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tymonPartyLate | 4 months ago

If you want reliable Wifi at home, get yourself Ubiquity access points and throw away TP-Link. The issue is not the protocol. After many years of unplugging and plugging back in my TP-link router I know that they are cursed.

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jonathanlydall|4 months ago

I think it's more a case of don't use cheap consumer grade hardware in any kind of remotely demanding scenario.

I have "enterprise" TP-Link equipment for my house which I bought 3 years ago now and am very happy with it, in particular I'm using:

- 4x EAP245 Access Points

- 1x SG3428 Switch (the APs came with PoE injectors and I wanted a fan-less switch, hence why the switch is not PoE enabled)

I rent out a room on my property and have my tenant on a separate VLAN to the main house. I also have my IoT devices on a separate VLAN.

I use a generic PC with pfSense as my "router".

My only complaint is that their Omada Controller software doesn't want to run as a Windows Service (I'm not interested in trying to manage a Linux box). Fortunately, it's not required at all, but is useful for centralized configuration management and facilitation of handover of WiFi clients between APs.

Before I moved into my current large-ish place, I used "cheap" ISP supplied TP-Link routers with WiFi, and aside from limited speed capabilities, were 100% reliable for me, in particular I used the following two models:

- TL-WR840N

- Archer C20.

I also use a few cheap (but again fully reliable) 5 port and 8 port TP-Link 1GB/s switches, for example under my desk in my office to allow both my laptop and desktop to share the single CAT6 cable to the room.

Before buying the "enterprise" TP-Link equipment I considered Ubiquiti, but the TP-Link stuff was less expensive, I liked the controller being optional and considering all my past TP-Link equipment's reliability was a non-issue, I was happy "to take a risk".

viraptor|4 months ago

It's tough. On one hand side, TP-Link has some weird issues. On the other, I spent a while debugging an issue with their engineers and they seem to actually care to improve things. Maybe the lower price is worth it sometimes.

The_President|4 months ago

Bought their new long range bluetooth dongle, works better for longer than any other on the market I have tried. Competitively priced.

dgroshev|4 months ago

Or better yet, Aruba Instant On. Enterprise hardware for SOHO money, truly plug and play, rock solid, no tinkering involved (which can be both good and bad depending on one's goals).

nottorp|4 months ago

Can relate. I went through various consumer ish access points until I got tired of it and splurged on an Ubiquiti.

Haven't had any wifi problems since. To the point I don't remember what wifi standard my home is on :)

Too bad they may or may not have given up on the cloud connectivity requirement. I've been told (even on here) they have, but I've also been told that you can disable it after setup instead of setting up without any stinking cloud.

Say, did Ubiquity stuff work during the AWS outage?

zuhsetaqi|4 months ago

As far as I know devices like Access Points only need the Controller to be configured or monitored. Once they are configured they work completely without it.

XorNot|4 months ago

My Ubiquity stuff worked fine the whole time, but I do have the Dream Machine as my router/video surveillance hub.

None of my ubiquity stuff uses their cloud stuff at all.

SkyPuncher|4 months ago

Anecdotally, I switched from Ubiquiti to TP-Link and am very happy with the decision.

Ubiquity stuff was giving me constant buffer bloat issues and it was a pain to do basic configuration for. Just too many options.

TP-LInk generally works just fine as long as the WiFi channel is clear.

PeterStuer|4 months ago

I use TP-link switches exclusively as they turned out far more reliable than any other I had.

For wifi I have been using ASUS's AI Mesh. Not that impressed tbh so looking to change to something else in the next upgrade cycle.

jansper39|4 months ago

Better yet, buy actual enterprise gear even if it's a generation behind. You can find decent Aruba, Ruckus and Cisco kit on eBay going for decent prices.

gambiting|4 months ago

Anecdote time - I've had their BE550 Wifi 7 router for over a year now and it's been rock solid. Easily does 2Gbps over wifi, never had to reset it once despite having 40+ devices connected to it all the time, the 4x 2.5Gbps ports are super useful.....it is one of their more expensive devices so maybe that's why, but generally it's been very very solid.

argsnd|4 months ago

I own two consumer-grade Deco XE75 access points which I purchased several years ago as the most cost-effective 6E compatible access points available. They have proven to be exceptionally reliable.

Although I have previously encountered significant issues with WiFi, I now do not see a need to replace these devices despite the availability of WiFi 7.

casept|4 months ago

I've always had good experiences with TP-Link, just not their stock firmware. They're cheap and reliable OpenWRT devices.

andreashaerter|4 months ago

But: the Omada gear is awesome. I threw away all of Ubiquity stuff and can operate without cloud.

ThatPlayer|4 months ago

Yeah I was gonna say, I upgraded from my older Unifi stuff to TP-Link Omada and have had no issues.

bdunks|4 months ago

Agreed. I have 4 Omada APs in my house — 3 wired PoE and 1 mesh.

I haven’t thought about it since I set it up, three years ago. 100% reliability, seamless handoff between APs.

hbarka|4 months ago

What I have read is that with Wifi-7 (MLO, dynamic channels), TP-Link is much improved.

flanked-evergl|4 months ago

I bought a UniFi Dream Router 7 some months ago, very happy with it so far.

booleandilemma|4 months ago

I had a tp-link router for a few years and never had any problems with it.

glimshe|4 months ago

I now run a TP-Link free household. I was disappointed with every one of my TPL purchases over the years, both on routers and client adapters.