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Computers & Networking
help with networking & router
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<blockquote data-quote="Wolvebain" data-source="post: 878214" data-attributes="member: 13371"><p>Popping in a Gigabit switch would work for your wired ethernet devices, but your wireless is still limited.</p><p>I would get that ASUS RT-AC66U AC1750 router, as it is a great device at a great price too. The AiMesh beats the other Mesh offerings as well, so it's a good move for future expansion/coverage.</p><p></p><p>Just disable the WiFi on the Tenda, and plug it into the ASUS RT-AC66's WAN port.Use 1 of the 4 GbE LAN ports for you NAS, and the other 3 as you see fit.</p><p> </p><p>Perhaps I'm misreading this... Are you saying that a 2.4GHz wireless device is also a 5GHz wireless device? If so, that is incorrect. Most 5GHz wireless devices support 2.4GHz wireless connectivity, not the other way around.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Wolvebain, post: 878214, member: 13371"] Popping in a Gigabit switch would work for your wired ethernet devices, but your wireless is still limited. I would get that ASUS RT-AC66U AC1750 router, as it is a great device at a great price too. The AiMesh beats the other Mesh offerings as well, so it's a good move for future expansion/coverage. Just disable the WiFi on the Tenda, and plug it into the ASUS RT-AC66's WAN port.Use 1 of the 4 GbE LAN ports for you NAS, and the other 3 as you see fit. Perhaps I'm misreading this... Are you saying that a 2.4GHz wireless device is also a 5GHz wireless device? If so, that is incorrect. Most 5GHz wireless devices support 2.4GHz wireless connectivity, not the other way around. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
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help with networking & router
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