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Forum Discussion
cfj4462
Jun 15, 2016Aspirant
High Operating Temp Environment
I am looking for a reasonably priced wireless router that can handle temps above 120 degrees. All cabling for the house is in the garage, in LHC AZ, a very hot place in the summer. I could do a fir...
- Jun 24, 2016
Thank you everyone for your input.
I ended up purchasing a Mikrotik RouterBoard RB2011iL-IN (wired router) for the garage. It is rated at 149 degrees.
I purchased a WNDR4300V2 wireless router for in the house.
It was 116 degrees out the other day, it was 106 degrees in the garage.
Everything is working fine.
avtella
Jun 16, 2016Prodigy
I used my WNDR 3800 like that for almost two years, and when I returned to the states it was still fine and working by which time I upgraded and gave it away. Asus uses Broadcom only, and from my experience they run (current gen Broadcom) hotter than the Qualcomm chips which are far more powerful as well so I would think it would be a somewhat easy decision on picking a router with the QCA chipset, if you are looking at current gen offerings. Another thing which may be trivial at the moment but should be mentioned is that the Qualcomm MU-MIMO implementation actually works while the Broadcom one is still in beta last I checked. MU-MIMO client s aren't very common but they are picking up with new products.
VE6CGX
Jun 16, 2016Master
See that Asus routers use 19V wall wart vs. Netgear 12V. I use R7800 myself. To improve ventilation one can drill more holes on the router
case. Redo the heat sinking compund on the cpu, radio chips.