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by ipython
2882 days ago
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I explicitly mentioned that you could beat single stream performance with high end all-in-one routers. However, no router in that price point gives you the ability to easily expand past one AP, RADIUS VLAN support, the Unifi web interface and so forth. My last setup was an ASUS N66 dedicated as the router with an Archer C7 as the WAP. Good performance but the configurability and stability (even with ddwrt on the asus) doesn’t compare to the ubiquiti combo I run now. |
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You must be assuming that the user insists on sticking with broken vendor software, instead of switching to OpenWRT. The only software benefit that you don't get just as easily from OpenWRT is centralized management of multiple APs. Adding and configuring APs one at a time is very easy and since home networks never require more than 2-3 APs the lack of centralized management is not a significant issue. RADIUS and VLANs are fully supported by OpenWRT, and the web interface is fine except for the aforementioned limitation that you're only managing one AP at a time.
I suspect your stability issues with the ASUS router were a consequence of you using DD-WRT hobbled by proprietary WiFi drivers, instead of an OpenWRT-supported router. The DD-WRT "project" is a mess compared to OpenWRT, which actually puts out stable releases and operates more like a proper Linux distribution. Third-party firmware distributions aren't all the same.