At my house, it is much too potent for even me to handle. The router's transmitter power is just super, the processor power is above and above praise at a speed of 100 megabits, and the CPU load does not exceed 4 percent even with the fasttrack connection switched off. This is one of the router's many positive attributes. I dug into the stuffing and discovered that the router uses Japanese nichicon capacitors, Japanese memory chips, and even a lan transformer 10/100 Base-T Dual Port Transformer Module. I also discovered that the original, non-Chinese NS772022 from SWAPNET complies with the IEEE802.3u standard. I have taken apart many routers, but I have always stuck with the originals. I didn't see the details, but most of it seemed to be China. Nevertheless, Mikrotik surprised me in that they make an effort to conform with international standards such as ieee and RFC. Got cons: It's understandable why there are routers with 28-nanometer processors, but the price difference is significant. A 40-nanometer processor heats up so normally that it's not good. There is a small chance that heating the processor over the years will cause the capacitors to dry out and the tracks on the board will start to fall off, but I could be wrong. If and even this happens, then not earlier than in eight years, so it's understandable why there are routers with 28-n
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