What's the difference between routers?
One thing is missing on the website or maybe I can't find it, but what is the difference between this sea of products ?
I am after a router but what's the difference between A, C, AX etc....
TP Link, don't assume all visitors and buyers are IT professionals.
Cheers
Mike
- Copy Link
- Subscribe
- Bookmark
- Report Inappropriate Content
@migo33 AC are WiFi ac (so called WiFi 5), AX are WiFi ax (so called WiFi 6)
Anyway, you can't guess the specifications of any product (furniture, cars, toys, appliances, processed food) just by the model name, you have to read the specifications and compare.
The important things to look at in a router are, basically:
- Type of input (WAN), either Ethernet, DSL, optical connection... depends on where you want to connect it of course.
- Speed of wired Ethernet ports: Gigabit (1000Mbps, better) or 100Mbps (will limit your connection if your Internet provider gives you more than 100Mbps)
- Type and speed of wireless WiFi. WiFi ac is a safe bet right now, the models that say ac1200 or higher mean they support WiFi ac and a combined speed of 1200Mbps (though in practice it's about 500Mbps)
Usually vendors provide a search page so you can filter by what you need (for instance, Ethernet router with Gigabit ports and WiFi ac) and browse available models.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@migo33 AC are WiFi ac (so called WiFi 5), AX are WiFi ax (so called WiFi 6)
Anyway, you can't guess the specifications of any product (furniture, cars, toys, appliances, processed food) just by the model name, you have to read the specifications and compare.
The important things to look at in a router are, basically:
- Type of input (WAN), either Ethernet, DSL, optical connection... depends on where you want to connect it of course.
- Speed of wired Ethernet ports: Gigabit (1000Mbps, better) or 100Mbps (will limit your connection if your Internet provider gives you more than 100Mbps)
- Type and speed of wireless WiFi. WiFi ac is a safe bet right now, the models that say ac1200 or higher mean they support WiFi ac and a combined speed of 1200Mbps (though in practice it's about 500Mbps)
Usually vendors provide a search page so you can filter by what you need (for instance, Ethernet router with Gigabit ports and WiFi ac) and browse available models.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@migo33 It's easy. Marketing. No big difference. Some times all the same. Just look Gigabit or not and Wi-Fi standards. IMHO TP-Link have too much models of routers and HW versions in each model line.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@2MEX2 I wish it was that easy. Each ISP has its own standards and Australia NBN is a joke with its own standards. On top of that TP Link have as you mentioned have way too many routers hence why I always preferred Apples extreme range which where two basically and worked well for me for the last 10 years.
Anyhow seems like I'll keepy archer VR1600.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Information
Helpful: 0
Views: 3580
Replies: 4
Voters 0
No one has voted for it yet.