Advice for a new AC router


Recommended Posts

I had been using a NETGEAR  AC1750 router for the last 4 yrs and a Lynksys wrt54G before that without problems until it died the other day.

I'm looking for suggestions for a good router with a $200 budget that would be future proof for the next 3-4 yrs

I have an eye on a TP-Link AC5400  but have no experience with TP-Link

I also have about a dozen wireless devices and a few wired that would connect, only a few being used at a time .

TIA

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1349300-advice-for-a-new-ac-router/
Share on other sites

I love my Synology RT2600ac. It is easily the best router I have ever owned, and like most everyone here, I have owned many different brands over the years.

 

https://www.synology.com/en-us/products/RT2600ac

 

Looks like it can be purchased at Amazon.com for your exact price point:

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=rt2600ac

 

Tim

Is your budget, $200 US dollars? I will never recommend a consumer device again, they are pure junk. Every, single, one of them.

 

I would recommend this setup:

 

ER-X($50): https://www.amazon.com/Ubiquiti-Networks-ER-X-Router/dp/B0144R449W/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1511731347&sr=8-2&keywords=edgerouter-x

 

in conjunction with this access point (for the wireless signal)

UAP-AC-PRO ($140): https://www.amazon.com/Ubiquiti-Networks-802-11ac-Dual-Radio-UAP-AC-PRO-US/dp/B015PRO512/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1511731383&sr=8-3&keywords=UAP-AC-Pro

 

This configuration will blow away anything that you can buy off the shelf, sold as a "home" router.

  • Like 4

I'd stay away from cheaper brands like TP-LINK, currently own a AC1350 and ended up unhooking it and giving up on it.

My router firmware kept being hacked and replaced by a modified russian version, I had literally taken all security precautions and updated it to it's latest firmware (which is making outdated an art form).

 

Since this is not the first time I had these issues with consumer routers, I plan on buying a Asus router since I've heard better reviews about them and updates or I just give up and get a Google Wifi mesh router pack.

1 hour ago, Seahorsepip said:

I'd stay away from cheaper brands like TP-LINK, currently own a AC1350 and ended up unhooking it and giving up on it.

My router firmware kept being hacked and replaced by a modified russian version, I had literally taken all security precautions and updated it to it's latest firmware (which is making outdated an art form).

 

Since this is not the first time I had these issues with consumer routers, I plan on buying a Asus router since I've heard better reviews about them and updates or I just give up and get a Google Wifi mesh router pack.

I’d just dump consumer junk altogether. 

3 hours ago, Circaflex said:

While I agree, this product is great, I didn't include it because the price for the "kit" is over $300 dollars. Just a tad over the budget listed by OP.

He could start with the router at $130, which works great. And add a meshpoint or two if necessary - http://a.co/euWQDJ3

1 hour ago, Mindovermaster said:

@adrynalyne and @Circaflex why ban consumer level routers? Have a bad time with them?

 

1 hour ago, jamester64 said:

Any suggestions then ?

TIA


They way I look at it is like this:  

Lack of config
Lack of real security
Lack of control

Those 3 reasons are why I went with Cisco Meraki

So is KRACK as bad as it sounds ?

11 minutes ago, T3X4S said:

 


They way I look at it is like this:  

Lack of config
Lack of real security
Lack of control

Those 3 reasons are why I went with Cisco Meraki

So is KRACK as bad as it sounds ?

Yeah, yet some of these kids don't know how to manage these monsters. They just want something that works.

Seriously? Would any of you file a recommendation in your company without gathering any requirements?

 

The OP has not stated his usage model, throughput requirements or wireless coverage needs in terms of area to be covered, types of devices, types of surfaces that can affect the signal, interference levels etc.

 

Then, what does he mean in terms of the next few years. Simply not dying? Handling emerging standards? Increase in his device load? Faster speeds?

 

Wireless is only going to get more complex.

 

Without any specific info, and being aware that $200 is not much, we have an initial restriction to cheap consumer devices. The main reason these devices die is that they are overloaded and overheat.

 

The way to improve longevity and also to permit increased granularity in controlling upgrades to your network, I suggest separating out functions and distributing them.

 

1. I use a PC configure with IPFIRE.ORG to handle high throughput routing with total control over the config. The user interface is no more difficult than a standard consumer router.

 

2. I locate multiple consumer "wireless routers" re-purposed as Wireless Access Points and dedicate them to specific areas of coverage or frequency bands to reduce interference and provide perfect coverage everywhere. If any device fails, it can be easily replaced and the network keeps running.

 

 

 

Regular consumers just want to purchase something that works, not have to allow LAN>WAN traffic and setup ACLs on an Edgemax router. 

 

The two best suggestions so far are the Synology router and the AmpliFi HD I recommended if he needs larger coverage.

1 hour ago, jamester64 said:

Any suggestions then ?

TIA

Ubiquiti products. Not the easiest to configure initially if you are new to it, but it works very, very well. I had a KRACK patch in under 8 hours of the exploit being announced. 

