After reading all the positive reviews I decided to give it a try in hopes of increasing the range of the wireless network. My current Cisco AP covers the house with no issues, but there is a dead zone outside that I want to cover. Unfortunately, this access point did not keep what it promised. Attitude. Mine actually came with DHCP which worked out of the box. The installation guide says that when you first set up the access point you need to set a static IP address for the PC, so I thought it came in DHCP client mode. Area. It is said to be 26 dBm, but with the latest firmware it only increases to 23 dBm. Ultimately, my real-world testing showed it had a slightly shorter range than the Cisco WAP 581, so my dead zone outside the home is still dead. So far, Asus home routers have had better range than anything I've tested. This is also visible in the FCC tests as Asus typically puts out 990mW per transmission compared to everyone else who is under 500mW. Reference: EAP1300EXT (FCC ID: A8J-EAP1300) 2.412-2.462GHz - 288mW 5.18-5.24GHz - 273mW 5.755-5.825GHz - 320mW RP-AC1900 (FCC ID: MSQ-RTACHC00) 2.412-2.462 GHz - 5.93 mW 5.24 GHz - 766 mW 5.745 - 5.825 GHz - 993 mW Your client has enough power to transmit back or the access point has enough sensitivity). You may also notice that EnGenius did not apply separately for the EXT model, so they either cheated, or the performance of the wireless network didn't change much. Particularities. This is a typical consumer access point. There are no fancy ACLs (MAC address filtering only) and not many WiFi settings. No rogue hotspot detection or anything like that. The latest firmware supports WPA3, so that's a plus. Perfomance. Can't really comment on that as I only have about 50 clients and have never had a problem with consumer routers. After all, the price of this access point corresponds to that of a typical home router from NetGear. Asus/Linksys/tp-link/etc so I'm not entirely sure why you should buy that combo and not a router and access point combo considering that it works the same if not worse (less range) and only offers wireless connectivity. Maybe half price. But $100 is way too much for a consumer hotspot. There are no fancy ACLs (MAC address filtering only) and not many WiFi settings. No rogue hotspot detection or anything like that. The latest firmware supports WPA3, so that's a plus. Perfomance. Can't really comment on that as I only have about 50 clients and have never had a problem with consumer routers. After all, the price of this access point corresponds to that of a typical home router from NetGear. Asus/Linksys/tp-link/etc, so I'm not entirely sure why you should buy this combo and not consider a router + access point combo that it works just as well if not worse (shorter range) and only offers wireless connectivity. Maybe half price. But $100 is way too much for a consumer hotspot. There are no fancy ACLs (MAC address filtering only) and not many WiFi settings. No rogue hotspot detection or anything like that. The latest firmware supports WPA3, so that's a plus. Perfomance. Can't really comment on that as I only have about 50 clients and have never had a problem with consumer routers. After all, the price of this access point corresponds to that of a typical home router from NetGear. Asus/Linksys/tp-link/etc, so I'm not entirely sure why you should buy this combo and not a router + access point combo, given that it works just as well if not worse (shorter range) and only offers wireless connectivity. Maybe half price. But $100 is way too much for a consumer hotspot. I won't comment on this much as I only have about 50 clients and have never had a problem with consumer grade routers. After all, the price of this access point is similar to that of a typical NetGear/Asus/Linksys home router. /tp-link/etc so I'm not entirely sure why you should buy that combo and not the router and access point combo as it offers just as good if not worse (less range) and only wireless communication. Maybe half price. But $100 is way too much for a consumer hotspot. I'm not really commenting as I only have about 50 clients and have never had a problem with consumer grade routers. After all, the price of this access point is similar to that of a typical NetGear/Asus/Linksys home router. /tp-link/etc so I'm not entirely sure why you should buy that combo and not the router and access point combo as it offers just as good if not worse (less range) and only wireless communication. Maybe half price. But $100 is way too much for a consumer hotspot. if not worse (less range) and only offers wireless connectivity. Maybe half price. But $100 is way too much for a consumer hotspot. if not worse (less range) and only offers wireless connectivity. Maybe half price.
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