Hi All,
After recently going through (yet another) bad experience with Comcast support at a rental property I help with the networking at, I reviewed the networks being broadcast, and saw that the 2.4GHz spectrum is now very crowded, and the 5GHz spectrum is not. 25Mbps Comcast service runs over MOCA networking to a pair of Tenda W268R N150 routers, and to an Actiontec 500Mbps powerline repeater.
The N150 routers get nearly cable speed over wifi when I configured them at home (with very little 2.4GHz competition). At the property, they only get 10-15Mbps over wifi, but cable speed when I connect directly to the router. The powerline repeater gets cable speed over wifi, and also when I connect directly to the repeater unit (I'm guessing that there's much less competition in 2.4GHz near the powerline device). MOCA and Powerline equipment doesn't seem to have any performance penalty at these speeds.
My goal was to replace the N150 routers with AC routers, and also to look at 3rd party firmware, and to set up a VPN to my house so that I could log into the rental property network and change settings if needed, without driving to the property.
I was pretty much settled on TP-Link Archer C5 V1.2/C7 V2 routers running Gargoyle, but was informed that these routers do not support beamforming, which I thought was crucial to performance of the 5GHz radios and clients (most, if not all the wifi clients are AC capable phones and laptops).
My question is - Without beamforming, is the expense of an AC router worth it compared to a 5GHz N router?
I can get 3 used simultaneous dual-band N600 routers for the price of a single recommended AC router. With the wiring already in place, I could put the N600 routers such that no client would have more than maybe 30 feet to reach a repeater, with a single wooden floor, and/or one drywall wall blocking.
Is it worthwhile setting up the VPN? For the N devices, I'm looking at the Netgear WNDR3800 running Gargoyle/OpenVPN.
Any help appreciated.
After recently going through (yet another) bad experience with Comcast support at a rental property I help with the networking at, I reviewed the networks being broadcast, and saw that the 2.4GHz spectrum is now very crowded, and the 5GHz spectrum is not. 25Mbps Comcast service runs over MOCA networking to a pair of Tenda W268R N150 routers, and to an Actiontec 500Mbps powerline repeater.
The N150 routers get nearly cable speed over wifi when I configured them at home (with very little 2.4GHz competition). At the property, they only get 10-15Mbps over wifi, but cable speed when I connect directly to the router. The powerline repeater gets cable speed over wifi, and also when I connect directly to the repeater unit (I'm guessing that there's much less competition in 2.4GHz near the powerline device). MOCA and Powerline equipment doesn't seem to have any performance penalty at these speeds.
My goal was to replace the N150 routers with AC routers, and also to look at 3rd party firmware, and to set up a VPN to my house so that I could log into the rental property network and change settings if needed, without driving to the property.
I was pretty much settled on TP-Link Archer C5 V1.2/C7 V2 routers running Gargoyle, but was informed that these routers do not support beamforming, which I thought was crucial to performance of the 5GHz radios and clients (most, if not all the wifi clients are AC capable phones and laptops).
My question is - Without beamforming, is the expense of an AC router worth it compared to a 5GHz N router?
I can get 3 used simultaneous dual-band N600 routers for the price of a single recommended AC router. With the wiring already in place, I could put the N600 routers such that no client would have more than maybe 30 feet to reach a repeater, with a single wooden floor, and/or one drywall wall blocking.
Is it worthwhile setting up the VPN? For the N devices, I'm looking at the Netgear WNDR3800 running Gargoyle/OpenVPN.
Any help appreciated.