π Elevate Your Home Connectivity Experience!
The ASUS ZenWiFi AX6600 Tri-Band Mesh WiFi 6 System (XT8 2PK) offers unparalleled whole-home coverage of up to 5500 sq.ft, delivering a total wireless speed of 6600 Mbps. With easy setup, lifetime internet security, and advanced parental controls, this system is designed for both home and business use, ensuring a fast and secure online experience for all your devices.
Color | White |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 6.3"L x 2.95"W x 6.36"H |
Item Weight | 6 Pounds |
Number of Ports | 4 |
Control Method | App |
Data Transfer Rate | 6600 Megabits Per Second |
LAN Port Bandwidth | 2.5 Gigabit |
Voltage | 110 Volts (AC) |
Controller Type | vera |
RAM Memory Installed | 512 MB |
Number of Antennas | 6 |
Recommended Uses For Product | Home, Business |
Connectivity Technology | Wi-Fi, USB, Ethernet |
AntennaType | Internal |
Operating System | Microsoft Windows, Linux, Mac OS, Apple iOS |
Security Protocol | WPA2-Enterprise, WPS, WPA2-PSK |
Additional Features | Internet Security, Parental Control |
Frequency Band Class | Tri-Band |
Wireless Compability | 802.11n, 802.11ax, 802.11a, 802.11ac, 802.11g |
Compatible Devices | Personal Computer, Tablet, Smartphone |
Frequency | 5 GHz |
S**Y
Effortless setup, massive improvement
Night and day coming from a Ubiquiti AP in terms of setup and performance. I've only been using this setup for a day, so longer term performance is still TBD, but everything has been excellent so far. Worth noting that my use cases and infrastructure might be simpler than many folks but even then, some of the negative reviews are a bit baffling given my experience.Pros:- Stupid-simple setup. The entire network with both devices was up and running within ~15 minutes of opening the box. I'm probably more technically inclined than others, but a child could figure this out. As simple as connecting the router to your modem, turning it on, and then walking through the in-app setup. The mesh node was about as plug-and-play as it gets, at least when using ethernet backhaul. It was recognized and configured almost immediately as a secondary node in the network.- Mobile app. Used for initial setup and management. Could probably be done through the web-ui but I don't really see a reason to do that on initial setup. Save time and just download/use the app.- Web UI. The router management web UI is more robust and a bit easier to navigate than the mobile app. Will likely use this going forward for more detailed configuration and monitoring.- Performance. Both speed and coverage are incredible. I pay for 1000/20 and consistently got ~930/~25 with the speed test in the Asus app. 5Ghz WiFi speed tests (fast dot com) on newer devices averaged ~750/~25. 2.4Ghz varied but was consistently fast and reliable. Full signal on various devices throughout the house and outside on both bands.- Wired backhaul. Worth mentioning specifically because I saw some reviews that complained about this not working very well or at all when a switch was in between the two units. It worked immediately and works well for me. There's also multiple physical connections between the node, the wall and the switch itself and there still aren't any problems. if you run into problems, its probably worth double-checking your cabling (CAT 5E+), hardware (switch compatibility/1G+ ports), and Asus configCons:- Asus UI/UX. Very minor issues just getting used to and understanding how to navigate the UI both on the mobile app and on the web. It seems simple enough now though after poking around. Not worth docking the rating.- 2.4 Ghz. Noticed in some instances where the speeds were sporadically low on 2.4 Ghz, but I generally don't use that and it isn't consistent enough to dock a star. Most of the connected devices on the network default to or have to use the 2.4 band, so it could just be some basic congestion. As of this writing, I'm getting 150/22 on my laptop while situated near the secondary node, which is more than acceptable. I'll look deeper into the settings and report back if there are problems.- SSID management. Fairly negligible but worth mentioning like others have. The default configuration uses a single SSID for both 5 and 2.4 Ghz bands which I immediately turned off. I assume most folks would want the delineation of the two like me. The other knock here is that it will broadcast the alternate 5 Ghz channel used for wireless backhaul. I don't intend to ever use the wireless backhaul, but, unless I'm missing something, Asus seems to force it to be left on as a fallback in case the wired connection ever drops. I'm fine leaving it on as a fallback but I'll at least see if I can hide the SSID without causing problems with the network, since it should never be used by regular clients.TBD:- Long-term performance. Very satisfied at the moment but I'm sure most would agree that a huge percentage of the value is how these things hold up over time. I'll report back as needed.- Advanced features. I haven't spent enough time with the router management software to really understand the pros and cons here quite yet.- IOT connection stability. Saw some reviews that dinged connection drops for connected devices. No issues to report yet. I used the same SSID and passwords as before. Everything connected seamlessly and appears to be working. I'll keep an eye on this as well.- Wireless backhaul. I have not tested wireless backhaul and I don't really intend to. In fact, I don't really see the utility of using wireless backhaul if you can avoid it. For the XT8, it relies on an alternate channel on the 5Ghz band. This is obviously going to be slower than ethernet from the jump but the 5Ghz band is much more "fragile" and can quickly become very limited by physical distance and obstructions between the two nodes, even if the actual channel is dedicated strictly for backhaul instead of regular traffic.Misc. Notes:Physical setup:- Cable connection from the street comes into the basement, which is where the modem and the main router are situated.