"50 (wifi) users" are guests with smartphones, tablets, and the occasional laptop. Maybe a few could be watching a youtube video but most would be accessing static pages and email. I'd say 50 is a worst case scenario and even then only half might be "using the Internet" at any given time.
Consider the following choice of Netgear Access Points:
AC1900-Nighthawk Smart WiFi Router set to AP mode @ $200
ProSafe Premium 3 x 3 Dual-Band Wireless-N Access Point WNDAP660 @ $500
The ProSafe's specs say "up to 128 users" but it costs over twice as much as the AC1900. New high-end consumer routers like the AC1900 boast fast dual-core CPUs so I wonder if one like the AC1900 could handle the same traffic.
Insofar as multiple SSIDs all I usually need is a single Guest network isolated from the owner's LAN (no more than 10 users, mostly wired), which consumer routers like the AC1900 usually provide for.
Thoughts, pros, cons? Is it a moot point if the broadband service is 10Mbps max?
Consider the following choice of Netgear Access Points:
AC1900-Nighthawk Smart WiFi Router set to AP mode @ $200
ProSafe Premium 3 x 3 Dual-Band Wireless-N Access Point WNDAP660 @ $500
The ProSafe's specs say "up to 128 users" but it costs over twice as much as the AC1900. New high-end consumer routers like the AC1900 boast fast dual-core CPUs so I wonder if one like the AC1900 could handle the same traffic.
Insofar as multiple SSIDs all I usually need is a single Guest network isolated from the owner's LAN (no more than 10 users, mostly wired), which consumer routers like the AC1900 usually provide for.
Thoughts, pros, cons? Is it a moot point if the broadband service is 10Mbps max?