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No hay artículos en el carro(5) Gigabit RJ45 ports with passive PoE support. (1) Gigabit SFP port for backhaul applications. Ports configurable for line-rate, Layer-2 switching. 130 kpps for 64‑byte packets. 1 Gbps for 1518-byte packets.
Johnny Lunchbucket
Comentado en Canadá el 24 de julio de 2023
I bought this the other day for two primary reasons, I needed to have several simultaneous connections to the Internet and I wanted POE for older Ubiquiti gear. I was running a USG3P but replaced it with this.It's working perfectly. This device enabled me to get rid of 3 POE blocks for the WAN radios and 3 ethernet cables right off the bat. WAN balancing between the 3 wireless WAN connections is working perfectly. Setup was pretty easy. Price was/is excellent. What makes this router very neat is that it's both a router AND a switch. I can also add another two WAN connections for a total of 5. It's tiny and passively cooled (no fan).What can I say? I'm pleased. Very pleased. It cleaned up all cabling clutter and freed up three electrical outlets for the POE blocks it replaced. It's certainly a bit dated but I'm very pleased. Lots of information out there on it, lots of videos to show you what to do if you don't know but I set it up with no issues.Highly recommended.
Customer
Comentado en Singapur el 1 de diciembre de 2020
The product came with a EU plug instead of the UK plug for Singapore...
K.A.
Comentado en Canadá el 11 de enero de 2019
Never let a little black box do a Computer's job. This certainly remains true.I've been building routers and servers out of computers running various flavours of Linux and BSD for many many years now. Those have always worked well, and continue to do so to this day. Problem is, the little black box has a lot more ports and can route them with hardware besides. I can now let the little black box do that for me, while my Computer can focus on what it's really really good at: be a server and provide network services.Make no mistake, this little black box is a serious router, it is going to blow your consumer one right out of the water. It is, however, definitely limited in features and resources, so you may or may not find all you want depending on your needs. Having played and tinkered with it for a while now, it is quite customizable: I can get it to do a lot more through the command line than what is "officially" supported through the web interface. Which isn't to say this is a good idea: you have 256MB of NAND flash, 70% of it full right out of the box, 256MB of RAM, and a quad-core MIPS-based CPU running at 880Mhz. All of this is probably fine for routing but not much else. For those of you who don't know that, MIPS is a RISC-based CPU, formerly used by a very famous and popular line of mainframes, but the company that made them went under sometime in the 90ies. Nowadays the MIPS architecture has been repurposed for use in embedded devices such as some Linksys routers, and Ubiquiti ones too I guess, and seems to be doing quite well there. This is a router, a solid one for a small network, but this is all it is.EdgeOS, the operating system this router uses, is going to be very familiar to anyone who has ever tinkered with Debian Linux. There are a few additions, the "set", "show" and "configure" commands being of note, and a few differences, such as it still using the older rc-based start scripts, and the lack of a package manager, which you won't miss with just 60-and-change MB of free space. Any long-time Linux user will figure it out pretty quickly.EDIT: I tested this router on a Gigabit fiber connection and I am simply not able to get it to perform. It maxes out at around 350Mbps download and this is all I can get from it. I tweaked everything I could to no avail. The instant I replaced it with one of my computers, performance instantly hit 850Mbps. So this is it then: a great little router, but underpowered.
Cliente de
Comentado en México el 25 de febrero de 2018
Excelente calidad de los productos Ubiquiti. Un gran número de características de productos de marcas más costosas, pero a precios menores. Administración de características básicas a través de interfaces fáciles de usar, pero también la posibilidad de administrar desde consola todas las características disponibles. Migrando nuestra infraestructura a productos Ubiquiti.
Drawring Simon
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 25 de agosto de 2017
I bought this as the first piece of my all Ubiquiti network setup. I wanted to replace my ASUS all in one AC router because of constant restarts and inconsistent wifi performance. It was a good router, but it can't compare to my new system of dedicated router (this), switch, and access point. In the three months I've had my system, there has not been a single issue with internet speeds or connection, or with wifi performance. It is rock solid now and there haven't been any complaints from the family about the internet being down.This router just routes. It isn't encumbered by the need to be the AP as well. I do use the switch function on this however, and it is very configurable, pretty close to a managed switch. It is also capable of passive POE power, which I am not using currently. The SFP port can be configured as the WAN port if you need another port. This is all in a small, well built metal case. The one downside is that it's not the easiest to configure in this current age of consumer routers, but it's still not hard with the wizards and all of the information and support available online. If you are skilled or determined, there is so much configuration this router is capable of. If you get by the initial setup hurdle, the separated router and AP combo is a gamechanger for people like me. The wifi is no longer tied to wherever the router has to be. It can go in the most central or needed location in the house, and you can have more AP's if needed. This is the first step toward non-sucky internet.
Sylvester Dsouza
Comentado en India el 27 de junio de 2017
I have been using off the shelf routers with my BSNL ADSL service for many years now, The regular Linksys, d-link, tp-link type devices cannot handle more than 3-4 wifi clients simultaneously, I have had severe buffering issues playing HD videos between devices just a few feet away from each other, I suspected it had something to do with the memory/cpu on these devices and I was right about it.I still use my old TP-Link device to connect to BSNL but I now bridge the pppoe connection to this Edgerouter and all my streaming issues have magically disappeared, This device also powers my Unifi AP with POE and saves me on some of the cabling mess.This is a great router for a small home or office network with more than 2-3 devices.
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