- The house is fully wired via ethernet. A 10-port gigabit switch also sits in the basement with the modem and router, which feeds the wall ports in various rooms throughout the home.- Only a handful of the wall ports are actually used consistently. One for the entertainment center, one for a PC and one for an AP on the second floor of the home.- Various connected and personal devices throughout the house. Smart speakers, smart TVs, Nest thermostats, a camera, dog collar, wireless printer. Personal devices include cellphones, laptops, and tablets.Previous hardware:- Netgear Nighthawk 6700 running DD-WRT, located in basement. Older model but the reputation precedes itself. Worked fairly well on stock firmware for a little while. Decided to switch to DD-WRT after cord-cutting and increased bandwidth needs for remote work and more IOT devices. DD-WRT improved things for a little while. I toyed with various setups but ultimately wanted the router to feed all connectivity in the house, so it remained in the basement.- Ubiquiti AP on 2nd floor for better coverage. The house is a recent reno but is originally ~200 years old. Whether the older construction materials of the innards of the house or just physical distance of having the router in the basement, it was difficult to get solid coverage throughout even with relatively modest square footage. The single AP worked well for a little while but UI/UX for Ubiquiti products is clunky at best and annoyingly difficult to configure. Performance degraded slowly over time and required lots of hand-holding just to remain stable. It also seemed impossible to get a true "mesh"-like network without having to purchase a second AP and completely turning off wifi on the main router. This didn't seem appealing given the dissatisfaction with the Ubiquiti ecosystem as a whole.Current hardware:- Main AX6600 router in basement, replacing the Netgear 6700. Modem feeds the WAN port, single LAN port feeds the main switch for ethernet wall ports.- Secondary AX6600 on 2nd floor as secondary AP Mesh Node, replacing Ubiquiti AP. Strictly uses ethernet backhaul via wall port
M**F
Whoopie its great!!! Amazing really....
I got my first wifi access point about 12 years ago, from Amazon. A Netgear WGR614 Wireless-G Router, for a small apartment. It ran well for 5 years. I have had a few others since. Linksys, Cisco, Netgear. I spent 10+ years as a sys admin, "IT" guy, so have setup many more wifi systems.Times have changed, technology has advanced.Enter the ASUS ZenWiFi AX6600 Tri-Band Mesh WiFi 6 System. Wow!I live in central California, its Comcast "Xfinity" territory. I have 1Gbit broadband over coax cable (still 40Mbits upstream, sadly).I first tried the Comcast "Xfinity wifi Gateway" with 3 "xFi pods", in my 3 story 3400 square foot, almost new-construction house.It was a good concept, easy to setup, and easy to add the pods as range extenders. Well, it was not actually good. The pods are not powerful enough for an actual house, and they are slow to switch between them as you move in the house, so you end up tied to a distant one for minutes at a time...an Intolerable system all around, unless maybe you are somewhere very small?! The gateway alone for a small house would probably be just fine. (they just released a newer version gateway, probably better?)BUT, the comcast wireless gateway can be easily set into "bridge" mode, and any WAP connected to it directly via ethernet cable. So, that's what i did. I now have the comcast gateway as a bridge device (avoids double NAT among other things) and have directly connected it to one AX6600. This is physically located on the middle of 3 floors, about 20% the way in from the front of the house. A second AX6600 is on the same floor, about 20% in from the back of the house. So each one is covering their half of the floor above it and below it, and roughly half of the floor its on. It works great, strong signals!! (One cool feature is the units talk to each other on a dedicated 3rd band, so that doesn't use any bandwidth from the other 2 data bands.)In addition to just the raw speed of the AX6600, the Asus router app for IOS serves as a slick central point for monitoring and administration. I think its really great, and feature-rich. It shows the strength of the "backhaul" channel between the 2 AX6600 routers in the mesh, which in my case is "GREAT" (-47dBm). You can of course see all devices, their "interface" aka channel (2.4 or 5Ghz), signal strength, real-time throughput, as well as apply a bandwidth limiter or block altogether, and many more typical features of any modern WAP.I have on average 12-14 devices connected, phones, tablet, cameras, smart TV, thermostats and 2-3 computers. Our most intensive machine is an Alienware gaming PC with "killer wifi 6" at the top far end of the house, and it gets close to 200Mbits down, 30Mbits up, and the latency is under 15ms, often 9-10ms. (more a product of the comcast broadband itself i beleive). Zero issues when gaming. I even get 40Mbits all the way in out at the back of the backyard, haha.Suffice to say, the Asus AX6600 has solved all the issues I had covering a large home, and is easy to setup and administer. Also cool is that you can add any ASUS wifi6 routers into the mesh, so IF i wanted to enlarge the mesh, I could do it with "lesser" model Asus wifi 6 routers at any time.Overall this is an impressive product, and by far the best I have ever used. Its powerful, feature rich, and simple to use. Its done an impressive job covering a large house with strong signals and throughput!! I would recommend it.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago