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NETGEAR 24-Port Gigabit Ethernet Unmanaged Switch (JGS524) - Desktop or Rackmount, and Limited Lifetime Protection

4.7 out of 5 stars 13,324

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24 port | Rackmount
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Purchase options and add-ons

Color Black
Connector Type RJ45
Brand NETGEAR
Compatible Devices Personal Computer
Cable Type Ethernet

About this item

  • 24 Gigabit Ethernet ports
  • Simple plug-and-play setup with no software to install or configuration needed
  • Supports desktop or rackmount placement with the necessary mounting hardware in the box
  • Lifetime Limited Hardware Warranty, Next Business Day Replacement, and 24/7 chat with a NETGEAR expert
  • Energy efficient design compliant with IEEE8023az
  • Silent operation ideal for noise sensitive environment

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From the manufacturer

JGS524NA

Compare Similar NETGEAR Switch Models

.

GS108 image GS108E image gs116na switch JGS524NA
GS108 GS108E GS116NA JGS524NA
Customer Reviews
4.7 out of 5 stars
13,324
4.7 out of 5 stars
13,324
4.8 out of 5 stars
26,420
4.7 out of 5 stars
13,324
Price $49.97 $59.99 $89.99 $129.99
# Gigabit Ethernet Ports 8 x 1G 8 x 1G 16 x 1G 24 x 1G
# PoE Ports ---- ---- ---- ----
# SFP Fiber Ports ---- ---- ---- ----
Management Type Unmanaged Plus Unmanaged Unmanaged
Management Layer ---- L2 ---- ----
Advanced Network Features ---- Basic VLAN & QoS IGMP Storm Control Auto DoS ---- ----
Fanless Housing
Mounting Options Desktop or Wall Desktop or Wall Desktop or Wall Rackmount or Desktop
black gui
25 years

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Price-19% $129.99
List:$159.99
-18% $90.13
List:$109.99
-17% $99.99
List:$119.99
-21% $299.99
List:$379.99
-18% $89.99
List:$109.99
-9% $49.97
List:$54.99
Delivery
Get it as soon as Thursday, Apr 18
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Customer Ratings
Value for money
4.6
4.7
3.8
4.7
4.6
4.6
WiFi signal
4.4
4.1
3.8
4.3
4.4
4.4
Easy to install
4.8
4.9
4.2
4.7
4.8
Tech Support
4.2
4.0
4.3
4.2
4.2
User interface
4.5
4.0
4.5
4.5
Sold By
Amazon.com
Amazon.com
Amazon.com
Amazon.com
Amazon.com
Amazon.com
connector type
RJ45
RJ45
RJ45
RJ45
RJ45
number of ports
24
24
16
48
16
8

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Product Warranty: For warranty information about this product, please click here [PDF ]

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NETGEAR

NETGEAR 24-Port Gigabit Ethernet Unmanaged Switch (JGS524) - Desktop or Rackmount, and Limited Lifetime Protection


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Product Description

Product Description

The NETGEAR JGS524 Unmanaged Switch is designed for desktop or rackmount and features 24-Port Gigabit Ethernet, ProSAFE Lifetime Protection and more.

From the Manufacturer

NetgearÕs JGS500 Gigabit Switch Series gives your office network a megaboost of speed and capacity that is within your budget. With up to 48 Gbps of bandwidth, these 16- and 24-port switches can blast 2000 Mbps per port while their affordable prices enable you to put them everywhere. Use it to take Gigabit Ethernet directly to the desktop! Standards-based for easy integration of 10, 100, and 1000 Mbps devices, these unmanaged, rack-mountable switch feature 10/100/1000 automatic speed and full/half-duplex sensing plus Auto Uplink on every port. Users can take advantage of the their ability to deliver large amounts of multimedia, image, and video information in no time at all. Ideal for workgroups, labs, departments, or growing offices looking for oustanding performance at a low price.

High Capacity
1000 Mbps speeds and a switching capacity of up to 48 Gbps meet the performance needs for even the most bandwidth-hungry applications. The JGS500 series are perfect for graphics, multimedia, and other applications that have to move large files across the network quickly.

