Best value for the price. Cisco E4200 refurb.
http://homestore.cisco.com/en-us/Rou...VVviewprod.htm
I want sub $100 and new (I am allergic to refurb.) Buffalo WZR-HP-AG300H
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16833162047
All the above are Dual Radio, Giga Switch, and has USB port for NAS.
I was looking for something better to replace that very Buffalo model because it was very eratic in its connectivity to various devices.
I got both a refurb E4200V2 from the Cisco homestore and a factory refurb Netgear WNDR4000 from Amazon on the same day and tried them both (intending fully to keep both with one as a spare). The E4200 was a piece of junk and promptly got sent back to Cisco. The Netgear was far far superior to either the Buffalo or the Cisco and has been working flawlessly. Everything - PCs, laptops, tablets, phones, IP Camera, clock radio, TV, blu ray player, and every other wireless device in the home -- connected immediately and has stayed perfectly connected.
It's dual band, Giga switch, has USB port for a hard disk, guest access, triple 2.4Ghz antenna and dual 5Ghz antenna.
Not only is it the best of the bunch, it's a steal at only $75 on Amazon.
The refurb WNDR3700 gives up the third 2.4Ghz antenna and is $65.
It's not really fair to slam an entire model series of a rather highly regarded router based on your experience with one unit without an explanation of why? You may have gotten a faulty unit. Many times people who claim a router is a piece of junk simply don't know how to set it up properly I've found. I do not know if this is true in your case however. 🙂 The other issue is if you read reviews you can find as many people that had a bad experience as think it's the greatest router ever. This leads me to believe that that quality control in these mass produced routers is not very good. I know of no other explanation other than people are buying these new technologically advanced routers without a clue as how to set them up for their particular needs. Human error is as prevalent a problem as a bad router.
QFT - :thumbsup:
I took the liberty to Bold part of your Quote.
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Marketing of all brands is outright Manipulative at Best, and many time just creative verbal nonsense that has Nothing to do with the technology.
I think that after so many years on this forum I simple learned which people Judgment is fair and reliable and can be taken into considerations.
But the Most important thing to Understand is that there is No Good brand or Bad brand.
Each brand has some Good stuff and a lot of Junk.
If one notice my recommendation in 2012 are actually including specific models from Asus Buffalo and Linksys/Cisco.
Disclaimer - I never had any direct deal with any of the Brands, I never received any network device for free (or for eval). I buy my stuff.
😎
I would ask you to elaborate about what issues you had with the Cisco E4200V2? It's not really fair to slam an entire model series of a rather highly regarded router based on your experience with one unit without an explanation of why? You may have gotten a faulty unit. Many times people who claim a router is a piece of junk simply don't know how to set it up properly I've found. I do not know if this is true in your case however. 🙂 The other issue is if you read reviews you can find as many people that had a bad experience as think it's the greatest router ever. This leads me to believe that that quality control in these mass produced routers is not very good. I know of no other explanation other than people are buying these new technologically advanced routers without a clue as how to set them up for their particular needs. Human error is as prevalent a problem as a bad router.
No one is slamming a whole line. I've used quite a few Cisco/Linksys routers, waps and switches for a long time. Most recently I really liked my RSV4000. My success with Cisco/Linksys over the years was a large part of the reason why I bought the E4200V2.
But I was really disappointed with this one. For one thing, I do know how to set up a router and network. That's not the problem here. And my comments aren't based on reviews. They are based on actually having in my hands and trying the three routers I identified that had been discussed in this thread. The Buffalo I had used for over a year. It had good range and throughput, but its connectivity was inconsistent. Devices would simply lose their connection for no good reason. So I ordered both the E4200V2 and the WNDR4000. The interface on the Cisco was not great, and while I could create a wired and wireless LAN, I could not get it to connect to my Verizon modem (set in bridge mode). Yes, I cloned the MAC address, and I reset it multiple times, and everything else. It just didn't work. After wasting about 3 hours of my time (including 30 totally useless minutes with Cisco tech support) I boxed it up to send back to Cisco. The Netgear WNDR4000 on the other hand, took about 15 minutes to configure, it was really easy to set up, it connected to every diverse device in the house right away (pcs, laptops, tablets, phones, IP camera, clock radio, TV, BD player, etc.) and it has not lost a single connection in six weeks. It has good range, good throughput, was a tremendous bargain, and was, from my own personal experience, by FAR the best product of the Cisco, Buffalo and Netgear wireless routers that I tried this time around.
I had originally intended to use the E4200V2 and had bought the Netgear because it was a bargain just to use as a spare or perhaps to add as a second WAP in a separate part of the house. Instead, I sent the E4200V2 back to Cisco and ordered second WNDR4000. But the range and throughput is good enough on the Netgear I have had no need to set up a second WAP.
Thus, when the OP asked for a recommendation on a wireless router with guest access, I recommended the Netgear WNDR4000, and I would not recommend the Linksys E4200V2.
Is that enough "elaboration" for you? Just because you don't like the answer, you don't have to be so dismissive with all the "obviously you don't know what you're doing" nonsense.
You now sugar coat your original comments a bit. You did not simply say you did not recommend the E4200. You made the statement that the "E4200 was a piece of junk" without any explanation whatsoever. That's slamming the entire E4200V2 line based on a single router which may or may not have been faulty. That is not a fair technical evaluation of the product. All brands of routers have defective units right out of the box without exception.
You now explain that you had trouble setting it up that is why you called it a piece of junk. I can understand your frustration with not knowing how to configure your router. However you bought Cisco's most sophisticated flagship router from the E Series and because you didn't know how to set it up for your needs you gave it a thumbs down. It seems more like that "you don't know what you are doing nonsense" as you called it, is not so much nonsense at this point.
If you gave it a bad review on the basis that it was difficult to configure that is a valid complaint for those looking for ease of setup. To totally disregard it as "junk" was simply biased and unfair based on your reason for doing so.
By the way on the basis of owner reviews alone the WNDR4000 you tout so highly is not generally regarded as a good router at all.....so should we call it a piece of junk as well?
Nice try. But reading is fundamental.
I didn't sugar coat anything. It was a piece of junk. That's why it went back.
And no, I didn't have trouble configuring it. I know how to configure it. It simply didn't work. It was, I repeat, a PIECE OF JUNK. Don't know how much more clear I can be. Let me try it again. The E4200V2 was a piece of junk. Pure and simple. Now do you understand? Oh, and by the way, the Cisco tech support people couldn't get it to work either. But plug the Netgear into the same modem, without a single change, take 15 minutes to set it up, and perfect. See the difference?
And actually, the Netgear WNDR3700 and 4000 are very popular routers and get very good reviews from people who actually have used them and know how to use them.
I don't know if you work for Cisco or what, but someone who has actually used the piece of equipment comes on here and describes their actual hands-on real world experience with it and you whine and twist things like someone insulted your sister. Really don't care if you don't like my criticism of the E4200V2. It was, in my personal experience, a piece of junk. So get over it.
By the way, have you ever actually used one, or are you just regurgitating what you've read elsewhere? I don't see anything in your posts indicating that you have ever used or have any basis on which to comment on any of these routers.