Top positive review
26 people found this helpful
Relatively Easy Setup Yields Strong Wi-Fi throught the house
By TheBigGuy on Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2018
The Linksys Velop Tri-band Mesh Network System, P/N AC6600, is a relatively uncomplicated system to set up IF you understand a little about or have previously set up basic home wi-fi networking. I don't know how easy it is for those who have no prior experience setting up a wi-fi. It may be as easy or it may not, depending on your technical acumen and how well you read up beforehand and prepare for the installation. I cannot comment since I've been fooling around with home wi-fi ever since it was mass-marketed in the late 1990s. The packaging is crisp and very well done. You open the Linksys box easily due to a magnetic flap (no tape or seals to cut), and you see three Velop wi-fi routers, and a quick install card on the left, under which are three power supplies, one for each router, and one ethernet cable for the "home" router. Note - any one of the three Velop routers can be chosen and installed as the "home" unit when you begin the installation. NOTE - BEFORE you begin the actual installation, get a notepad and pencil or whatever you want to use to take down some vital information. Turn each of the three Velop routers over and you will find five (5) unique numbers on labels on the bottom. The print (font) is microscopic so if your eyes aren't great, get a magnifying glass and be under a good bright desk lamp. I strongly suggest that at this time you choose which router is going in each of your three home locations. So for mine, I had "Office" (which is in my basement), "Living Room", and "2nd Floor". I stuck a temporary lable on the side of each router. Your names will probably be different. Leave 5 lines under each router designation on your notepad. Under each of your chosen router names, record the following numbers from its bottom labels: Name_____, Password_____, Recovery Key____, Serial No.______, and MAC (address)________. The Name and Password on the labels are from the factory and only temporary and will not be used once you have developed your unique router names (I used the room name), your wi-fi home network name and password during the installation of the first router. But the label names & passwords may be needed in the future so don't lose your notes. You will find the MAC address versus router name handy to know once your system is running so you can tell which router is which and what devices are connected to it. I had read in advance of how to transition from my existing Apple Time Capsule/Airport Wi-Fi network to the new Linksys network. My previous Wi-Fi using the Apple Time Capsule router included a separate Arris cable modem that I was using to connect to my Comcast broadband cable internet service. The modem was not changed for this new system, it works just fine. Just connect the modem ethernet output to the first Velop router (either one of the two bottom ethernet ports on the Velop). But if you're not familiar with your existing network, fear not! Just follow the installation app instructions that you will be using - see my next paragraph. - and you should do fine. Linksys requires you to install their Velop app on your smartphone in order to install the system. You DON'T use your pc. The app is available on Apple's App Store and I assume from elsewhere if you're not an Apple user as I am. The app is free and installs easily. Once it installs, start following it's step-by-step instructions. I found it handy to pre-read the instructions from the Linksys website (using my laptop browser) before downloading the smartphone app and beginning the actual installation. It's just a suggestion. Also, if you've turned off your old wi-fi router, using the smartphone app is handy because that can communicate with Linksys via your cellular connection until your first Velop router (and its wi-fi signal) is up and running. The app requires you to establish a username and password which becomes your Admin credentials for modifying or customizing the Linksys settings if you want to use features other than the standard default settings. I won't go into those details because it's well-covered in many websites online if you search on "how to setup Linksys velop mesh wi-fi system". So once I started the linksys app and connected the first Velop router to my modem, it took about 10-15 minutes for that to recognize the internet signal from my modem and indicate it was ready (a light on the top goes to purple when its ready to install, and when all is done it turns solid blue). I followed the sequential instructions on the smartphone app; at one point I had to register for the Linksys Cloud account (needed for some optional features) and you have to have a home network name (SSID) and a password ready to type in. PS - CREATE YOUR NEW NETWORK NAME (SSID) AND NEW NETWORK PASSWORD BEFORE YOU START** SO YOU DON'T GET CONFUSED DURING THE PROCEDURE - HAVE THEM WRITTEN DOWN IN FRONT OF YOU. **I used a free website called Random Strong Passwords to generate a very strong 16 character password for my network since i live in a neighborhood where houses are on 1/8 acre lots and relatively close to each other. Everyone sees everyone else's SSIDs (I can see about 8 other people's SSID's inside my house) so its best to name my wi-fi network using nothing that gives away that it's my network and a password that no one other than NSA with their supercomputer can crack. After the first router setup was complete, the next two were so easy it was ridiculous. I simply took the second Velop router to the first floor, plugged it, waited until the light on the top turned purple, then followed the prompts on the smartphone app to "Add another node". It went much faster and easier now that the network had been created by the first router. Just had to name it "Living Room". That was easy. The third Velop router went on the second floor, again, setup for the added router was fast. Named that one "2nd Floor". Easy peasy. Coming back down to the basement, I could see that my new Velop mesh network was up and running fine, and we have strong wi-fi (5/5 or 4/5) throughout our house. All that remained was to go around and re-program every device that connects to wi-fi with the new SSID and new password. Two smart TV's, one home stereo, a security camera, one smart thermostat, two Apple TV boxes, 3 laptops, 2 wi-fi printers, four iPads, and two more iPhones. After entering the 16 digit password so many times, I was grateful this only needs doing once or (hopefully) *very* seldom. Whew! Everything works! MUCH better signal & speed than before when I had only a single router. Today is 3 days after installation and the system has remained rock solid with no dropouts. I'm impressed.