Affordable
Aggressive prices enable your workgroup, department or small network to ramp up to Gigabit speeds, even all the way to the desktop.

Flexible
Each port is equipped with automatic speed and duplex sensing, plus Auto Uplink to adjust for straight-through or crossover cables to make the right link. Standards-based design makes it easy to combine 10, 100, and 1000 Mbps devices on your network.

Convenient
Easy to set up and easy to use, these unmanaged switches have per port LED's for effortless network monitoring. Compact enough for desktop but comes with a rack mount kit. Compatible with PC, Macintosh, Linux, and Unix operating systems.

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
13,324 global ratings

Customers say

Customers like the ease of use, performance, temperature and value of the av signal switch. They mention that it works flawlessly, produces basically no heat and that the metal case acts as a great heat sink. They also like the size, connectivity, and quality. That said, opinions are mixed on ports.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

1,674 customers mention1,613 positive61 negative

Customers are satisfied with the performance of the AV signal switch. They mention that it works great, has excellent performance, and is workable. Some say that it functions great in a multi-VLAN environment.

"...Just. Worked. And it has never stopped working!..." Read more

"...Reasonably sized, fast as far as I can tell, sturdy metal case, nice looking, just like all "Pro" Netgear switches have been for many years...." Read more

"Works. Cheap. I wish the power cord was on the same side as the ports, but I'll survive" Read more

"A 5 stars rating feedback for quality,easy assembly and super fast delivery,thanks.William Garcia" Read more

1,058 customers mention985 positive73 negative

Customers are satisfied with the quality of the av signal switch. They mention it's well-made, reliable, and long-lasting. The body build is solid and the switch is guaranteed for life. The switches are durable and long lasting.

"...This made me appreciate just how trouble-free and reliable this quiet, affordable, unassuming little switch has been all of these years...." Read more

"...Reasonably sized, fast as far as I can tell, sturdy metal case, nice looking, just like all "Pro" Netgear switches have been for many years...." Read more

"Works. Cheap. I wish the power cord was on the same side as the ports, but I'll survive" Read more

"...- good build quality...." Read more

760 customers mention684 positive76 negative

Customers find the AV signal switch easy to set up. They mention it's simple to plug in and has zero trouble getting up and running. They appreciate the trouble-free setup and reliable performance. Customers are also pleased with the setup and other features. They say the web interface with management features makes it easy to configure the switch.

"...This made me appreciate just how trouble-free and reliable this quiet, affordable, unassuming little switch has been all of these years...." Read more

"A 5 stars rating feedback for quality,easy assembly and super fast delivery,thanks.William Garcia" Read more

"...LOVE IT. So easy to set up...." Read more

"Easy to set up. Let's the most powerful Wi-Fi signal through." Read more

416 customers mention361 positive55 negative

Customers like the value of the AV signal switch. They say it's an inexpensive way to increase network speed and the cheapest way to get VLAN tagging. Customers also say it is the perfect tool for budget network debugging and is slightly faster and more efficient than the Realtek RTL8380.

"...made me appreciate just how trouble-free and reliable this quiet, affordable, unassuming little switch has been all of these years. Thus this review...." Read more

"...The absolute perfect tool for budget network debugging or (in my case) for taking out into the field to put between two things and figure out what..." Read more

"...main chip is a Broadcom BCM53128, which seems slightly faster and more efficient than the Realtek RTL8380 used on competing switches from TP-Link..." Read more

"...It was cheaper than the purpose built inline sniffers, which were running about $100...." Read more

289 customers mention235 positive54 negative

Customers like the connectivity of the AV signal switch. They say it's perfect for a network that has audio or video as part of it, manages network as expected, and is a great solution for increasing Ethernet connections without limiting performance. Customers also say it adds physical network connections to your home wired network, providing a strong signal for all devices. They mention the data transfer is excellent when you combine these with good quality cat-6 cable, and that the WiFi signal is applicable.

