Gary B. Garland
Occasional Visitor
Hi all,
my first post - yippie!
I saw Tim's article about the 2 WiFi 6 routers he checked out in December, 2018 - lots of goodness there.
I have gone through routers over the years, and my last few have more or less been Netgear. My Nighthawk R7000 is wonky - not I'm not sure if it's the firmware or capacitors aging or what - I may have bought it 5 years ago, I just don't remember - the coverage is fine, just behavior.
If my R7000 is dying, as I THINK it is, then I need a new home router pretty soon. I would like similar coverage (at least) which reaches our pool area.
My kids stream (can you say fortnite?) and we stream netflix on some fire sticks, etc.
Yeah, there are no .ax devices out there - and i suppose my next ipad will have it, but otherwise i don't see us adopting ax anytime soon.
I'm jonesing at the Netgear Imperial shuttle router, just looks incredible - but the Asus seems compelling. I was going to wait for the Netgear ax12 to come out (but when) - I'd like to futureproof a while so i don't have to muck with the setup - but if there's better value routers now, maybe i should do that and then buy an ax router in a couple of years.
for those willing to still read - the netgear forums abound with folks complaining about the firmware. my first negative experience was years ago when the thing soft of dropped off - the firmware was introduced to take care of a memory leak.
Now, i have intermittent dropoffs, even after changing the channels to "empty" channels. We keep losing our nest (thermostats, cameras, etc.) and even my ipad loses connectivity - not just internet, but the wifi signal disappears. I'm convinced it's the router - i just don't know if a firmware downgrade might help, or as mentioned, it's hardware based. it doesn't support MU-MIMO so i figured i'd just "buy the best, cry once" but if there are compelling reasons to not get an .ax router i'm very easily convinced. Otherwise, if folks think Netgear is a bit asleep at the switch i'd just get the Asus and call it a day.
sorry to be so long winded, and i know a router choice can be subjective - for me, i'd like range and stability - i MIGHT set up QoS, etc. but basically, i just want the thing to work.
thanks for reading this far!
my first post - yippie!
I saw Tim's article about the 2 WiFi 6 routers he checked out in December, 2018 - lots of goodness there.
I have gone through routers over the years, and my last few have more or less been Netgear. My Nighthawk R7000 is wonky - not I'm not sure if it's the firmware or capacitors aging or what - I may have bought it 5 years ago, I just don't remember - the coverage is fine, just behavior.
If my R7000 is dying, as I THINK it is, then I need a new home router pretty soon. I would like similar coverage (at least) which reaches our pool area.
My kids stream (can you say fortnite?) and we stream netflix on some fire sticks, etc.
Yeah, there are no .ax devices out there - and i suppose my next ipad will have it, but otherwise i don't see us adopting ax anytime soon.
I'm jonesing at the Netgear Imperial shuttle router, just looks incredible - but the Asus seems compelling. I was going to wait for the Netgear ax12 to come out (but when) - I'd like to futureproof a while so i don't have to muck with the setup - but if there's better value routers now, maybe i should do that and then buy an ax router in a couple of years.
for those willing to still read - the netgear forums abound with folks complaining about the firmware. my first negative experience was years ago when the thing soft of dropped off - the firmware was introduced to take care of a memory leak.
Now, i have intermittent dropoffs, even after changing the channels to "empty" channels. We keep losing our nest (thermostats, cameras, etc.) and even my ipad loses connectivity - not just internet, but the wifi signal disappears. I'm convinced it's the router - i just don't know if a firmware downgrade might help, or as mentioned, it's hardware based. it doesn't support MU-MIMO so i figured i'd just "buy the best, cry once" but if there are compelling reasons to not get an .ax router i'm very easily convinced. Otherwise, if folks think Netgear is a bit asleep at the switch i'd just get the Asus and call it a day.
sorry to be so long winded, and i know a router choice can be subjective - for me, i'd like range and stability - i MIGHT set up QoS, etc. but basically, i just want the thing to work.
thanks for reading this far!