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Your cart is empty.TRENDnet’s 10G PCIe Network Adapter, model TEG-10GECTX, converts a free PCI Express slot into a 10 Gigabit Ethernet port. The 10G PCIe card includes advanced features, such as jumbo frames and VLAN tagging support. The standard and low-profile brackets included with the 10G PCIe card are compatible with Windows and Windows Server desktop computer designs.
David
Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2025
This was my 1st of 2 PCIE 10Gbit NIC and it performed horribly. It seems as if on Windows 11, these cards do not play well with the latest Aquantia drivers. The card will connect to the network but then drop connection, establish, and then drop again. Some say it's a temperature issue, but I tested this with a box fan blowing right at my PC, still failed. I even rolled back 2 drivers and applied troubleshoot settings that others recommended.Skip any card that runs on the Marvell drivers and pick up an Intel x550-t2. Little more expensive, but literally plug and play on my PC, no issues since.This card has been working well in my NAS running TRUENAS. No issues there. Skip for windows.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2025
works perfect. cheap. good. doesnt run too hot. no issues.
fur0n
Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2025
I bought this to move my device from 1gbe to 10gbe and this adapter does hit the speeds advertised!
J. Painter
Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2024
I'm using these Marvell AQC107 based cards in two Linux machines on my home network. Network throughput initially varied widely during large file transfers between these two machines. While troubleshooting, I learned that both cards were shipped with out-of-date/buggy firmware (v3.1.58) vice the latest/greatest firmware currently available on Marvell's website (v3.1.121a). I pulled the cards from my Linux machines, installed them in a Windows machine, updated the firmware via the included utility, and then reinstalled them in my Linux machines. Network throughput is now rock solid stable and only limited by the bandwidth of my storage devices.
M. J. Williams
Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2024
What can I say, it works as intended. I've got 2 of these: one is in an Ubuntu 22.04 server (an old 4770 i7 machine) and the second and Arch Desktop (a ryzen 3900x). Both recognized the cards immediately and set their speeds appropriately with auto-negotiate enabled. Both machines are connected through a 10g copper port switch connected to an OPNsense router (1520 XeonD) with a 10g port.People trying to speed test these with file transfers are going about it the wrong way ad will never see the total throughput because of drive read/write speeds and protocol limitations of the chosen share method (i.e. SMB).The easiest and truest method to test is to run iperf3 as a server on a machine with a 10g interface, on the second machine run an iperf3 test as a client to your machine. BUT that will not really give you the actual result you want, as standard iperf3 tests are run as a single process and will probably cap out around 2-4 gigs. You need to run the client with the -P option to enable more processes, I typically use 10.Example:on the server end:iperf3 -son the client end:iperf3 -c (ip of the server) -P 10iperf3 -c (ip of the server) -P 10 -RThat gives me the output that I would expect to see, typically in the 8.4 - 9.4 gig range. Also be sure to run it in reverse as well with the -R option the second time.The cards work exactly as intended for 10g, though admittedly I have not tried 2.5g or just standard 1g because I haven't the need to. And 5 gig is incredibly uncommon to find so I won't bother with it.I've attached 3 screenshots to show you the results of the 3 iperf3 tests I mentioned. The first pic is if you run iperf3 -c (ip of server) and caps out at 3.73gsecond is iperf3 -c (ip of server) -P 10 and caps at 9.34gthird is iperf3 -c (ip of server) -P 10 -R and caps at 9.37gBTW I should note that I'm not actually using Cat6a for any of these machines. I'm actually using standard cat5e, but the lengths are less than 10 feet. If I had to go longer or started to notice issues, I'd up it to cat6a but it's not always necessary. Just an FYI
Daniel E. Gorun
Reviewed in the United States on December 4, 2024
I have a 2.5gb switch. Originally bought the TP Link TX401. It did not work and was stuck at 100/100 MBps. Went through troubleshooting and no luck. This TRENDnet worked at 2.5 GB out of the box. Windows 10 found the driver right away. Definitely a good product.
Donald Smith
Reviewed in Australia on November 12, 2024
Worked fine when I first installed it. After 2 months I started getting intermittent dropouts last hours.Went to manufacture website and found out that Amazon was selling a discontinued product.
Tobias
Reviewed in Sweden on July 17, 2023
Arrived with full hight bracket mounted and half hight in the box. Easy swap.Works well in booth 2.5 Gbps and 10 Gbps mode.Pushes speed jus fine with iperf.Works well with 9k jumbo frames (could not test 16k since i have nothing at the other end that support it..)
Reece
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 10, 2023
I’m using this in a server environment for a 10GbE link directly to my NAS. I’m yet to experience the full 10GbE speeds but I’m throttled by the drives in the NAS, achieved 1.5GbE read/write on both NAS drives simultaneously thoughWindows sees a 10Gb link though, so I see no issues so far.I will update once I achieve full 10GbE speeds
gianni50
Reviewed in Italy on July 3, 2022
Semplice da installazione
LD
Reviewed in Canada on May 8, 2021
No need to spends hundreds of $ to get stable 10Gbps. This adapter does the job flawlessly. iperf3 gives me a the full 10Gbps duplex with near zero CPU usage.
Mike
Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2021
Put this card in a stable, month old 5950x system. It was recognized by device manager, drivers installed but there was 0 link activity. Reseated the card, wiped drivers, used the provided drivers and manufacturers, rolled the slot back from pci4 to 3, nothing worked. Then came the BIG problem! I tried the card in my server, same issue! After removing the card either system refused to boot. Cleared CMOS and got into BIOS. Long story short, after hours of troubleshooting I found that the card damaged the NVME drives in the slot adjacent to them. These were the OS drives so I lost all ability to use the machines! Had to purchase new NVME's, reinstall the OS, all the apps and I'm still recovering data from the RAID arrays. DO NOT buy this card.
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