With Standing units you have to get creative with zip ties to mount fans on the back of the unit.
Are you using static IPs assigned by the router? If so it is possible that the DHCP server assigned the device an IP from the pool before the static IP was assigned. Once the DHCP from the pool expires the device will only have a single IP associated with the MAC address.If you have a dual boot environment you can get this "2 clients" flag. Two different operating systems on the same MAC address (presumably also the same IP).
Are you using static IPs assigned by the router? If so it is possible that the DHCP server assigned the device an IP from the pool before the static IP was assigned. Once the DHCP from the pool expires the device will only have a single IP associated with the MAC address.
To view power options:
Code:pwr help
To lower CPU temp:
Code:pwr config --cpuwait on
To go back to same CPU temp:
Code:pwr config --cpuwait off
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Love these flat routers just for this reason with the ventilation at the bottom of the router and the cooling pad blowing air right up into the router that is an nice drop in temps
Which kind of issues?Before adding an AC86 to the mix check the year that it was manufactured. The 2019 model year may have solved the issues some people have with the 2018 model year.
I'm getting myself an AX88U for Black Friday to replace my perfectly functional AC88U.FWIW, Asus Store selling the RT-AX88U $299.99, free shipping in the US. 9/9/19
https://store.asus.com/us/search?q=rt ax88&s_c=1
I suspect Amazon may lower it to $279.00 or so as Black Friday/November sales approach, as I think it sold at that price briefly at the end of July 2019
In recent years ASUS went overboard with those "gamer" oriented products with alien creature look.
It's like once you drive a V8 there's no going back to 4-cylinder engines.
Search this forum and also read the numerous unfavorable reviews on Amazon. Reviewers gave this router a much higher percentage unfavorable ratings than to other router models.Which kind of issues?
This seems to me to be superficial. My 87U feeds three backbones to three 8 port 1G switches, and moving to 10G would be a huge effort and expense, particularly since none of my end points are at 10G. Of more interest to me would be that the 86U, ac88 and ax88 all have different ethernet and switch chips (the ac88 using a realtek), and how they handle feeding traffic from different end points to other end points could be a bottleneck, if we are at the point where bottlenecks exist. That might help me decide which is the better upgrade.Consequently, in a wired-to-wireless connection, the router's LAN ports are the bottlenecks."
This seems to me to be superficial. My 87U feeds three backbones to three 8 port 1G switches, and moving to 10G would be a huge effort and expense, particularly since none of my end points are at 10G. Of more interest to me would be that the 86U, ac88 and ax88 all have different ethernet and switch chips (the ac88 using a realtek), and how they handle feeding traffic from different end points to other end points could be a bottleneck, if we are at the point where bottlenecks exist. That might help me decide which is the better upgrade.
Because people don't know what they are doing. I bough two open box AX88U routers on Amazon at highly reduced prices and both work perfectly fine. Not a single problem in my environment and I have many scripts running plus OpenVPN. Understand what every function does and what all the settings are for and you'll be fine.Search this forum and also read the numerous unfavorable reviews on Amazon. Reviewers gave this router a much higher percentage unfavorable ratings than to other router models.
I bough two open box AX88U routers on Amazon at highly reduced prices and both work perfectly fine.
No, I use the MAC address clone with the same MAC address for years to connect to my ISP's modem.Aren't you concerned somebody (original purchaser) may have the MAC address and serial number of your routers?
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Aren't you concerned somebody (original purchaser) may have the MAC address and serial number of your routers?
Because people don't know what they are doing. I bough two open box AX88U routers on Amazon at highly reduced prices and both work perfectly fine. Not a single problem in my environment and I have many scripts running plus OpenVPN. Understand what every function does and what all the settings are for and you'll be fine.
That's certainly true for the AC86U. I had one before the AX88U and I had several issues with that router as well and it was new and not an open box sale. FYI open box products are not the same as refurbished devices.That may be the case with a portion of the reviews for any router but the AC86 is a "special" case. One of the most common issues noted is that the 2.4 Ghz radio stops working or is stuck on channel 0. Even the greenest NOOB can figure that out. Also many of the reviews for the AC86 were submitted by what could be considered ASUS fanboys.
I had to purchase a refurbished AC1900P from Amazon to use while my AC86 has been in RMA and it has worked fine but I strongly recommend that nobody purchase a refurbished AC86 as whomever refurbishes them has no way or doesn't thoroughly test them so defective routers are shipped to customers. I have received four routers as RMA units and none of them were stable for more than a couple of days if they even worked out of the box. My experience isn't unique, just read some of the hundreds of unfavorable reviews on Amazon or search this forum for AC86 owners who have issues.
Understand what every function does and what all the settings are for and you'll be fine.
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