Do you mean "simultaneous" dual band, or just dual band? Personally, I don't understand the use case for dual band other than simultaneous since you have to pick either 2.4 or 5 ghz and use it for everything (as I understand it). I guess it is so you can experiment and find which works better for mix of devices?
So, one more questionSince you say you are looking for a router to use as an access point, that implies you already have a router that will be your main router and this one will piggy-back on that one to extend your network, right? What is your main router? Depending on what you already have, it might not really be necessary to get a simultaneous dual band router for WAP since your main router, combined with the new one you are using as a WAP are, effectively, simultaneous dual-band.
I have WNDR3700 that I am "trying out" at the moment (Best Buy, I have 30 days) and so far it is great. The WNDR 3700 is $159 at most places though and if you really just need an N router to extend a G router you can get good N routers for a lot less than that (e.g. Belkin N+ for about $79).
Yes, that is what I meant, although I am wondering if I misunderstood what you already have, having reread this thread. I was assuming you already had 802.11G covered with what you have, is this true? If so, than you should be able to just add an 802.11N router to use as an AP and have the equivalent of dual-band as Tim describes very well in this article. This is all assuming that I am understanding what you have in the first place!![]()
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