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4.2 out of 5 stars

TP-Link AC1200 Wireless Dual Band Router

$32.99
$44.99 27% off Reference Price
Condition: New
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Top positive review
5 people found this helpful
Shockingly good bang for the buck. Seems to work just great in my house. Decent firmware, though not 100% features. No DD-WRT
By Joshua on Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2017
This was mostly an emergency purchase -- as I guess so many other routers are. However, this is the first emergency router purchase I've made where I didn't regret it at all. First and foremost: that pricetag is beyond amazing for what it offers. Most that do this much are roughly double this price. Second, it does seem to be fairly able to hold a good strong signal provided that your network adapter is good. If I had to find a nitpick, the use of only two antennas does mean that it's mostly only good for devices that are pretty close to parallel to its placement, but then having more antennas only helps if you can actually angle them to add more planes (and depending on how load is divided it may not really help anyway.) Unfortunately it's hard to test its maximum speed claims because most network adapters are USB and USB 2.0 is of course limited to a theoretical 480Mbps (and in real life a sustained transfer is less than that.) It's surprisingly hard to get PCI-E (or even PCI) adapters that aren't just horrible and they also cost quite a lot more. So the theoretical > 800Mbps this offers won't even apply to a lot of its customers. I can say that a WiFi to Ethernet transfer is quite fast though and online games seem to hold stable without any problems (I definitely saw the difference with a lower quality setup versus something better in gaming. A too high error rate causes all sorts of lag and problems.) The firmware is fairly advanced. I see a few more advanced features like VPN support missing in this versus a very rare few more advanced systems (but I do see support for two dynamic DNS services,) but overall I'm very impressed with its capabilities. They don't go as overboard as many do these days in bloat in their design, keeping it more minimal and simple (but not ugly by any means.) If I'm nitpicking I would say that it's kind of sad that there is no properly working third party support (DD-WRT, Open Tomato, etc etc) for this particular model, but this is, unfortunately, not the router's fault nor any fault in the manufacturer's designs. (It comes down to the fact that the chipsets are locked behind such proprietary designs that actually supporting them without paying for some very expensive NDAs that then won't let you distribute open source software anyway pretty much ensures that third parties must reverse engineer -- and since the chipsets change frequently even among the same companies there are just too many to reverse engineer them all.) Maybe someday though? But I wouldn't count on it. And that's why it's so very important that the built-in software can do all but the most advanced of things. It even supports IPv6 control (not only can it use IPv6 and has some useful options for it, but it lets you turn it off. For whatever reason I seem to be having a host of problems lately with all my Linux devices trying to use it and I guess my ISP doesn't support it or something causing everything to just time out until I disable it. Now I can just turn it off on the router. My last router would not do this so I had to manually disable it on each such device.) Simply put, it does what it does much better than it should for its pricerange. There aren't many that will at all compete at this pricerange. You can do more if you go to higher priceranges, but not by much (as I said, adding more antennas doesn't necessarily help -- it depends on a number of factors -- and higher speeds only help at all if the hardware connecting can even use them and few devices will benefit from more.)
Top critical review
3 people found this helpful
TP_Link AC 1200 will not install
By Charlie on Reviewed in the United States on October 20, 2016
I purchased this router to save the $8/month fee for using the Time Warner router. I have been unable to set it up to access the internet. I was told on my first call to tech support that their was a conflict with my computer and that I would need to pay $149.99 for a years free tech support and re-configuring my computer to resolve the issue. I declined and ended the conversation. My second call to tech support said that there was a IP address conflict and that I needed to change the IP address. That cost would be $69.99. What is going on here? Buy a router that will not install and then I have to pay a fee-both of which cost more than the router to install. I am going to revise my review as I was finally able to get the router up and running. After much research I found several forums where people has the same issue. I had better luck obtaining info. by using Archer c50 as a search. I was unable to use the [...] or IP address but found a site that opened a link [...] where it allowed me to install and change passwords. That link prompted me through the set up and I was able to change password and other info.thus allowing me to a network key that it would accept. Much time and frustration but I have found that my speeds have increased considerably Update: After 6 month I found the router unable to access the internet. After researching and much time trying to get it to work I called Spectrum and they had me bypass the router and hooked directly to my laptop. Internet was available but after trying the router again no go. Spectrum sent a tech. out and, as I expected, he said the router was bad. I then called TP Link tech. support. Now get this-After the phone was answered there was a female with an Eastern accent who told me "We are giving away 100 gift cards to the first 100 callers and you are number 50. After a long spiel about ability to use the gift card anywhere she asked me for $4.95 for processing and can I have your credit card number. After declining she was insistent that I give her a CC #. After refusing multiple times she then transferred me to tech support. Lot's of connecting and disconnecting cables, multiple reboots and shut downs I was able to get wireless to my lap top BUT nt my tablet or 2 cell phones. Back to searching the web and found that to not be an uncommon issue. This time tech support was unable to help. Out of frustration I reinstalled an old Netgear router, booted it up and everything is now good. After finding their website too difficult to navigate and poor tech support I have decided that I will not try to get a replacement or refund on a 2 year warranty.

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