Edited by adrynalyne
  • Like 2
1 hour ago, Mindovermaster said:

@adrynalyne and @Circaflex why ban consumer level routers? Have a bad time with them?

Consumer routers will work well enough as long as you don't use them for routing, NAT translation or Firewall all of which overheat the device at high bandwidth modern speeds.

 

Just let them handle the already difficult task of wireless signal processing and everything else can just "pass through"

 

Then front them all with a Linux Distro like ipfire.org

 

https://www.ipfire.org/

 

 

ipfire_tux_512x512.png

1 hour ago, Mindovermaster said:

@adrynalyne and @Circaflex why ban consumer level routers? Have a bad time with them?

I’ve not run into one yet that hasn’t had a short lifetime, problems with stability, lack of control, security issues, inconsistent updates.

 

The price for the top end stuff is often more expensive than Ubiquiti stuff and performs no better or worse. Obviously this is my two cents. I’m aware you can dd-wrt and what not, but that’s just trying to gain more control which you have with prosumer and enterprise stuff anyway. 

3 hours ago, adrynalyne said:

I’ve not run into one yet that hasn’t had a short lifetime, problems with stability, lack of control, security issues, inconsistent updates.

 

The price for the top end stuff is often more expensive than Ubiquiti stuff and performs no better or worse. Obviously this is my two cents. I’m aware you can dd-wrt and what not, but that’s just trying to gain more control which you have with prosumer and enterprise stuff anyway. 

Yes. Changing the software in the device won't help because they are overloaded at at hardware level and software won't help that.

 

I have opened up many failed devices and once you get all the stupid fancy plastic bits out of the way, you get cheap PCBs, really inadequate heat sinks, no active cooling and bursting power supply caps in 50% of the units.

17 minutes ago, xendrome said:

Regular consumers just want to purchase something that works, not have to allow LAN>WAN traffic and setup ACLs on an Edgemax router. 

 

The two best suggestions so far are the Synology router and the AmpliFi HD I recommended if he needs larger coverage.

Please dont take this the wrong way, I agree with much of what you’ve said, however EdgeOS is fairly simple these days. The built-in config wizard makes a home setup a pretty simple task. 

2 minutes ago, Circaflex said:

Please dont take this the wrong way, I agree with much of what you’ve said, however EdgeOS is fairly simple these days. The built-in config wizard makes a home setup a pretty simple task. 

Do you even have to setup ACLs? My USG runs EdgeOS and I’ve never had to do it. 

11 hours ago, adrynalyne said:

Do you even have to setup ACLs? My USG runs EdgeOS and I’ve never had to do it. 

I can tell you an EdgeRouter ER-X which was suggested above isn't going to route traffic out of the box. A regular consumer wants to plug in their modem, device and go. Not have to setup interfaces, allow IP traffic LAN>WAN via rules. They 1: Don't know how to do this and 2: Don't want to do this.

  • Like 1
31 minutes ago, xendrome said:

I can tell you an EdgeRouter ER-X which was suggested above isn't going to route traffic out of the box. A regular consumer wants to plug in their modem, device and go. Not have to setup interfaces, allow IP traffic LAN>WAN via rules. They 1: Don't know how to do this and 2: Don't want to do this.

http://thecyberfusion.com/edgerouter-x-setup-installation-diy/

 

