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TP-Link Omada EAP683 UR | Wi-Fi 6 AX6000 Wireless 2.5G Punto de Acceso de Montaje en Techo | Soporte de Malla, OFDMA, Roaming sin Costuras, HE160 y MU-MIMO | SDN Integrado | Acceso a la Nube y

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  • Diseñado con la última tecnología inalámbrica Wi-Fi 6 con 1024-QAM, HE160 y símbolo OFDM largo, el EAP683 LR aumenta velocidades Wi-Fi de doble banda de hasta 6000 Mbps.
  • Armado con un puerto Ethernet de 2.5 Gigabit, el EAP683 LR ofrece un rendimiento excepcional de varios gigabit y aumenta el rendimiento total de Internet para una conexión Wi-Fi más rápida y mejor. Soporta la fuente de alimentación estándar 802.3at PoE+ y 12V/2A DC, se puede alimentar con un interruptor TP-Link PoE+, o el adaptador de CC de 12V/2A proporcionado, lo que hace que la implementación sea fácil y flexible.
  • La plataforma Omada Software Defined Networking (SDN) integra dispositivos de red incluyendo puntos de acceso, conmutadores y puertas de enlace con múltiples opciones de control ofrecidas - driver de hardware Omada, driver de software o driver basado en la nube* (póngase en contacto con TP-Link para obtener detalles del driver basado en la nube). También es compatible con el modo no empotrado.
  • El acceso remoto a la nube y la aplicación Omada permiten la gestión centralizada de toda la red desde diferentes sitios, todo controlado desde una única interfaz en cualquier lugar y en cualquier momento. Para dispositivos compatibles con el Firmware SDN, visite la sección "Del fabricante – Preguntas y respuestas" o el sitio web TP-Link.
  • Soporta WiFi de malla, itinerancia sin fisuras* (la malla Omada y la itinerancia sin costuras requieren el uso de controladores Omada SDN), dirección de banda, equilibrio de carga, equidad de tiempo de aire y tecnologías de formación de haz.
  • Respaldado por nuestra garantía de 5 años líder en la industria y soporte técnico gratuito de 6 a 6 pm PST de lunes a viernes, puedes trabajar con confianza.
  • Este modelo no tiene un adaptador de CC.


AX6000 Soporte de techo Wi-Fi 6 Punto de acceso


heyuka
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de febrero de 2025
Do yourself a favor and go looking elsewhere.No device on my network is more than fifty feet from this access point. There are other networks in the neighborhood but nothing close or loud enough to cause interference on the channels it's assigned to. I have one SSID each on 2.4 and 5 GHz and a total of 24 client devices connected. I haven't bothered to set up VLANs. The device has the latest firmware from the manufacturer installed, and it says it's running at 1% of CPU and 17% of memory. This should be as close to optimal conditions as a device like this will ever see, right?Check the screenshots.This thing is dropping 6% of receive traffic on 5GHz and 50% 2.4GHz.The devices I have connected via 5GHz are getting a link speed of 1.2 Gbps but iperf is seeing This isn't a new issue, either. There are several threads on the manufacturer's support site complaining of the same issues with this model and the LR variant it was rebadged from. They have been dragging their feet on a fix for well over a year now, and the updated firmware they've released has done nothing to solve the issues.
NickJG
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de enero de 2025
I have over a dozen of these now serving clients and they are amazing. They are my go-to radio for all of my installs. Their range is awesome, the performance is incredible and the form factor is so much better than the radios this replaced.Really pleased what TP-Link has done here with their radios. It's crazy that these are both super easy to adopt into the Omada system and are really great at just being standalone Wifi radios.The ONLY design decision I often wonder about is for the ethernet to come out the top of the radio. For those of us who like things to look nice, when the TP-Link logo is right-side-up, the ethernet will come out the top of the device. In many cases, this means we need to do something special to have the cable route nicely and neatly. If they simply printed the logo upside down to what is now, that would make it way nicer looking in MANY wall-mount situations. (Yes I know it's a ceiling mount, but I often use this in both Ceiling and Wall mount configurations - the mounting bracket supports both options).
HoHo
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 29 de agosto de 2024
Got this access point to upgrade the WiFi of an existing Omada network with existing ER7206 Internet Gateway, LS108GP POE+ switch hub and 3 other EAP225 access points that had been working flawlessly for over 18 months. Added the EAP684 UR hoping to improve reception at a key location. It seems to improved throughput slightly. I thought all was good. But after about 2 weeks, the EAP683 started dropping off the Omada network a few times a day and automatically re-adopting. This process takes about 1 hour automatically while that section of the network is at a total standstill. Checked the firmware for latest version on all devices. Same issue persisted. Don't know what to do now, probably go back to EAP225 since I just missed the return window by 2 days.
MaryBeth
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 18 de diciembre de 2024
Do not buy these until TP-Link creates fully-functional firmware for this model.I had high hopes for these access points given good experiences with TP-Link switches and wanting a nicely integrated ecosystem. I selected this model because I have a bunch of 2.4 GHz webcams and this model has additional capacity on that band. Signs were initially encouraging as the access points were readily adopted into Omada and setting up SSIDs was straightforward.Unfortunately from there it was all downhill. The "lock to access point" feature didn't work properly (a deal breaker for me). Despite placing these APs in the exact same locations as their Unifi predecessors, signal strength was worse even on max power, roaming didn't work well, and phones were regularly getting one or two wifi "bars" instead of 3. Worst of all, even with the closest access point and signal north of -50dbm, the connection would drop as often as once every 5 minutes.Omada didn't show any available firmware updates. However on the website there was a firmware release dated April 2024 but released literally 2 days ago. This firmware update would not work through Omada even when supplying the downloaded file. I had to un-adopt each one, update firmware through its individual web interface, and re-adopt to get the new firmware loaded.I tried TP-Link chat support, but after waiting in the queue for over an hour with no response ... and finding very similar experiences to this on Reddit, I'm cutting my losses and returning these.
JP
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 22 de octubre de 2024
No, it's not WiFi7. But the range is incredible, and very few people would ever actually utilize the speeds of WiFi6.If you have a use-case for speeds greater than this, you really need to be looking at cabling your device.
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