"...The result is much better than the wireless that we were using." Read more

"Easy set up. Using for extensive home network." Read more

"...The switch has a desktop or wall mount option, making it versatile for different setups...." Read more

"...For me this switch is a great solution for increasing Ethernet connections without limiting performance or laborious set up...." Read more

253 customers mention241 positive12 negative

Customers like the size of the AV signal switch. They mention it's well-built, sturdy, and has a small footprint. The metal case acts as a great heat sink, making it small enough to put just about anywhere. It's excellent for small labs or home server farms, and the sleek compact metal case is for desktop or wall mounting.

"...this switch does exactly what you need, it does it well, it does it in a tiny package, and it does it for hundreds of dollars less than most..." Read more

"The device is compact and I mounted it on the wall in a convenient spot to make connections. It did exactly what I needed it to do...." Read more

"...Good quality product easy to install. Nice and compact." Read more

"...The entire unit looks and feel high quality. Case is metal and device is heavy. No cheap plastic and lightweight feel.4...." Read more

97 customers mention74 positive23 negative

Customers like the temperature of the av signal switch. They mention that it runs cool to the touch, has no perceptible heat coming off it, and the metal case acts as a great heat sink. The metal housing dissipates heat more efficiently than a plastic housing. The simple foot print seems to run cooler than the previous brand.

"...There is a reasonably sized heatsink on the main chip, and a thermal pad under the PCB, allowing the case bottom to serve as an additional..." Read more

"...The cranky set top box is operating with none of the freezing TV I had been experiencing...." Read more

"...We are using five of the 8 ports constantly but it does not run hot. No problems running zoom meetings or VOIP phones and computers." Read more

"...version (desktop non-rackmount version) used at full speed (gb) and it was HOT! You prob could use it as a hand warmer on those cold days...." Read more

125 customers mention77 positive48 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the ports of the av signal switch. Some like the fact that it has mounting slots and hardware that permit you to hang it, while others say that they only have 8 ports and that a few stopped working on the third day. Some complain about the way the ports are numbered and that they were locked up and not responding.

"...The switch has mounting slots which you will need if this is going into the closet and needs to be mounted on the wall...." Read more

"...Trunking not truly available" Read more

"...Works great and gives me seven additional ports (one is used to connect to the router)...." Read more

"...same side of the unit as the status lights -- makes it easier to mount in tight spaces and still see what's going on...." Read more

