Hi Brian, yes for control (from the computer or mobile) but generally not for streaming. In your case I would assume that it would be perfect because the reality of it is that it would all be on device, unless you were streaming from Tidal or Qobuz.
I’m not sure if the issue is the lack of a driver (hampering Rock V2) or a choice by Roon not to support the on board WiFi, but I know that it doesn’t work as I have the i5 version of the same NUC.
I seem to remember that there were some known to be working USB WiFi dongles, but I’m not 100% sure of that. Hopefully someone else can chime in here with the models for you if that is the case.
Roon core, NUC in your case, needs an ethernet connection to your router or switch. Your Roon end-points can be connected by ethernet or WIFI. It’s usually best not to connect your DAC directly to your core, but connect to your network. Control of your Roon system is usually by iPhone, iPad, other tablet, or laptop via WIFI. Ethernet will work also.
You can’t without using an external WiFi adaptor which may or may not work. Rock did support a very small amount of internal WiFi cards that came in nucs but they stopped that ages ago as there where too many variations and they dont at all on any ones past the 7 series.
Roon recommend that the core device itself be hardwired to the network and you use wireless for Networked endpoints. If you can’t hardwire then you need to either find a WiFi bridge or use a mesh system that has the ability to run off a cable to a device acting as a bridge or move your rock core to somewhere you can and add in a Roon endpoint device that supports WiFi and connect that to your DAC.
I do tend to resist the flow when it seems appropriate. Thank you for your response. Past experience has shown a significant loss of quality when using Roon Bridge on Windows 10, a Moon Audio integrated amp and others. The Linux audio drivers seem to be the best and the NUC platform seems the quietest on the signal path of PCs. My old Roon Rock on an i3 with USB out to the DAC was the best combination I have found. If the newer NUC NICs are not being supported, it should be stated as such rather than picking a preference for Ethernet over Wi-Fi. Either can be great or poor.
Considering solutions. It seems that the Linux audio drivers would need to be used with Roon Bridge. The the Linux distribution I choose will have the support for WiFi if I choose to use WiFi. Which I wouldn’t because I would prefer to not have WIfi between the library and the bridge. So I would then put Roon Server on the Linux NUC and have essentially rolled my own Rock.
For reference, the old NUC NIC is an Intel 7265D2W
I appreciate the healthy discussion. I paused because I ordered two USB wifi devices that are supported in the standard linux kernal. They did not work. I am completely comfortable creating a Ubuntu server and adding Roon. However, the goal is not to have another project that I need to support and update. I appreciate what the Roon team has created with their experience that will always be more vast on this topic than mine. I did purchase the recommended NUC for my hardware upgrade rather than something else so that my project would be as compatible as possible. I will purchase a wifi extender to work around this issue. Hopefully, this discussion and details help others.
Brian have you considered using Ethernet over Power Line adapter’s. I don’t use them myself, but there are a couple of thread’s here on the forum’s where people discuss using them with great success.
It can be dependent on the quality of your wiring, but it could also be just the trick for you
I seem to remember that @garye used some that worked well and maybe he would be good enough to say what he is using.
I use devolo magic 2 wifi and Ethernet. Have been excellent with both since installed. One tip for any home plugs is plug them in close to each other to pair them then move to the location you want. They seem to drop out a lot less (out of four, one of mine has dropped out once in 18 months) and remain stable. The mesh wifi is useful too for wandering round with mojo poly.
Thanks Garry. I had some really old Devolo products that I donated to my sister. They used to be about the best brand in the Powerline market when I originally purchased mine.
Surprised your phono stage doesn’t pick up the horrid RF EoP spits out. Mine did got nice little clicks with it especially the higher rate ones. I never got them to work consistently either used to drop out all the time. Got 6 in my attic having fun with all the dust and spiders. One thing is it did prompt me to install a cable which was a pain to do but made it stable and no more interference.
If you want to cut your wireless bandwidth in half go for it but a better solution would be a mesh system with radios dedicated to backhaul. Even better than that would be multiple APs wired to switches but your Roon core should really be wired.