Just curious - which router are you using in your network?
I am using a Dell PC with pfsense using my L3 switch. I could not find a Cisco solution since they did away with the Cisco RV340 router. I tried to buy a Cisco baby Firepower firewall but Cisco will not sell me support for home use. I can buy the firewall but I can't get software updates, only for 90 days.
I was Cisco trained on the old Cisco PIX firewalls, so I have idea of how they work. I can see Cisco not wanting to deal with a bunch of homeowners buying a complicated firewall that they have no idea of how it works.
So what is the verdict on the 150AX after a while in use? How would you compare them to the WAP571?
I like the 150ax wireless APs as I have 9 ax clients. I don't have nbase-t clients as most of my new hardware clients are wireless which have ax support. What I like about the Cisco 150ax wireless APs is that they are cheap, and you can install a lot of them in all the heavily used rooms. I have an old house with walls that degrade the signals so having an AP in every room works much better for me.
My old Cisco WAP581 APs were better in that they were 4 x 4 units and would reach out farther, but the signal degrades going through walls so the signal is not as good overall as having more AP units. I also think the roaming could be better in the AX spec as it is not as good as the older units. But speed prevails. I do have an iRobot which vacuums my house 3 days a week and it has no problems with my wireless network.
If my granddaughter stays for the whole summer, then I will probably add another AP in her room. The Cisco 150ax are snappier using Windows 11 than using my older Cisco WAP581 APs and part of it is maybe having real close proximity with only air space between you and the AP. I have installed an AP in every room that we spend much time in. My wife's sewing room is in progress as she spends lots of time there doing projects. She also has an easy chair where she zooms a lot with her friends about their projects.
I have my 85-inch 4K TV using an AppleTV 4K on wireless. And it works great. I had a wire running there in the past but I have pulled it because the wire needs to cross a fireplace to reach the TV. I see no issues with TV on wireless. All my wireless APs run on different channels, so they do not wait on each other. The only issue I have had using the Cisco 150ax wireless APs is that they are slow to come back when you lose power. I have solved that by buying an APC Smart1000 battery backup which backs up the Cisco POE+ switch that keeps the APs hot when power drops.
My old Cisco WAP581 APs were $300 apiece. The new Cisco 150ax APs are $102. You can buy a lot of 150ax APs for what the old one's cost.
The old Cisco WAP581 APs pulls around 25 to 26 watts each. The Cisco 150ax APs pull around 11 watts so I run more for the same power draw. To run a lot of older WAP581 units I need a larger power POE+ switch.
My wireless now is the fastest it has ever been. But I am chasing 5 GHz. This is my thinking right now. I may have left out stuff as I am getting older, but this is what comes to mind as I write this.