I'm trying to improve my internet at home. My design goal is "better" and to that end I've replaced my consumer router with a TP-Link 6210 and a three-pack of ubiquiti APs. I bought a monoprice unmanaged gigabit switch and I'm in the process of pulling CAT-6 all over the place.
I'm not entirely happy with the TP-Link router. One problem is the complete lack of data provided--see my other post for my complaints on this--such as per-IP data use graphs, for example.
I just read somewhere that this router supports only 32 "virtual servers" which is what they call port forwarding. I just got it and I'm using over half of that already.
Finally, the only way the UniFi access points identify "guests" is by assigning them a VLAN tag. The TP-Link router doesn't know anything about VLAN tags, only port-based VLANs. On my old router, guests were on a separate subnet so I could graph that traffic separately. No way to do that now.
I guess what I want is a router with consumer features (pretty graphs) but enterprise speed and reliability. My budget is probably obvious from TP-Link (just above $200) but I'd spend up to $300 if necessary.
It's really hard to discover if routers support VLAN tags - many of the data sheets say "VLAN.... yes." but that may be port-based like the TP-Link.
The router I bought has gigabit ports, but I guess I don't need that? -- I've got a gigabit switch that handles in-network connections.
The router I bought has dual-WAN which I'm not using, but I thought "might be nice someday"
The router I bought has extensive VPN capabilities which I don't plan to use.
The router I bought is rack mounted which I like.
Sorry it's so long! I've got a few weeks during which I can return the TP-Link to Amazon. Should I?
Thanks!
I'm not entirely happy with the TP-Link router. One problem is the complete lack of data provided--see my other post for my complaints on this--such as per-IP data use graphs, for example.
I just read somewhere that this router supports only 32 "virtual servers" which is what they call port forwarding. I just got it and I'm using over half of that already.
Finally, the only way the UniFi access points identify "guests" is by assigning them a VLAN tag. The TP-Link router doesn't know anything about VLAN tags, only port-based VLANs. On my old router, guests were on a separate subnet so I could graph that traffic separately. No way to do that now.
I guess what I want is a router with consumer features (pretty graphs) but enterprise speed and reliability. My budget is probably obvious from TP-Link (just above $200) but I'd spend up to $300 if necessary.
It's really hard to discover if routers support VLAN tags - many of the data sheets say "VLAN.... yes." but that may be port-based like the TP-Link.
The router I bought has gigabit ports, but I guess I don't need that? -- I've got a gigabit switch that handles in-network connections.
The router I bought has dual-WAN which I'm not using, but I thought "might be nice someday"
The router I bought has extensive VPN capabilities which I don't plan to use.
The router I bought is rack mounted which I like.
Sorry it's so long! I've got a few weeks during which I can return the TP-Link to Amazon. Should I?
Thanks!