Moving my home office from the 1st floor to a 3rd floor finished loft prompted me to upgrade my router after 6+ years of faithful service from my R7000. I have AT&T gigabit service and the home has structured ethernet wiring (unfortunately only Cat5e). While the R7000 provided excellent coverage (even on 5Ghz) for 2 floors of my small footprint home, I thought I'd need to switch to a mesh setup and put a node on the 3rd-floor. I did a ton of research on the various mesh router options, and initially I wanted to buy 2 AX86Us to connect via AiMesh. Unfortunately, I couldn't find them in stock, but I did find a slightly discounted AX92u bundle. The initial reviews left me skeptical, but then I saw the updated DongKnows review and decided to give it a go. I'm glad I did! Out of the box, the router was a cinch to setup with IP passthrough from the Arris fiber gateway. After a quick firmware update, I was ready to pair it with the 2nd router/AiMesh node. There were a few settings I needed to change to set it up for wired Ethernet backhaul, but it was pretty simple.
I've had it setup for a week, and I've had zero issues with the current stable firmware. No resets (my R7000 required 3-4 resets every week) and speeds are stable. I'm using a single SSID in tri-band smart connect and didn't change any of the default settings, and so far it's doing a good job of matching clients to the right band and optimizing client/node distribution (between laptops, tablets, phones, thermostats, streaming devices, assistants, smart home stuff I have 26+ clients.) One interesting note--I thought the 5Ghz-2 band was WiFi 6 exclusively, but my laptop's 7265ac adapter regularly connects via the 5GHz-2 band. I'm regularly pulling between 400-500mbps speedtests off an 866mbps link rate.
That brings me to my question--why is there so little love for this router? I understand its primarily sold in a mesh kit (hence no Merlin love) but based on features/specs this combo delivers an unbeatable value. For under $350, you're getting a tri-band mesh with 6100mbps of headroom--similar setups go for $450 or more (heck look at Asus' own XT8!) I get that my use case is very specific and not everyone can take advantage of wired backhaul, but I think the AX92U provides a great mesh setup regardless.
I've had it setup for a week, and I've had zero issues with the current stable firmware. No resets (my R7000 required 3-4 resets every week) and speeds are stable. I'm using a single SSID in tri-band smart connect and didn't change any of the default settings, and so far it's doing a good job of matching clients to the right band and optimizing client/node distribution (between laptops, tablets, phones, thermostats, streaming devices, assistants, smart home stuff I have 26+ clients.) One interesting note--I thought the 5Ghz-2 band was WiFi 6 exclusively, but my laptop's 7265ac adapter regularly connects via the 5GHz-2 band. I'm regularly pulling between 400-500mbps speedtests off an 866mbps link rate.
That brings me to my question--why is there so little love for this router? I understand its primarily sold in a mesh kit (hence no Merlin love) but based on features/specs this combo delivers an unbeatable value. For under $350, you're getting a tri-band mesh with 6100mbps of headroom--similar setups go for $450 or more (heck look at Asus' own XT8!) I get that my use case is very specific and not everyone can take advantage of wired backhaul, but I think the AX92U provides a great mesh setup regardless.