Doesn't look terribly frightening vs consumer setup. I'd even go so far to say that Unifi equipment is more complicated to setup, and I never had to set ACLs.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Last time I used Pascal was in college about 40 yrs ago, programmed an inventory database for my exam.
    • If they don't sell enough of the 1st gen then there won't be a 2nd gen
    • Epic fail, should've added an eSata port on the back, also if the memory/NVME are soldered then they're hardly gonna sell any, first thing most people do with their Steamdeck is, or used to be, replacing the NVME with a 2TB one.
    • GEEKOM kicks off Prime Day Sale with discounts up to 30% on Intel and AMD mini PCs by Steven Parker GEEKOM has kicked off its Prime Day Sale letting you save up to 30% on mini PCs in every price class. Below we are sharing a few highlights from the A series of AMD mini PCs, along with an Intel variant with pretty beefy specs. We start off with the very affordable GEEKOM A5 in the AMD Ryzen 5 7430U, 16GB RAM, and 512GB NVMe SSD configuration, with some of its highlighted specs listed below: Operating System: Windows 11 Pro CPU Model: AMD Ryzen 5 7430U CPU Speed: 3.5 GHz Cache Size: 16 MB Graphics: Integrated AMD Radeon Vega 7 Graphics Memory: 16 GB 3200 MT/s DDR4 Copilot+ PC: No SSD: 512 GB Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.2 + WiFi 6E I never got the chance to review this variant, but here is how GEEKOM describes it: GEEKOM A5 [Ryzen 5 7430U, 16GB+512GB] for $371 —was $439 (15% off) Next up is the GEEKOM A6 in the AMD Ryzen 7 6800H, 16GB DDR5 RAM, with a 1TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD configuration, with the below highlights: Operating System: Windows 11 Pro CPU Model: AMD Ryzen 7 6800H CPU Speed: 4.7 GHz Cache Size: 16 MB Graphics: Integrated AMD Radeon 680M Memory: 16 GB 4800 MT/s DDR5 Copilot+ PC: No SSD: 1 TB Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.2 + WiFi 6E I gave the A6 high marks in my dedicated review from just over a year ago; GEEKOM has this to say about this compact Mini PC: GEEKOM A6 [Ryzen 7 6800H, 16GB+1TB] for $524 —was $649 (19% off) Next up is the MAX variant of A-series mini PCs in the Prime Day Sale. The GEEKOM A7 MAX [2026 Edition] powered by the AMD Ryzen 9 7940HS with 16GB of DDR5 and a 1TB SSD. Below are some of its more important specifications: Operating System: Windows 11 Pro CPU Model: AMD Ryzen 9 7940HS CPU Speed: 5.2 GHz Cache Size: 24 MB Graphics: Integrated AMD Radeon 780M Memory: 16 GB 5600 MT/s DDR5 Copilot+ PC: No SSD: 1 TB Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.2 + WiFi 6E I reviewed this Mini PC a year and a half ago, and praised it for its modern internals like a dedicated NPU and DDR5 memory, as such it is more than capable of keeping up with today's offerings of Mini PC on the market. GEEKOM A7 MAX [Ryzen 9 7940HS, 16GB+1TB] for $594 —was $699 (15% off) Next we have another in the MAX series of A mini PC. The GEEKOM A9 MAX powered by the AMD Ryzen AI HX 470 with 32GB DDR5 and a 2TB SSD. Below are some of its more important specifications: Operating System: Windows 11 Pro CPU Model: AMD Ryzen 9 AI HX 470 CPU Speed: 5.4 GHz Cache Size: 24 MB Graphics: Integrated AMD Radeon 890M NPU: 55 TOPS Copilot+ PC: Yes (combined NPU+CPU=86 TOPS) Memory: 32GB 5600 MT/s DDR5 SSD: 2 TB Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.4 + WiFi 7 We reviewed this Mini PC last month, also in the 64GB configuration. Be sure to check out both reviews before dropping this kind of money on it, you won't be sorry! I praised it for its excellent NPU (AI) performance and premium all-metal build, as such it is more than capable of keeping up with today's offerings of Mini PC on the market. GEEKOM A9 MAX [Ryzen AI 9 470 HX, 32GB+2TB] for $1,444 —was $1,699 (19.72% off) Last but not least we have the GEEKOM IT13 MAX, which is an Intel configuration featuring the Ultra 9 185H with 16GB DDR5 memory and a 1TB SSD. Below are some of its more important specifications: Operating System: Windows 11 Pro CPU Model: Intel Ultra 9 185H (65W TDP) CPU Speed: 5.1 GHz Cache Size: 24 MB Graphics: Integrated Intel ARC Graphics Copilot+ PC: No Memory: 16GB 5600MT/s DDR5 SSD: 1 TB Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.4 + WiFi 7 I never got a chance to review the IT13 MAX, but I did review the GEEKOM X14 Pro which has comparable specifications if you want to get an idea of the IT13 MAX's capabilities. In any case this is what GEEKOM has to say about this variant: GEEKOM IT13 MAX [Intel U9 185H, 16GB+2TB] for $764 —was $899 (15% off) Check out other US and UK deals too These are just a sample of discounts in GEEKOM's Prime Day Sale, you can check out the entire line up, which include more Intel and AMD mini PCs, discounted at up to 30% off, which was more than the recent Spring Sale they ran earlier this year. You can check out the entire lineup of Prime Day deals on the dedicated GEEKOM store page at Amazon in the following regions: Amazon US GEEKOM Prime Day Sales (up to 30% off) Amazon UK GEEKOM Prime Day Sales (up to 30% off) What's more, all products from GEEKOM receive a 3-year free Warranty from the date you receive the product. If needed, you can RMA or return locally relative to your region (the U.S. has a U.S. warehouse, mainland E.U. has a German warehouse, U.K. has a U.K. warehouse, Australia has an AU warehouse). To recap, here are all of the above mentioned deals, available on Amazon US. GEEKOM A5 [Ryzen 5 7430U, 16GB+512GB] for $371 —was $439 (15% off) GEEKOM A6 [Ryzen 7 6800H, 16GB+1TB] for $524 —was $649 (19% off) GEEKOM A7 MAX [Ryzen 9 7940HS, 16GB+1TB] for $594 —was $699 (15% off) GEEKOM A9 MAX [Ryzen AI 9 470 HX, 32GB+2TB] for $1,444 —was $1,699 (19.72% off) GEEKOM IT13 MAX [Intel U9 185H, 16GB+2TB] for $764 —was $899 (15% off) Please be aware that the above promotional discounts expire on June 26 Between June 23 - 26 it's Prime Day week on Amazon, click here to check out all the deals. As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      487
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      204
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      94
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      91
    5. 5
      neufuse
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!