that's weird that you say it's 8 years old, when I got it it was only 2 years ago and ti was brand new at the time.its prob age related , the n16 after all its going on nearly 8 years by now , might be time to retire the old dog and get a new one , most support for the n16 is long gone and even merlin has given up on it
see
https://www.snbforums.com/threads/end-of-the-road-for-the-rt-n16.22959/
It was released in 2009.that's weird that you say it's 8 years old, when I got it it was only 2 years ago and ti was brand new at the time.
that's weird that you say it's 8 years old, when I got it it was only 2 years ago and ti was brand new at the time.
I wish that they'd make the release date simpler the thing was still pretty expensive to me and at ~85USD I think I payed for it I cant' beleive it was already 5 years old at the time. I am just shocked at that, it was bought Aug of 2014 and I guess 2.5yrs is probably good for it.It was released in 2009.
Asus was still supporting it when I bough it, I made sure to contact them to see if the firmware was still getting updates and it was and customer service people told me that the warranty/after pruchase support was still going strong. Admittedly that's 2.5yrs ago. Oh well then I gues Ihave to get a new one.yes i see you can still buy them new in the states but they have been long gone from my part of the world and asus gave up supporting them quite some time ago , its got pretty low specs for a router for todays usage , its prob time you moved into the world of wireless AC
how can Itell if this capacitor is really popped? I looked at the picture on the openwrtr forums and it lookd to be AOK I alreayd replaced capacitors in my orignal xbox thankfully they hadn't fully exploded yet.I bet if you open it up, you'll see a bulging capacitor. The rt-n16 is notorious for this.
guess 2.5yrs is probably good for it.
So needing AC is going to be at least 5+yrs from now.
router that supports openwrt
doesn't support packages
how can Itell if this capacitor is really popped? I looked at the picture on the openwrtr forums and it lookd to be AOK I alreayd replaced capacitors in my orignal xbox thankfully they hadn't fully exploded yet.
it's a text editor asin editing config files like the hosts file to move aroundentries etc. merlinwrt _only_ comes with vi which is god wful assbackwards thing the only one more needlessly complex is emacs. Merlinwrt only lets yuo install packagse if you set up the thing with a USB device which is crazy as I _only_ want one package and it won't let me do that.yer most routers today only last a few years , if you get to 3 years 24/7 on your doing pretty good anyway
tim did a really good article on the benefits of wireless AC over wireless N ever for wireless N clients , worth reading
https://www.smallnetbuilder.com/wir...oes-an-ac-router-improve-n-device-performance
openwrt doesnt give much benefit to new routers these days and in fact the drivers arnt that good for the wifi
not sure what nano does but the newer ac routers have pretty much anything anyone could need feature wise
my biggest issue with merlinwrt is that the default editor is vi and it doesn't support packages which
It doesn't supprot packages without adding an external USB device hence I am not wrong. Also "For months" doesn't mean on my device RT-N16 only has vi so how am I to know that nano is now part of it? My device was EOLed.Incorrect on both counts. Nano has been part of the firmware for months now, and Entware-NG packages have been supported for years.
Not fully truth: You can still use John's "[Fork] Asuswrt-Merlin 374.43 LTS releases" and even newer "unofficial" releases still support the N16.Also "For months" doesn't mean on my device RT-N16 only has vi so how am I to know that nano is now part of it? My device was EOLed.
Edit: I also stopped reading the changelgo once my router went EOL so whatever release that was I think 378.x or something was when it was officially killed.
The AC87U is still supported by Merlin and others as well! I just installed Merlin's .65 release on my AC87U device.Also getting the rt-87u seems to be from that original link when it was EOLed to be one of the newer SDKs...
Today's USB thumb drives are very small (at least the once up to 32 GByte) and do not make any difference compared to the internal sdcard.I would've liked the idea of an itnernal micro-sd card from n66u but since that's so old at this time I'd barely be buying myself any time at all.
so old at this time I'd barely be buying myself any time at all.
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