kingoffools13
New Around Here
this is gonna be long so I appreciate even skimming this and giving me some info. I have wasted a ton of time and gotten nowhere.
my needs: I am in the process of setting up a smart home (so lots of wifi/ IOT devices (currently 40-50 but would like to get more depending on how this goes)
want future proof wifi 6 if possible
have gigabit internet want the full speed I can milk out of that
I do a lot of streaming and file transfer across the network over cat6
I am coming from an Asus rt3200. it worked great for everything except I believe a firmware update killed my 2.4ghz wifi (and reviews on amazon confirm it isn't just me) and merlin no longer supports so I couldn't try going the 3rd party route.
I spent over a month researching and trying to contact Asus (no customer support) and finally gave up and caved in and bought a new router.
currently, I picked up a tp-link archer ax11000 from Costco got it on sale it was a steal normally in the 400+ range I think. it does connect, and for certain sources, my hardline connections sorta get close to the max speeds I was getting before but just an approach they never get there, and they have a sluggish start. both 2.4 and 5ghz wifi are very sluggish. local network transfers are slow. speed tests on the router itself cant get above 80mbps when I have gigabit FiOS but my hardline computer gets close to the full speed. with certain servers. I have updated to the most recent firmware and nothing seems to help, customer support for tp-link is almost nonexistent as well.
is there an out of the box router that just goes? trustworthy? will just work with 50-100 devices? gets full use of gigabit speed. isn't sluggish? doesn't limit everything with QOS you can't turn off. I'm sick of routers that get in their own way and then customer support that is non-existent and quite frankly doesn't speak the same language.
I was looking at:
asus ax6100
or
asus rt-ax88u
I kinda wanted the tri-band set up so I could pick and choose what connected to what but I honestly don't know if that really matters for speed/congestion or if I should focus on more ram/CPU power
my needs: I am in the process of setting up a smart home (so lots of wifi/ IOT devices (currently 40-50 but would like to get more depending on how this goes)
want future proof wifi 6 if possible
have gigabit internet want the full speed I can milk out of that
I do a lot of streaming and file transfer across the network over cat6
I am coming from an Asus rt3200. it worked great for everything except I believe a firmware update killed my 2.4ghz wifi (and reviews on amazon confirm it isn't just me) and merlin no longer supports so I couldn't try going the 3rd party route.
I spent over a month researching and trying to contact Asus (no customer support) and finally gave up and caved in and bought a new router.
currently, I picked up a tp-link archer ax11000 from Costco got it on sale it was a steal normally in the 400+ range I think. it does connect, and for certain sources, my hardline connections sorta get close to the max speeds I was getting before but just an approach they never get there, and they have a sluggish start. both 2.4 and 5ghz wifi are very sluggish. local network transfers are slow. speed tests on the router itself cant get above 80mbps when I have gigabit FiOS but my hardline computer gets close to the full speed. with certain servers. I have updated to the most recent firmware and nothing seems to help, customer support for tp-link is almost nonexistent as well.
is there an out of the box router that just goes? trustworthy? will just work with 50-100 devices? gets full use of gigabit speed. isn't sluggish? doesn't limit everything with QOS you can't turn off. I'm sick of routers that get in their own way and then customer support that is non-existent and quite frankly doesn't speak the same language.
I was looking at:
asus ax6100
or
asus rt-ax88u
I kinda wanted the tri-band set up so I could pick and choose what connected to what but I honestly don't know if that really matters for speed/congestion or if I should focus on more ram/CPU power