







🚀 Upgrade your network game with dual-port 2.5G speed — because buffering is so last decade!
The QFly 2.5G Dual RJ45 Port PCI-E Network Card, powered by the Realtek RTL8125B chipset, delivers ultra-fast 2.5Gbps Ethernet speeds with dual RJ45 ports for enhanced connectivity. Compatible with all PCI Express slots and supporting Windows and Linux OS, it offers plug-and-play convenience and flexible installation options with included low-profile and full-height brackets. Ideal for professionals seeking reliable, high-speed wired networking with future-proof versatility.








| ASIN | B0BN6CL81R |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Item model number | QFly-25G-DualPort |
| Manufacturer | PANSHI |
| Package Dimensions | 15.4 x 13.2 x 3.7 cm; 78.5 g |
A**R
I picked up two of these QFly 2.5G dual-port PCIe cards and they’ve been phenomenal for the price. Easy install, solid performance on both Windows and Linux. The only hiccup was with PCI passthrough — the Realtek RTL8125B chipset doesn’t play nice with virtual machine passthrough. I had to fall back to a VirtIO setup for my router VM. Not ideal, but it works — and that’s on the chipset, not the card. Pros: Reliable 2.5G speeds Plug-and-play on most systems Great price Dual ports on a PCIe x1 slot — perfect for compact or low-slot systems Cons: Realtek chip has known passthrough issues in VM setups Verdict: 5 stars. Great card, just avoid it for passthrough-heavy virtualization.
A**N
Works great it does have a blue led that blips along, not great for glass or open cases that you’ll keep in your room. Works smooth on Linux btw.
W**E
I wasn’t sure about this card but it showed up and the driver loads Traffic flows and it works well without any dropped packets What more can you ask for
A**Z
Works perfectly with proxmox and pfsense(vm) Getting around 2.25gbps on a multi gig network
A**R
I purchased this card for an existing Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Xen server. It works great, and fits very nicely into a 1U server chassis. But, the big problem is drivers. The manufacturer download site is laughable. The only option is to download a source version of the driver, once you find it, and then rebuild the driver and your kernel to include it. It would be one thing if this was for a really old or really new OS, but Ubuntu 20? Fortunately, I found a project on GitHub (awesometic/realtek-r8125-dkms) which builds and packages the driver. All you need to do is to install DKMS, and then install the downloaded .deb file, and all is well. In summary, this is a great little card, marred by terrible driver support. Apparently Ubuntu 22.04 LTS may include RTK8125 support built-in, but for older OSs, forget it.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 week ago