Nice BCM53128 switch with flawed management interface (can disable via hardware hack)
4 Stars
Nice BCM53128 switch with flawed management interface (can disable via hardware hack)
PROS: - true 802.1q VLAN tagging support, at a very low price - excellent wire-speed performance, tested @ 950+Mb/s in iperf on 6 ports at once, so long as Flow Control is disabled (see below). The main chip is a Broadcom BCM53128, which seems slightly faster and more efficient than the Realtek RTL8380 used on competing switches from TP-Link and Zyxel. - very low power use, approx. 1W - 3W dependent on ports in use (~ 0.25W DC / 0.45W AC base plus 0.3W per connected 1000M port, or 0.2W per 100M port). Traffic levels seem not to affect this much, though cable length might, since it tries to use lower transmit power on short cables. The switch-matrix core runs on 1.2V, with 3.3V for I/O, both provided by efficient switchmode buck regulators (unlike some switches that use a hot-running, linear step-down from 3.3V to 1.2 or 1.8V, at < 50% efficiency). - silent operation, with no fan or coil whine. Despite the lack of a fan, mine never even gets noticeably warm. There is a reasonably sized heatsink on the main chip, and a thermal pad under the PCB, allowing the case bottom to serve as an additional heatsink. - good build quality. Just one electrolytic capacitor, which is a Nichicon (reputable Japanese brand) 220uF on the power input, over-rated at 25V when operating at 12V. Main switch chip is a Broadcom BCM53128. Case is solid metal, compromised slightly by a stick-on platic piece around the ports for labeling, which another reviewer complained about. - happily runs on the variable 12V battery bus (10.5-14.4V) from an offgrid DC power system - starts up quickly, from cold-powerdown to forwarding traffic in about 8 seconds, far faster than any "true" managed switch (Catalyst, Juniper, Procurve etc.)CONS: - management interface, whether via web or Windows app is limited and cumbersome, especially when configuring VLANs, though is most cases this is only a one-time annoyance, set-and-forget - typical of switches in this class, there's no CLI management, nor SNMP, so tracking port activity with MRTG, etc. is not possible. Omitting these probably does reduce both cost and power use, though. - The management controller, integrated within the BCM53128 is a weak CPU derived from the 1980s-vintage, 8-bit Intel 8051, which is easily overloaded. This explains the lack of HTTPS SSL support, occasional dropped HTTP requests, etc. It's actually impressive they managed to squeeze an IP stack and web interface onto such a small CPU at all. - This limited 8051 service processor would only affect management functionality (it isn't part of the main switch-fabric data path at all), except for a dumb decision on Netgear's part to configure the switch registers to send a copy of *all* HTTP (tcp port 80) traffic, originating from any port, to this tiny management CPU.This has the effect of badly crippling the layer-2 Flow-Control feature, causing any and all HTTP traffic flowing through the switch to be bottlenecked to about 10Mb/s whenever Flow Control is switched on. The reason is that flow-control rate limiting kicks in whenver any port receiving the traffic gets overloaded, the weak management CPU effectively connects to a internal 9th, on-chip port that seems to run at only 10Mb/s, AND all web traffic from anywhere to anywhere (even when bearing an 802.1q VLAN tag!) gets uncontrollably copied to the phantom port-9.This wouldn't be so bad if the web interface could be moved to a less important port than tcp/80, set to listen to requests only from one specific switch port, or disabled entirely (until next power-cycle, say, or even semi-permanently until a factory reset), but none of these options are provided.Netgear does seem to ship these switches with Flow Control turned OFF by default, masking the performance problem, and in many cases Flow Control is undesirable anyway, but it can be useful in cases where a node on your network can't keep up with full Gigabit rates, but can do better than 100M. Many low-power single board computers fall into this category and can benefit from FC.The management controller can also be a big security hole, since it doesn't respect VLAN boundaries at all, and copies of its transmissions get relayed to ALL ports, in-the-clear and untagged, regardless of VLAN membership status. The switch effectively reverts to just a dumb hub whenever the hidden Port 9 is involved.HARDWARE MOD:If you don't mind voiding your warranty with a small bit of soldering, it's thankfully possible to disable this ill-behaved web interface and completely disconnect the BCM53128's 8051 management controller from its switch fabric, eliminating its security exposure and letting Flow Control work as intended, with no more weird slowdowns affecting port 80 . Here are the steps:1. First Get everything configured as you like in the web interface, setting up and testing all VLANs, etc. Reboot the switch and verify it comes up in the desired configuration.2. Open the cover and find tiny surface-mount resistor R75, between the main chip and the ports, near the crystal oscillator. Desolder this resistor. See my first photo, where it's already been removed, leaving bare pads.R75, which I measured at 4.4k in-circuit, pulls BCM53128 pin 43, "EN_8051_TxRx" high, to 3.3V. It CAN just be left floating if you don't mind losing the web (and Windows-config-tool) interface permanently after initial setup.3. If you want to be able to toggle the web interface off and on, solder a very fine-gauge wire to the removed R75 resistor's pad nearest the main chip, and another such wire to a 3.3V power pin anywhere on the board-- you could use the other side of R75, but it's easier to grab this voltage from a less closely-spaced area. I chose to use the power pin (pin 8) of U5, the 8pin serial EEPROM at upper-right.4. drill a hole on the back panel somewhere to mount a small toggle switch. Solder one of its terminals to the R75 pin (BCM531128 pin43, EN_8051_TxRx signal) through a 3.3k-ohm resistor. Solder the other toggle switch terminal to any convenient 3.3V pin, through a 1k-ohm resistor (optional - these two resistors in series approximate the original 4.4k-ohm pullup, but anything in the ballmark should work)Note that EN_8051_TxRx is only latched during reset, so after flipping the switch you have to power-cycle the switch for it to take effect. At least this Netgear is fast to reboot, but having to do so makes its port traffic & error counters effectively useless, unless you leave management enabled all the time.If you want to add a RESET button also, solder a fine wire to the right-hand (near the coil) terminal of resistor pad R7, which should be empty to begin with. This goes to the Shutdown terminal of the 3.3V switchmode regulator, and grounding it (through a 1k-ohm resistor) even briefly will cause a clean reset via 3-pin power-supervisor chip U3. That IC actively drives the BCM53128 RESET pin both high and low, so you can't safely pull RESET down directly.Rather than mounting a physical toggle switch, since my GS108e is in a hard-to-reach spot I decided to bring out these control signals (EN_8051_TxRx, +3.3V, RESET-via-regulator-shutdown) to a 4-pin header, which plugs into GPIO outputs on a nearby router, allowing management-enable and reset functions to be controlled remotely. Anyone going this route should ensure both systems share a common logic ground, and take care to never drive either signal to more than 3.3V Documentation on the BCM5128 is hard to come by, but I very much doubt it's 5V-tolerant.
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Customer image
4.0 out of 5 stars Nice BCM53128 switch with flawed management interface (can disable via hardware hack)
Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2018
PROS:
- true 802.1q VLAN tagging support, at a very low price

