Hello
Is the (asus rt- acrh 13 ac 1300 ) excellent router to buy ? I want to buy it ? please advise me
I have some questions about the router :-
1- Can the router cover 3000 sq feet home?
2- Does it support Asuswrt-Merlin
3- Is the antenna removable ?
View attachment 20445
1- Can the router cover 3000 sq feet home?
2- Does it support Asuswrt-Merlin
3- Is the antenna removable ?
1 - No
2 - No
3 - No
Sorry, it's a budget oriented and region specific router from 2016.
The updated version is RT-ACRH17 and you already asked similar questions about it:
https://www.snbforums.com/threads/is-asus-rt-acrh17-router-good-to-buy.60598/#post-532773
Yes I still search
Your router choices are significantly limited by the idea to use 12V power bank as backup power supply. Also, your home in your country is probably built from bricks/stone/concrete materials and even high-end expensive routers may struggle to cover the entire 3000 sqf area.
Please search on your own, there are many different ones to buy, it has been only a fast search example!
And before you need to know which router for its specs (voltage/ampere/connection-plug)!!!
Yes you are 100% right . 12V power bank is killing my choices.
If the quality is same like their sinus I would give it a wide berth.BESTEK 300W Sine Wave Power Inverter
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07KQ4Q2L5/?tag=snbforums-20
If the quality is same like their sinus I would give it a wide berth.
I believe you are going in a wrong direction by trying to solve per-device power needs. In a long run it is going to cost you a lot of money and the reliability will be low. Cheap power banks from unknown manufacturers, drained and recharged often, won't last for very long. You may have to replace them again and again every 12-18 months, if not more often. Also, advertised battery capacity on no-name power banks is always far from reality. You'll be happy to get 2/3 of that advertised capacity.
I would approach the problem differently:
1. 72Ah or up car battery (available, replaceable, will work for >2 years with no issues)
2. 220V automatic trickle charger (to charge the battery and maintain the charge after)
3. 200W power inverter 12V to 220V (to power small electronics and even LED lights)
Your one time initial investment is (2) and (3). Your recurring cost every few years is (1). What you get is basically high-capacity UPS that can keep alive all your small electronics for few hours. There will be power loss in power conversion, but all you have to replace eventually is the battery and you get the convenience to power any current and future devices you may have.
If you lose power very often though and for extended periods of time, no power backup system will work reliably. Batteries need time to recharge, no matter what type they are. The faster the charge/discharge cycles, the lower the life expectancy of the battery.
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