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Forum Discussion
NowWatt
Jan 07, 2020Initiate
RAX200 WPA3 availabilty?
The RAX200 is suppose to be a high end / all encompassing router that will brush your teeth if wireless toothbrush is compatible. Who spends $500 on a rocket that doesn't have WPA3? I won't. Cm...
psychopomp123
Jan 10, 2020Luminary
The extra 5ghz radio on the RAX200 makes it superior to the RAX120. Hence why the RAX200 costs more. Sure, not everybody needs/wants an extra 5ghz band but for those that have tons of wifi clients (like me), then a tri-band router like the RAX200 is a great choice. No issues at all with my RAX200, love it to bits. And no, i didn't pay $500+ for it either :)
psychopomp123
Jan 10, 2020Luminary
I should also add, its becoming a bit of an outdated myth that Qualcomm chipsets are still vastly superior to Broadcom units. Sure, that may have been the case when features like Mu-Mimo were first released a few years ago but Broadcom chipsets have finally caught up in the last year or two. As an example. my RAX200 performs just as well as my R9000 (QCA based), if not better.
- avtellaJan 10, 2020ProdigyI think SNBs testing of 6 AX routers shows the QCA still had a big lead if you look at the 5Ghz downlink/uplink plots it was pretty bad for the BCM based routers. In my testing 4 MU capable clients that I’ve done the QCA chipset still shows a superior throughput gain. On the BCM unit at least on the RAX80 there’s still a severe occasional loss in performance though better than the AC BCM chipsets, which I assume is why on the RAX200 it’s off by default. Where Broadcom really caught up is in their QoS implementation which is now pretty good and is now doing a better job than the QCA routers.
Is BCM terrible, no, just that they’re usually behind in implementing the ancillary features like MU or OFDMA in properly functional manner.- avtellaJan 10, 2020ProdigyAlso yeah nothing wrong with needing an extra 5Ghz band. Just note that unlike what marketing makes people believe simply having numerous devices doesn’t mean as much, as most clients are usually inactive/occasionally syncing. What matters more is how many clients are actively using a lot of bandwidth. Like let’s say you have 4 people at home using their laptops actively streaming video, that usually means their phones 4 phones and tablets most likely are idle. Also if you have a lot of older WiFi clients and a lot of newer gen ones having separate bands can make a difference there too.
- microchip8Jan 12, 2020Master
This is bull. QCA is still leading BCM. The latter doesn't even offer hardware dedicated network processors for offloading network traffic and still depends on **bleep**ty CTF which gets turned off the moment you need to inspect packets. QCA not only has a much better SDK (based on OpenWrt) but also leads in WiFi 6 chipsets and drivers, while BCM is still messing around. As avtella mentions, read the articles on SNB