Recommend me a wireless router |
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SamV
Old Croc Joined: 21 October 2008 Location: London Status: Offline Points: 8707 |
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Posted: 28 June 2015 at 5:56pm |
I need a new unit for the house since the last draytek may have got soaked lol.
Now if I was after just a wap I would have gone for a Ubiquiti unit but I'm not sure if they do one with them modem and router built in? I could just buy another Draytek which I really like but that seems like a waste of money for a single user home.
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shagnasty
Old Croc Joined: 30 July 2007 Location: Guildford, UK Status: Offline Points: 7685 |
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look at the TP-link stuff, I use mainly Draytek (or Cisco if I need that) for £67 inc Vat they do a VDSL compatible unit, the Draytek 2860 series I tend to use are great (with 4G fallback if you want all that) but for home, Zyxel/TP-link take some beating, IMHO....
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nickyburnell
Old Croc Joined: 06 February 2005 Status: Offline Points: 4410 |
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TP Link for home, and they WILL honour the three year warranty with an email and reciept.
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It's everything, not everythink!
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amlu
Young Croc Joined: 30 November 2009 Location: london Status: Offline Points: 740 |
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i got some d-link dir615, found in charity shop, installed dd-wrt on it, works nicely. if you getting adsl modem from your isp set it into "modem mode" or equivalent, let your own router do the routing.
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shagnasty
Old Croc Joined: 30 July 2007 Location: Guildford, UK Status: Offline Points: 7685 |
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The thing about TP link is don't think they use a classic processor setup, so no open-WRT ect, they seem to be FPGA based!
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ceharden
The 10,000 Points Club Joined: 05 June 2005 Location: Southampton Status: Offline Points: 11776 |
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I'm running Open-WRT on a TP-Link AP... It was pretty useless with the stock firmware but works really well with Open-WRT.
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shagnasty
Old Croc Joined: 30 July 2007 Location: Guildford, UK Status: Offline Points: 7685 |
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Ok, I may be wrong, we were benching a TP router recently, no way is that running any kind of embedded Linux, it was virtually wire-speed, either way, not-bad kit on the bang/£ list...
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James Tengo
Old Croc Joined: 09 May 2008 Location: Brighton Status: Offline Points: 2155 |
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We have a bunch of these to go out on jobs with our desks for remote applications, and for a cheap access point they rock.
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JohanXV
New Member Joined: 27 October 2020 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 1 |
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When I had a problem with choosing a router, friends advised me to try Cisco routers as they were their users. Cisco Routing provides intent-based networking for WAN, LAN, and cloud. Network routers include advanced analytics, application optimization, auto provisioning, and integrated security to provide a complete, proven solution. I found out more about Cisco at https://cciedump.spoto.net/ and checked the terms that some of them offer users. I have been using it for several weeks now and am quite happy with my choice.
Edited by JohanXV - 27 October 2020 at 6:23pm |
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fatfreddiescat
Young Croc Joined: 15 October 2010 Location: N.E.Wales Status: Offline Points: 1081 |
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Wow and 5 years later I'm still running openwrt, archer C7 looks like a good choice now bang for buck.
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