Top critical review
62 people found this helpful
Good Idea, Execution??? UPDATE: Avoid, DO NOT BUY!
By BraneTraveler on Reviewed in the United States on October 3, 2018
I purchased the Linksys Velop system after my Apple AirPort Extreme was taken out by a surge through my cable system which also took out an 8 port switch, cable modem and an APC UPS. What attracted me about the Velop system was the true mesh networking as well as distributed wifi. A wired Access Point and the AirPort worked well but I needed really good wifi coverage with all the IoT devices. The Velop system looked good on paper. Setting Up the Velop System Setup of the Velop system took about 8 hours of mis starts, freezing up and error messages saying to basically start over again. Since all the Velop nodes are the same, I grabbed another and got the system up with 4 nodes in about an hour. First off the Velop system only recognized about half of the IoT devices. Reading blogs and comments found how to access via a PC and not go through the App. After several days of experimenting I split the network into two with a 2.4 and 5 GHz SSID and turned on the Guest Network. I still cannot get 15 of the IoT devices to link with the main network and not the Guest Network. These devices are Ring, Nest, Lutron,Chamberlain,Echo, Apple, Amazon, Epson, SolarEdge, Haiku and Etekcity. Having these devices split across the main and guest network is problematic due to the constraints of the Guest Network. The Velop node I could not get working as the main node I placed in my dining area immediately adjacent to my outside Ring Doorbell. The doorbell refused to connect and would only connect to the main node at a barely workable -58 RSSI. Decided to try wiring the backhaul from other nodes back to the main node with CAT 6 feeding into an HP ProCurve 16 port switch. Vola! As soon as I connected two of the nodes homerun back to the main node the doorbell and several other devices immediately connected at around -18 RSSI. However, over the next several days with everything remaining static the RSSI dropped to -33 but everything still functioned well. BeamForming? I also see quite a bit of drift between nodes with varying RSSI generally trending worse. I’ve noticed the red light coming on the Master Bedroom node but the App SW saying all is fine. I would have thought since the Velop system has been out for awhile bugs like these would be gone by now. Also the App needs more reporting on overall flow to, from and within the entire system. Reading comments I saw how to access the Velop Log, IP Address 192.168.X.X/sysinfo.cgi where the two Xs are the address of the main Velop node. The log is large and not really meant for the casual user. Here I found information that showed the nodes connected to the main node at Gigabit Ethernet. This was validated by the ProCurve Switch. The App only reports one node Ethernet connection. Moreover, the App reports an Ethernet connection made between an Amazon Fire TV Cube and the Garage Node when its connected to the main node. Wish I could look at the code running the system. Would no doubt explain a lot. UPDATE 11/27/2018 I really wanted the Velop System to work. I added APC UPS devices to each Velop node in my WiFi network so momentary power glitches would not affect operation. Why? Because I cannot get half of my devices to attach to the main network and had to set up a Guest Network so a power glitch makes a tedious re-connection of 15-16 IoT devices. additionally due to limitations of the Guest Network I would have to switch my iPad between the Guest and Main network to control different devices. The balancing act between my iPad and voice control through Alexa is tedious due to this limitation. There are numerous review and blog entries about this problem but I mistakenly thought I could find a workable solution. All in all this has been an incredibly frustrating and time consuming ordeal, not to mention the $700 or so I have invested. BTW, I have a Master’s degree in Electrical Engineering and worked with networks my entire adult career. I cannot believe that a manufacturer has allowed a product so shoddy that its basic functions don’t even work. To say nothing of the painfully slow application. Final straw was the node communicating with the cable modem just stopped. After two days of trying to revive this turkey I finally gave up, bought a $99 refurbished Apple AirPort Extreme, plugged it in and all up and running in 15 minutes. At least things function while devices further from the Airport do suffer. So it’s back to the Airport and my TP Link extender. I wish I could get my money back from Linksys but I am not going to hold my breath. Not going to try to resell this mess on eBay because I don’t want to foist this problem on someone else. 12/4/2018 Another update. Removed all the Linksys Velop nodes and went back to my original configuration with a refurbished Apple AirPort Extreme and a TP Link Range Extender/Access Point configured as a wired access point. All devices immediately attached and with better RSSI and overall performance. This setup was around $180 as opposed to the $750 for the Linksys Velop system. I had 4 Velop nodes. Moreover, a week of continuous operation and zero glitches. I use my wifi system to monitor and control environment and lighting for my greenhouse. With the Linksys Velop system I could not get all the devices to connect in a stable fashion. They would drift to and from the closest Velop node, ultimately losing connection which would require forcing them back to the nearest velop node which was about 10 feet awayy. Everything attached immediately and performing perfectly for a week now. Moral of this story, when the 802.11X is out for awhile going to attempt another upgrade with a commercial system, something like Aruba Access Points and a Cisco router. The Apple Airport and the TP link range extender are the only two consumer grade wifi products I have used that did not require a rebooting weekly or daily. To bad Apple abandoned the wifi component marketplace.
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