NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.

Forum Discussion

richard72942's avatar
richard72942
Aspirant
Aug 03, 2015
Solved

using a router instead of an extender

Currently I have a R6250 in the house and I'm usling a 2500 Ranger Extender to my son's "apartment" located approximately 100' away from the house.  There are as many as 16 various units that are connected wirelessly ranging from thermostats to laptops, t.v., cellular phones, etc most of the time.

 

I'm thinking about getting a new 9600 and was wondering if I could connect the 6250 instead of the 2500 as a "range extender"?

  • Thanks for the speedy reply.  I've been on a short vacation or I would have replied eariler.

     

    I was reffering to the newer R9600 router to replace the R6250.

3 Replies

  • The 6250 only does bridge and AP mode. You could get a 100' CAT6 cable run the 6250 in AP mode back to the to 9600(?) Curious what a 9600 is.

    • richard72942's avatar
      richard72942
      Aspirant

      Thanks for the speedy reply.  I've been on a short vacation or I would have replied eariler.

       

      I was reffering to the newer R9600 router to replace the R6250.

      • netwrks's avatar
        netwrks
        Master

        I haven't found any links to a R9600. But, here's a rule of thumb. If it's brand new, save your money and wait until the product matures. The firmware is way too flaky and the first round of hardware is typically the worst. everything from DOA's, to basic hardware failures. The most stable Netgear AC router at this time IMO, is the R7000. (AC1900). Personally, I wouldn't touch anything in the first year of release..