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WiFi 7 equivalent of AX88U Pro?

neil0311

Senior Member
I have 2 RT-AX88U Pro routers in a mesh. Got some new devices that support WiFi 7, so am considering upgrading my routers.

What’s the WiFi 7 equivalent of the AX88U Pro? Is it the BE88U?
 
RT-BE88U is dual-band router. The same band limitations apply, it won't be significantly faster on Wi-Fi. If none of your Wi-Fi 7 devices really need >Gigabit speeds - keep your existing routers. Don't invest in speed test numbers.
 
RT-BE88U is dual-band router. The same band limitations apply, it won't be significantly faster on Wi-Fi. If none of your Wi-Fi 7 devices really need >Gigabit speeds - keep your existing routers. Don't invest in speed test numbers.
Thanks. That was my initial inclination. Just didn’t even know cost, given I wasn’t sure which router model would be the correct upgrade.
 
Your routers are good for years. No need to change if they do what you need.
 
I have 2 RT-AX88U Pro routers in a mesh. Got some new devices that support WiFi 7, so am considering upgrading my routers.

What’s the WiFi 7 equivalent of the AX88U Pro? Is it the BE88U?
I bought 2 BE-92U routers and connected them in Ai Mesh (wired haul); been very happy with them and their WiFi 7 performance since the BE92U supports the 6 GHz band where as the more expensive BE-86U/BE-88U don't.

I haven't had a single disconnection or other issue with them since I got them.
 
I made the mistake of "upgrading" my RT-AX88U to a RT-BE88U, the AX ran much more stable then the BE does. You will not notice any difference in Wifi speeds.
 
It's not AX vs BE, but 3004 vs 3006 firmware. @helo1976 old RT-AX88U router was running more mature 3004 firmware at final stages of development, the new RT-BE88U is running 3006 firmware at initial stages of development. The new firmware on BE-class devices has components not working at all since release, Adaptive QoS as example. The new BE router may start working as expected in about 1.5-2 years after release. The usual Asus new product beta tester cycle. At least there is a chance. With TP-Link/Netgear home products the device will most likely be EoL'd in 2-3 years...
 
The 802.11be standard itself is a beta test. No one truly complies with the IEEE standard, and the entire industry is collectively cheating. This is the root cause of the problems that every WiFi 7 product has faced to this day. IEEE knows this, vendors know this, and OEMs certainly know this. If you encounter any problems, they will just tell you to disable WiFi 7 rather than fix anything, because they know 802.11be is rotten from top to bottom.
 

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