Liquidretro
New Around Here
I currently have a WISP (Wireless ISP) that is giving me some troubles, but I also think some of my troubles might be router related too. I have some testing via wired, and directly the POE injector and found some differences but not a ton. I have a Asus RT-N16 that’s a little over 5 years old and has been running a build of the Shibby Tomato firmware forever. It’s generally pretty reliable but wireless performance has never been great, especially when streaming video. I have tried tweaking settings and had it to the point of mostly working. However after 5 years and what seems like an increasing amount of trouble I am about ready to throw in the towel and replace the hardware and relocate it a bit by moving it to a little more central location in the basement.
I mostly have 2.4ghz devices right now, and a rough estimate is under 10 wifi devices most days in a ranch style house approximately 1800sq ft. I have a couple of 5ghz AC devices and will probably add more once I have a router that supports it.
My list of want’s for the new router is improved wireless performance. 5ghz in my neighborhood is not being used from a scan with my phone, so having that is a plus at least for the devices that can use it. Improved 2.4ghz is important too. I would also like to setup a VPN server on the router for when I travel. I don’t plan to use it a lot but it would be good to have on hotel wifi etc. So a dynamicDNS like service on it would be good too since my IP will change periodically. USB Support is probably good but not critical. I should probably mess with this some on a new router with decent performance. 3rd party firmware support is a plus for me. While I generally don’t use all the extra features its nice to have, and the security tends to be better it seems.
So what I have been looking at.
Asus AC68u (Or P Variant)
Right now the refurbished version of this router is on sale for $120 for the P variant. This is a good deal as it’s normally $180. Not a huge fan of refurbished but for the savings ok. Performance for the price this one might be too hard to pass up.http://www.newegg.com/Product/Pro...228&cm_sp=
This router ranks favorably all over, especially over at here at SNB in the AC1900 category http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/to...900/rev8/6 3rd party firmware of various flavors is available and seems to work well. Router has beamforming although most tests of the technology says it doesn’t matter much.
TP-Link Archer C7,C8,C9
Money is about the same but for a new router. The Wirecutter loves the C7 as it’s their top pick. SNB is not a huge fan of the C9. It’s performance just was not as good as it’s peers. http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/wi...ed?start=2 For the C9 it doesn’t look like 3rd party firmware is as good, C7 has pretty good support and seems to be the crowd favorite for the under $100 price range.
The Google Router
It’s expensive but it’s features look tempting. Lack of lan ports while frustrating is easy to fix with a switch. Hard to jump on board with nothing being tested much yet.
Thoughts/comments/other suggestions?
I mostly have 2.4ghz devices right now, and a rough estimate is under 10 wifi devices most days in a ranch style house approximately 1800sq ft. I have a couple of 5ghz AC devices and will probably add more once I have a router that supports it.
My list of want’s for the new router is improved wireless performance. 5ghz in my neighborhood is not being used from a scan with my phone, so having that is a plus at least for the devices that can use it. Improved 2.4ghz is important too. I would also like to setup a VPN server on the router for when I travel. I don’t plan to use it a lot but it would be good to have on hotel wifi etc. So a dynamicDNS like service on it would be good too since my IP will change periodically. USB Support is probably good but not critical. I should probably mess with this some on a new router with decent performance. 3rd party firmware support is a plus for me. While I generally don’t use all the extra features its nice to have, and the security tends to be better it seems.
So what I have been looking at.
Asus AC68u (Or P Variant)
Right now the refurbished version of this router is on sale for $120 for the P variant. This is a good deal as it’s normally $180. Not a huge fan of refurbished but for the savings ok. Performance for the price this one might be too hard to pass up.http://www.newegg.com/Product/Pro...228&cm_sp=
This router ranks favorably all over, especially over at here at SNB in the AC1900 category http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/to...900/rev8/6 3rd party firmware of various flavors is available and seems to work well. Router has beamforming although most tests of the technology says it doesn’t matter much.
TP-Link Archer C7,C8,C9
Money is about the same but for a new router. The Wirecutter loves the C7 as it’s their top pick. SNB is not a huge fan of the C9. It’s performance just was not as good as it’s peers. http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/wi...ed?start=2 For the C9 it doesn’t look like 3rd party firmware is as good, C7 has pretty good support and seems to be the crowd favorite for the under $100 price range.
The Google Router
It’s expensive but it’s features look tempting. Lack of lan ports while frustrating is easy to fix with a switch. Hard to jump on board with nothing being tested much yet.
Thoughts/comments/other suggestions?