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Review on Wi-Fi router MikroTik hAP ac2, black by Mateusz Sowa ᠌

Revainrating 5 out of 5

I do not cease to rejoice at the purchase, a very good deal!

After attending hap ac, I had no expectation that Mikrotik would present me with anything unexpected. By publishing hap ac2, they were able to accomplish this (a ts square, as they themselves call this router). This is essentially identical to the hap ac, with the exception that it has significantly less Wi-Fi power and does not include an SFP. I overclocked the 5 GHz Wi-Fi on it to sub 500 megabits, and I did this within the same room. If you are having issues with Mikrotik, it indicates that you did not set it up correctly or that something is "phoning" somewhere nearby; you should try moving the router to a different location if you are experiencing these issues. It legitimately pumps a gigabit channel across the wire (don't forget to use fasttrack for NAT) at a rate of 70-80 megabytes per second; if it doesn't pump, then the provider is lagging: Oh yes. 100 megabits/s IPSec? Easily! Because of its hardware support, the router's load capacity is nowhere near its maximum (the vendor offers up to 400 megabits per second IPSec, but I have not checked). Unquestionably the greatest router currently available on the market. Whoever has read this far will receive a present in the form of a lifehack that will teach them how to make this router even better. Purchase a Raspberry Pi for $4,000, attach it to your router using adhesive, and draw power from the USB port on your router. Install a home server, even if it's just a little one, directly on the router.

Pros
  • The flexibility, signal strength, the cost, and the dependability of the product.
Cons
  • dazzling outward presentation