The GT-AX6000 also has it. In the UK recently Amazon had that on sale for £70 cheaper than the RT-AX88U Pro. So worth looking at prices for both.And the cheapest way to get to use 5.0 of the firmware is the get a Asus RT-AX88U Pro correct?
Ok, but the GT-AX6000 is a bit older and will maybe lose support a couple years earlier then the AX88U Pro I guess. Prices are a bit higher (20% or so) for the AX88U Pro here in NorwayThe GT-AX6000 also has it. In the UK recently Amazon had that on sale for £70 cheaper than the RT-AX88U Pro. So worth looking at prices for both.
No, that's the RT-AX86U Pro.And the cheapest way to get to use 5.0 of the firmware is the get a Asus RT-AX88U Pro correct?
Ok, but the GT-AX6000 is a bit older and will maybe lose support a couple years earlier then the AX88U Pro I guess. Prices are a bit higher (20% or so) for the AX88U Pro here in Norway
Range on the 6ghz band needs help , it is great from 20 or 30 feet takes no time to transfer 20 gb of files wireless if I'm in rangeOne good reason to wait also is to let the newer router mature with their firmware. And then once you have wifi 7 clients go ahead and upgrade. Most newer routers i would give minimum 1-2 years to let asus release firmware updates. The be98 pro has been pretty lacking in firmware updates but that's not a surprise as asus is working on a new firmware across many new routers in the same time apparently.
One plus i do like about the newer routers is the 6ghz band and with afc about to be most likely turned on in next coming firmware (remains to be seen) it should help get better range with the 6ghz band. And that's if its not client dependent so not sure. But yeah most of my friends and relatives use a wifi 5 router still and they are ok.
You are talking about US location in older posts. Test the connection with your existing router on 5GHz higher range channels. They are close to 5.8GHz. If you get -60dBm of better signal to your client behind the walls - you have a chance. If you get -70dBm or worse - unlikely to get Gigabit speeds.
is quite crowded with 5 GHz
I can get 480-580Mbps to 2-stream AC-client in a condo with multiple 5GHz networks around. Not sure if the cost of new router justifies the eventual speed increase to few clients only. Your choice, I wouldn't bother. You perhaps don't need >Gigabit speeds all the time either.
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