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Forum Discussion
MamaBear2016
Jul 09, 2017Aspirant
What will replace the WN2500RP with 802.11ac functionality, without being a repeater?
I'm a Comcast customer in the Denver area, have my own TM822G being used as a modem only, and just upgraded my own router from a RT-N66U to a WRT 1900ACS. I don't know the differences between some...
- Jul 10, 2017
The WAC104 is described as an Access Point, which means, once configured, you Ethernet connect from a port on the WAC104 back to your base router. That will expand your wireless in your environment. You can also configure the WN2500RP as an Access Point. manual - Page 16. Any Access point that is added should use different wireless channels (2.4ghz non-overlapping 1,6,or11) and upper channels for 5ghz). Never leave wireless channels at auto. The LAN ports on the AP's can be used to connect other devices on your network. If you run out of ports on your base router (WRT 1900ACS), you can pick an unmanaged gig switch (5-8 port) for cheap.
netwrks
Jul 10, 2017Master
The WAC104 is described as an Access Point, which means, once configured, you Ethernet connect from a port on the WAC104 back to your base router. That will expand your wireless in your environment. You can also configure the WN2500RP as an Access Point. manual - Page 16. Any Access point that is added should use different wireless channels (2.4ghz non-overlapping 1,6,or11) and upper channels for 5ghz). Never leave wireless channels at auto. The LAN ports on the AP's can be used to connect other devices on your network. If you run out of ports on your base router (WRT 1900ACS), you can pick an unmanaged gig switch (5-8 port) for cheap.
- MamaBear2016Jul 10, 2017Aspirant
Thanks! We don't need much - just to connect via wifi to the bedrooms and go into the blu rays in both, and the Hopper in one of these bedrooms. Not sure how to do that thing with using different channels, though. Gotta figure that out. I think everything is on auto now. ( the WN2500RP is working, but of course it's not likely configured as an access point, and not being 802.11ac, it doesn't talk back to the router?
Looking at the manual for the WN2500RP, I see:
For product available in the USA market, only channel 1~11 can be operated. Selection of other channels is not
possible.Not sure if that's just the channels it TRANSMITS on, but my router is transmitting successfully to this unit on channel 151.
- MamaBear2016Jul 10, 2017Aspirant
Actually, the original TP LINK DUAL BAND WIFI ADAPTER TL-WA890EA appears to be doing just what we need, just NOT with 802.11ac.
In the intro, it says:
1.1 Product Overview
The N600 Universal Dual Band WiFi Entertainment Adapter with 4 Ports TL-WA890EA can bring
all of your home or office’s Internet-enabled devices into the world of wireless.
By connecting them to TL-WA890EA, the entertainment devices in your home that previously
required running Ethernet cables around furniture, through walls and doorways can now be
connected to your network wirelessly, without the risk of degrading performance. With N600 dual
band wireless speeds and four LAN ports, TL-WA890EA provides your devices with ample
bandwidth for smooth HD video and music streaming and online gaming. What’s more, the N600
Universal Dual Band WiFi Entertainment Adapter with 4 Ports TL-WA890EA is universally
compatible with all Internet-enabled devices, so if it has an Ethernet port, you can make it wireless
in a flash.
1.2 Main Features
Gives wired-only devices (such as Smart TVs, Games Consoles, Blu-ray players, etc.) access
to an existing Wi-Fi network
Dual band performance, 300Mbps wireless speed over 5GHz or 2.4GHz
Universally compatible - works with any device with an Ethernet port
Works seamlessly with all 802.11a/b/g/n devices
Easy wireless security encryption at a push of the WPS button
CD-less installationSo it doesn't appear to be acting as a repeater or anything - JUST acting as an "Adapter", to bring the wifi to some ethernet ports that hook to our blu ray player in the bedroom, and Hopper ( if it was in that bedroom ) to bring internet to them.
So all I need is a simple inexpensive version of this box, that also does 802.11ac. But what is it called?