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1,238
4.4 out of 5 stars

TP-Link Archer AX11000 Tri-Band Wi-Fi 6 Router

$159.99
$299.99 47% off Reference Price
Condition: New
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Top positive review
6 people found this helpful
High-performance gaming router with antivirus software
By Russell Morrisey on Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2024
Had this router for a few years. We used to have multiple google routers to cover the entire house, but this thing pretty much covers everything, so we got rid of the other routers. Pros: -Very fast. The 5GHz networks are great for gaming. -Long range. This router uses a technology called beam forming, which extends the range by listening for signals in a particular direction using its multiple antennas. It covers almost my entire house, which used to require 2 or 3 routers in a mesh network. -Multiple bands. It has two 5Ghz bands and one 2.4Ghz band. Choose 2.4Ghz band for longer range, or 5Ghz band for higher speed. -Very reliable. I've used this for 5+ years and had very few issues with it. I think I've had to restart it two or three times maybe over the years. -It has an easy-to-use mobile app that gives you detailed info about the devices on your network and the wifi connection performance of each device. If you have an active internet connection, you can also control your router remotely and run an internet connection test. -It detects and blocks malicious activity on the network. If a device on your network is infected with a virus, the router will prevent it from infecting other devices. You also get a notification in the mobile app when this happens, so you can remove or clean the infected device. The antivirus service on the router gets free periodic updates. Cons: -The 2.4Ghz band can be disrupted by other appliances in your house, like microwaves and cordless phones. This is true of all routers that have a 2.4Ghz band. You can avoid this by using the 5Ghz bands. -It doesn't have a lot of slots for wired ethernet connections. If that's something you need, this might not be a good pick for your setup.
Top critical review
7 people found this helpful
Facts and facts - the numbers tell all
By JASMan on Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2022
I recently moved and needed to set up a new wired and wireless network in our new condo. I had a Netgear Nighthawk x10 laying around next to my TPLINK AX11000 and Verizon FIOS gig internet. The condo is large so I bought a MoCA coax to Ethernet adapter for the far side of the condo where our office was. I hooked up the TPLINK AX11000 and it had terrible performance via wireless, which got me troubleshooting. The Netgear X10 blew the AX11000 away via wired and wireless performance. I literally unplugged and replugged the same Ethernet cables into the network and ran the same tests against Verizon's network back-to-back. The AX1100 allegedly supports 2.5GBps via Ethernet (I tested Auto/1Gbps/2.5Gb) whereas the X10 only supports 1Gbps to the WAN port. The routers were literally sitting on the same table for the wireless tests. Wireless Speeds: AX11000 149 Mbps download 187 Mbps upload X10 651 Mbps downlaod 419 Mbps upload Wired Speeds: AX11000 323 Mbps download 188 Mbps upload X10 880 Mbps download 741 Mbps upload The Netgear x10 wireless router is far superior in all tests, both wired and wireless. The only thing that the TP Link does that the Netgear doesn't is support CIDR/Supernetting. I can (and do) assign an IP address of 10.10.10.0 to my router and provide a DHCP scope wherever I like, whereas the Netgear is strict on Class A, B and C networks. Bottom line is I'm keeping my Netgear router.

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