- excellent wire-speed performance, tested @ 950+Mb/s in iperf on 6 ports at once, so long as Flow Control is disabled (see below). The main chip is a Broadcom BCM53128, which seems slightly faster and more efficient than the Realtek RTL8380 used on competing switches from TP-Link and Zyxel.

- very low power use, approx. 1W - 3W dependent on ports in use (~ 0.25W DC / 0.45W AC base plus 0.3W per connected 1000M port, or 0.2W per 100M port). Traffic levels seem not to affect this much, though cable length might, since it tries to use lower transmit power on short cables. The switch-matrix core runs on 1.2V, with 3.3V for I/O, both provided by efficient switchmode buck regulators (unlike some switches that use a hot-running, linear step-down from 3.3V to 1.2 or 1.8V, at < 50% efficiency).

- silent operation, with no fan or coil whine. Despite the lack of a fan, mine never even gets noticeably warm. There is a reasonably sized heatsink on the main chip, and a thermal pad under the PCB, allowing the case bottom to serve as an additional heatsink.

- good build quality. Just one electrolytic capacitor, which is a Nichicon (reputable Japanese brand) 220uF on the power input, over-rated at 25V when operating at 12V. Main switch chip is a Broadcom BCM53128. Case is solid metal, compromised slightly by a stick-on platic piece around the ports for labeling, which another reviewer complained about.

- happily runs on the variable 12V battery bus (10.5-14.4V) from an offgrid DC power system

- starts up quickly, from cold-powerdown to forwarding traffic in about 8 seconds, far faster than any "true" managed switch (Catalyst, Juniper, Procurve etc.)

CONS:
- management interface, whether via web or Windows app is limited and cumbersome, especially when configuring VLANs, though is most cases this is only a one-time annoyance, set-and-forget

- typical of switches in this class, there's no CLI management, nor SNMP, so tracking port activity with MRTG, etc. is not possible. Omitting these probably does reduce both cost and power use, though.

- The management controller, integrated within the BCM53128 is a weak CPU derived from the 1980s-vintage, 8-bit Intel 8051, which is easily overloaded. This explains the lack of HTTPS SSL support, occasional dropped HTTP requests, etc. It's actually impressive they managed to squeeze an IP stack and web interface onto such a small CPU at all.

- This limited 8051 service processor would only affect management functionality (it isn't part of the main switch-fabric data path at all), except for a dumb decision on Netgear's part to configure the switch registers to send a copy of *all* HTTP (tcp port 80) traffic, originating from any port, to this tiny management CPU.

