Alternatives to provided routers
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Alternatives to provided routers
19-07-2022 10:11 AM
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Can anyone recommend a decent router that I could buy myself as an alternative to the provided Hubs and which work well with PN FTTC?
My current Hub One has been flaky recently. I have a new one that I tried to install yesterday but ran into issues. The biggest pain with the Hubs is their lack of configurability - especially the DNS addresses. With all my devices except my phone I have had to set DNS locally as everything was struggling to connect va the PN DNS a couple of years ago. My phone doesn't allow me to set a local DNS and that still has issues via WiFi that I don't see with 4G so I am sure the problem is still there.
Another thing I miss is a lack of guest WiFi.
So I am not looking for anything too advanced - just one that is not quite so dumb. The main criteria are reliability, working solidly, good WiFi. Not necessarily looking to do it on the cheap - I'll spend extra for quality as I need this to be reliable for work.
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
19-07-2022 10:31 AM
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Depends on your budget, TP-Link modem/routers are worth a look,
https://www.tp-link.com/uk/home-networking/dsl-modem-router/
Dan
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
20-07-2022 1:20 PM
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I use a Fritzbox 7530 on PN which I am pleased with for FTTC stability & speed - a steady 36Mb for months on end - plus a meshed repeater. Caters for guest access, Voip, dect phones, and much more.
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
20-07-2022 4:09 PM
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@Dan_the_Van wrote:
Depends on your budget, TP-Link modem/routers are worth a look,
https://www.tp-link.com/uk/home-networking/dsl-modem-router/
Dan
Thanks. I've owned various TP-Link devices like portable hotspots and homeplugs, and they seem to have been decent enough.
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
20-07-2022 4:10 PM
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@mavison wrote:
I use a Fritzbox 7530 on PN which I am pleased with for FTTC stability & speed - a steady 36Mb for months on end - plus a meshed repeater. Caters for guest access, Voip, dect phones, and much more.
Thanks! Not a brand I have come across before but from what I can see they get good reviews. I will look into them a bit more.
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
20-07-2022 4:36 PM - edited 20-07-2022 4:36 PM
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Although not cheap Fitzbox have a good reputation. They also have an eco system built around them if you want things like Mesh, VOIP etc.
Zen Internet supply a Fitzbox as their standard router (not certain which model - I think there's a newer one than the 7530). They may also be the best place to buy one. If buying elsewhere make sure you get a UK model.
Brian
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
20-07-2022 6:45 PM
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@bmc wrote:
Zen Internet supply a Fitzbox as their standard router (not certain which model - I think there's a newer one than the 7530). They may also be the best place to buy one. If buying elsewhere make sure you get a UK model.
Brian
I was supplied with the 7530 13 months back when I moved, but I think new customers get a later version, although I've found my model to be extremely reliable. They are a little bit harder to follow than the Hubs, but have excellent documentation.
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
23-07-2022 12:11 PM - edited 23-07-2022 12:21 PM
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FWIW - I don't think you can go wrong with most models from any of the following manufacturers
- Tp-Link
- Asus
- Netgear
- Linksys
- Draytek
- Billion
- eero Amazon
- D-Link
- Huawei (as long as you don't mind Chinese spyware...lol)
It will just be down to how much you want to pay and for what features. E.g., WiFi 6/6e? Mesh ?
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
24-07-2022 10:49 PM - edited 24-07-2022 10:50 PM
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Just catching up with new posts. I got my new Hub working so the pressure is off to buy anything quickly. I will take some time now to research options based on the suggestions here.
Thanks all.
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
08-08-2022 2:09 AM
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I used one for FTTC and bought another one when I upgraded to FTTP.
Neither of them have missed a heartbeat and the new one supports WiFi 6 which is handy if you have any devices that can use it.
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
13-08-2022 5:55 PM
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My 2.5 year old Fritz!Box 7530 finally gave up the ghost yesterday ( presumably because of the heat in my loft ) and for the time being I've re-commected my Hub One. It's very noticeable how poor the Wi-Fi is downstairs now.
If the Fritz!Box 7530 was still available I think I'd buy another but I can only find the Fritz!Box 7530ax at a price that is too rich for my liking.
I was looking at a TP Link AC2800 but I'm trying to get an idea from people with experience of it what the strengths and weaknesses are.
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
13-08-2022 6:25 PM - edited 13-08-2022 6:26 PM
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I've found TP-Link devices to work well, if you follow this link you can see what the devices GUI offers.
https://emulator.tp-link.com/VR2800V1_Emulator_2017042605/index.htm
Has a VPN Server built in is a handy feature.
HTH
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
13-08-2022 7:38 PM
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Thanks for that link. Covers pretty much everything I wanted to know. I suppose that Wi-Fi functionality depends very much on local conditions but presumably better than the Hub One.
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
13-08-2022 7:43 PM
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I suppose that Wi-Fi functionality depends very much on local conditions
Absolutely, wireless connections are subject to many variables
Dan
Re: Alternatives to provided routers
13-08-2022 7:52 PM
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i.e. the only reliable comparison is where different routers are used in the same location e.g. I know that my Fritz!Box performed better than the Hub One 😁
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