OneFingeredFist
Occasional Visitor
ordered the BE98 yesterday and was wondering if I'll notice some big differences?
You might want to read thru this thread:I’m sure I have some WiFi 6 devices like iPad, iPhone and PC.
How much you think it should cost? Wi-Fi 6E devices are expensive too, and this one has 4 bands and is a new standard. Pretty sure I've seen both Merlin and Dong say there's nothing coming in wifi 7 that these devices don't already have. It's not like past situations where updated hardware will be needed.What devices you have doesn't matter. This BE98 router is an overpriced pre-release Wi-Fi 7 product.
How much you think it should cost?
devices I have connected by ethernet to the nodes get full gigabit speeds now
I did not ask about the value for a specific person. You have to pay for what something can do, not what the value is to you. Now you can say it has no value to you or it's not worth the price to you. Overpriced would mean it cost more than it should for what it can do. A Corvette is 100k, but if someone just drives it back and forth to work only going the speed limit, it's now worth the same price as a Toyota Camry? No. Now it might not be worth it for someone to spend that much then, but that's a personal decision. It doesn't mean Corvettes are overpriced. Compare them to other high end vehicles and price per performance actually is probably better.How much of a value this router brings to someone with few Wi-Fi 6 devices including a tablet and a phone?
The same with AiMesh with 2x RT-AC86U routers released in 2017. Link speed >2Gbps and full Gigabit on the node LAN ports.
You have to pay for what something can do
The range I get for my backhaul is about the same as the 5ghz. It's actually better performance for me on the 6 vs 5. I've tried both. I just can't do 5ghz backhaul because I live like 5 min from an airport and it was intermittently wreaking havoc for me.I personally don't pay for specifications on paper. This router is useless with no clients. This router is also not compliant to all Wi-Fi 7 specifications. It's a draft product rushed to the consumer market with users as beta testers. I would also never purchase 4x beta Asus products to use in AiMesh with shorter range 6GHz wireless backhaul. I would invest in Ethernet infrastructure instead and use business class APs for Wi-Fi. This is exactly what I did for my home. The price is about the same to what you have paid, but with VLAN capable Netgate x86 hardware firewall, Netgear 16-port PoE switch and VLAN capable PoE Ruckus Wi-Fi 6 APs. This is what I find better value for the money.
I just can't do 5ghz backhaul because I live like 5 min from an airport and it was intermittently wreaking havoc for me.
That's what I would think. I know every time I've upgraded, I've gotten better performance. The first time that I don't, I'll just return the equipment.I had a rog 16000axe that I felt the 5ghz channels actually provided higher speeds than the ac5300 did at the same distance. Is that just better hardware? I sent it back when ASUS announced the WiFi 7 early last year
I know every time I've upgraded, I've gotten better performance.
This makes sense. Well, I think I've finally reached the performance level I need so hopefully no more upgrades for me any time soon.This is because home routers have weak good enough for the application and release time CPUs and the newer routers come with a better one. I have an x86 hardware firewall with 4-core Intel CPU and 4GB RAM and my existing AC clients work exactly the same way with AC and AX class access points. In both cases I get the maximum from AC.
AC is limited to WPA 2.
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