This has the effect of badly crippling the layer-2 Flow-Control feature, causing any and all HTTP traffic flowing through the switch to be bottlenecked to about 10Mb/s whenever Flow Control is switched on. The reason is that flow-control rate limiting kicks in whenver any port receiving the traffic gets overloaded, the weak management CPU effectively connects to a internal 9th, on-chip port that seems to run at only 10Mb/s, AND all web traffic from anywhere to anywhere (even when bearing an 802.1q VLAN tag!) gets uncontrollably copied to the phantom port-9.

This wouldn't be so bad if the web interface could be moved to a less important port than tcp/80, set to listen to requests only from one specific switch port, or disabled entirely (until next power-cycle, say, or even semi-permanently until a factory reset), but none of these options are provided.

Netgear does seem to ship these switches with Flow Control turned OFF by default, masking the performance problem, and in many cases Flow Control is undesirable anyway, but it can be useful in cases where a node on your network can't keep up with full Gigabit rates, but can do better than 100M. Many low-power single board computers fall into this category and can benefit from FC.

The management controller can also be a big security hole, since it doesn't respect VLAN boundaries at all, and copies of its transmissions get relayed to ALL ports, in-the-clear and untagged, regardless of VLAN membership status. The switch effectively reverts to just a dumb hub whenever the hidden Port 9 is involved.

HARDWARE MOD:

If you don't mind voiding your warranty with a small bit of soldering, it's thankfully possible to disable this ill-behaved web interface and completely disconnect the BCM53128's 8051 management controller from its switch fabric, eliminating its security exposure and letting Flow Control work as intended, with no more weird slowdowns affecting port 80 . Here are the steps:

1. First Get everything configured as you like in the web interface, setting up and testing all VLANs, etc. Reboot the switch and verify it comes up in the desired configuration.

2. Open the cover and find tiny surface-mount resistor R75, between the main chip and the ports, near the crystal oscillator. Desolder this resistor. See my first photo, where it's already been removed, leaving bare pads.

R75, which I measured at 4.4k in-circuit, pulls BCM53128 pin 43, "EN_8051_TxRx" high, to 3.3V. It CAN just be left floating if you don't mind losing the web (and Windows-config-tool) interface permanently after initial setup.

3. If you want to be able to toggle the web interface off and on, solder a very fine-gauge wire to the removed R75 resistor's pad nearest the main chip, and another such wire to a 3.3V power pin anywhere on the board-- you could use the other side of R75, but it's easier to grab this voltage from a less closely-spaced area. I chose to use the power pin (pin 8) of U5, the 8pin serial EEPROM at upper-right.

4. drill a hole on the back panel somewhere to mount a small toggle switch. Solder one of its terminals to the R75 pin (BCM531128 pin43, EN_8051_TxRx signal) through a 3.3k-ohm resistor. Solder the other toggle switch terminal to any convenient 3.3V pin, through a 1k-ohm resistor (optional - these two resistors in series approximate the original 4.4k-ohm pullup, but anything in the ballmark should work)

Note that EN_8051_TxRx is only latched during reset, so after flipping the switch you have to power-cycle the switch for it to take effect. At least this Netgear is fast to reboot, but having to do so makes its port traffic & error counters effectively useless, unless you leave management enabled all the time.

If you want to add a RESET button also, solder a fine wire to the right-hand (near the coil) terminal of resistor pad R7, which should be empty to begin with. This goes to the Shutdown terminal of the 3.3V switchmode regulator, and grounding it (through a 1k-ohm resistor) even briefly will cause a clean reset via 3-pin power-supervisor chip U3. That IC actively drives the BCM53128 RESET pin both high and low, so you can't safely pull RESET down directly.

Rather than mounting a physical toggle switch, since my GS108e is in a hard-to-reach spot I decided to bring out these control signals (EN_8051_TxRx, +3.3V, RESET-via-regulator-shutdown) to a 4-pin header, which plugs into GPIO outputs on a nearby router, allowing management-enable and reset functions to be controlled remotely. Anyone going this route should ensure both systems share a common logic ground, and take care to never drive either signal to more than 3.3V Documentation on the BCM5128 is hard to come by, but I very much doubt it's 5V-tolerant.
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