Router selection info - beginners guide

Its usually confusing to decide which home router to buy. So I thought of listing down a few features (and a brief description) that could be helpful. A good document shared with some technical details below.

1. Wifi speed advertised (eg AC1200 vs AC 2300 etc). - Its usally a marketing gimmick describing total theoretical throughput of all bands used simultaneously. Best to ignore.

2. Bandwith size - eg 40 mhz channel width on 5 Ghz would give 433 mbps max, the same 5 Ghz with a 80 mhz channel width would give 866 mbps max. Go for higher spec one.

3. MIMO - Atleast 2x2 Mimo. Most wifi client devices only support that. Higher MIMO is better. But note that a 2x2 MIMO wifi device and wifi 5 router, on 80 mhz band on 5 Ghz wifi will give you actual speeds of <= 350 mbps at a close distance.
@yougotmehere ,It is possible to get 500mbps wifi speed for a 500 mbps internet connection. Wifi speeds are independent of internet connection speed.

I'm attaching an image of iperf test on my mobile. It's a OnePlus 5 with 2x2 mimo. Connected to an archer c6 on 5ghz, 80hz band. Distance from router is less though, about 10 feet only. The iperf 'server' is running on a raspberry pi on my network itself.
kpTlXEb.jpg



Perhaps the below threads will be helpful in selecting a router. Choosing one with a gigabit port is ideal.

4. Beanforming - Yes, a good to have feature.

5. Gigabit ethernet port - Gigabit port is ideal as its max speed is 1 gbps. If its not advertised, its usually ethernet port - having ethernet speeds < 100 mbps.

6. Wifi standard - Wifi 4 - n , Wifi 5 (ac), Wifi 6 (ax).
Wifi 4 - n only routers can safely be said to be outdated as of now. Decide between Wifi 5 and 6.
  • Wifi 6 - Supposed to be best with very large number of devices (like public Wifi, hostels, classrooms etc)
  • Wifi 6 - Supposed to lessen mobile phone battery usage.
  • Wifi 6 routers tend to be expensive compared to Wifi 5.
  • Online claims about download speed vary, from improving, to being the same.
7. Software - a recent router model may be better supported that an older model. eg it may have features like WPA3 etc and more recent security updates. You could check for 3rd party firmware support also if you're up for it.

Other members could add more details like say hardware, brands, security, features, mesh support etc etc.
 
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If C6 v2, TP-Link should soon release mesh support for it. The c6 v2 US model has recently got it.

A correction. Tplink one mesh is indeed coming for Archer c6 v2. But it only supports a range extender. It cannot support another router itself acting as an access point. 😧 ref So people cannot use older routers like in eg Asus aiMesh. (As mentioned before, opensource solutions like openwrt support fast transitions.)
 
I have a Netgear R7000 in the passage, and have bought a TP-Link C6 recently, and will be delivered next week.
I plan to install the C6 in the guest bedroom/study which has poor WiFi.
I have a CAT6 cable already between the R7000 and where the C6 will be installed.

What are my best options for a good roaming setup with the existing hardware? R7000 isn't supported on OpenWRT.
 
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@suku_patel_22 You could setup the two devices independently with the same SSID. The devices would still roam, but it may not work seamlessly. I mean if you go from the passage to the study, you might still be connected to the R7000 and it may not switch to the C6. But if you disconnect and reconnect it will then connect to the C6.

This is not the case always though, some client devices tend to work better.

Other than that, I don't see another option. The R7000 does support Tomato, but I don't see fast transition support in it. feature_matrix [FreshTomato Wiki]
 
And which all _ mid range _ models would you guys recommend, now that I wish to move away from my modded DGN2200. Mandatory features I would need is support likes of DDWRT/OpenWRT, Also should be able to taken on running DNSMasq, DNSSEC, USB PrintServer, Ext Storage and Torrent
 
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