megabyzus
Occasional Visitor
I'm sure your constant complaining will really help the ASUS support presence on the forum.
What support presence? I don't see anything meaningful on this thread.
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I'm sure your constant complaining will really help the ASUS support presence on the forum.
It would be great if you could take on the rest of the networking and telephone equipment industry that has "jack size problems" with the same level of dedication and bravado. It seems to be long time problem rampant among companies selling consumer networking and telephone communications equipment.
For example I have a Linksys 4200v1 router I bought a two years ago that has a design flaw where the RJ-45 jacks that have a fit so tight that some of my regular Cat 5e cables get stuck to the point where I almost feel like I am going to break the router when I try to remove them and I can't even plug some of my standard Cat 6 Ethernet cables into it. Many owners and professional reviews complained to Cisco/Linksys about this problem with what was at the time their consumer grade flagship router. Cisco was aware of the problem but they continued to sell their top of the line consumer router with that design flaw. They couldn't even offer a replacement to consumers for that model at the time. I am not sure if they corrected the design flaw until the next v2 model came out a year later.
I have run across similar what you would call "critical design flaws" with phones, cordless phones, external and internal fax modems and fax machines for decades where the RJ-11 jacks seemed to be "out of spec" by being either too loose or too tight. Jacks that were too loose were never as much as a problem as jacks that were too tight. I broke off the plastic clip ends on the jacks of many phone cords trying to remove them them from similarly "critically flawed" phone equipment with RJ-11 jacks that were "too tight". The loose RJ-11 jacks usually could be bent slightly upward to make the connections normal.
Since these "too loose or too tight jack problems" have been going on for many decades maybe your extreme passion for this quest can effect worldwide industry wide change for network, telephone and computer manufacturers using RJ-45 and RJ-11 jacks in their products.
Considering my experience and enormous inconvenience caused, I don't believe ASUS is taking this seriously at all..
On a less serious note... After purchasing so many of these routers and returning so many of them ... if your replacement router for the one that you traded in to Asus ends up having normal working jacks you could call it the "Jack of all trades".
Asus just called me and told me that they are sending Megabyzus 3 new AC routers free of charge because of the terrible inconvenience. lol
......
Thanks for the lengthy explanation. However, I do not see what you said has any bearing on this conversation. Yes, various vendors and manufacturers make flawed things every once in a while. I think we all know that. I can also see a networking vendor looking away on tight jacks. But I can't see that for loose jacks. There isn't any equivalence. Loose jacks means DISCONNECTIONS.
Nevertheless, if you have any examples of other critical NETWORKING routers (I'm not talking about RJ 11's or anything else) with loose jacks, where this has been a COMMON PROBLEM, please share.
And finally, this subject isn't only about ASUS acknowledging this problem. It's also about how they are currently addressing it and assuaging considerable customer inconvenience. Obviously they have done little in regard to the latter.
Considering my experience and enormous inconvenience caused, I don't believe ASUS is taking this seriously at all..
For a perspective using a recent example... I have a friend who told me he had to deal with a repair/return of his less than year old $2600+ Apple iMac computer because of a bad run of internal hard drives that were crashing in many thousands of computers world wide. Luckily he had backed up his system using Time Machine but he lost all data on the drive after the crash and not long afterwards Apple issued a worldwide recall on that top of the line model iMac's that just happened to have that one run of hard drives that were flawed.
It was a major inconvenience for many thousands of that model of effected iMac owners who had to take their machines in for warranty repairs while their consumers wait for a week, two weeks or more for their repaired computers. It really wasn't Apples fault and their wasn't much they could do after those computers with the flawed parts ended up in the inventories. Apple did finally acknowledge the serious flaw involving their parts supplier and they took care of the problem by replacing the drives.
My guess is that in another month or two Asus will have sent out replacements to it's effected consumers and hopefully the problem with that particular run parts for Ethernet ports will have been tested and replaced on their manufacturing lines and hopefully you will be posting here about how happy you are with the performance and reliability of your RT-N66U replacement router from Asus.
Looks like Megabyzus will have 2 routers for sale. Any buyers ??
It would've much better if they had call ME!
I have an iMac, and am aware of that issue. It didn't affect mine. However, I've had other issues with my Apple devices during their lifetimes. Apple's response has been universally immaculate. I wish ASUS were like Apple.
Although my wishes and your guesses are nice, at the end, here we are TODAY: ASUS' response has been awful.
ASUS is no Apple.
I have a Mac and it's great but from my positive experience with the RT-N66U I will stick with Asus routers in the foreseeable future.
But if you are a big fan of Apple you do have other options....
http://www.apple.com/airport-extreme/
Dude, it's pretty obvious you are making this big of a stink in hopes that Asus will give you a free router to shut you up. It's not going to work. Give it up.
You've done a great service to the forum for bringing the issue to everyone's attention, but now it seems like all you want is a free router and you're embarrassing yourself.
Who says I have options? Please read previous posts. Not sure what this thread has to do with Apple.
simple solution, refuse the router delivery, get a refund and buy another brand.
This thread is going off topic quickly I don't want to see it get locked before we see if the new ones they send have the issue.
This thread is going off topic quickly I don't want to see it get locked before we see if the new ones they send have the issue.
On a less serious note... After purchasing so many of these routers and returning so many of them ... if your replacement router for the one that you traded in to Asus ends up having normal working jacks you could call it the "Jack of all trades".
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