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Forum Discussion
psychopomp123
Nov 24, 2016Luminary
Couple of questions to R9000 owners
Hi, Thinking of getting a Netgear R9000 next time I'm over in the States (i live in UK) as its $500 in US v £500 in UK LOL. A couple of questions though: 1) Does the US version of the R9000 come...
- Nov 27, 2016
Yes when you get a chance to use the router, please have a quick look at the power adaptor - it should say either 100v or 100-240v. Also let me know if the antennas flop about easily even after screwing them in tightly. Many Thanks!
Thanks, good to know i can use a non Netgear power adaptor on this.
psychopomp123
Nov 27, 2016Luminary
Yes when you get a chance to use the router, please have a quick look at the power adaptor - it should say either 100v or 100-240v. Also let me know if the antennas flop about easily even after screwing them in tightly. Many Thanks!
Thanks, good to know i can use a non Netgear power adaptor on this.
DodgeDeBoulet
Nov 30, 2016Apprentice
Home a day early, so I popped the box open to take a look.
The power adapter states "Input: 100 - 120V ~ 50/60Hz 1.5A." Output is 19V at 3.16A. So it looks like you'll need a 3rd party adapter if you don't want to use a voltage converter on your mains.
The antennae are effectively permanently attached to the chassis. Wiith the chassis laying flat, the side antennae can be positioned vertically, angled at 45 degrees, or horizontally forward, backward, or to the side. The rear antennae have essentially the same range of motion (albeit in the left, right, and rearward directions), at least until they contact each other. All 4 antennae have fixed detents at 0, 45 and 90 degree angles from their mounts when angled away from the chassis.
They're not "floppy" at all. Once positioned, they'll stay that way until you move them, even if they're off the detents. While I would prefer removable antennae, these seem to be quite sturdy. Given the embedded LEDs, I can see why they aren't detachable; that would require a non-standard connector.
Since I'm going to install it in a location where it would not normally be visible, though, the LEDs don't buy me much other than an initial modest nerdgasm.
Hope this helps!
PS. Some pictures of the antenna positioning options ...
- psychopomp123Nov 30, 2016Luminary
Thanks for the info, yes I'll definitely need a 3rd party 220-240v adaptor, i believe the R9000 uses the same adaptor as the R8500 so I'll keep an eye for those as well. Found a good deal on Monday so ordered the R9000 from Amazon US @ $375, will be delivered very soon to me in UK via shipito.com
Great news about the antennas, nearly every high end router I've purchased so far (Asus RT-AC5300 & Linksys EA8500) has antennas which become 'floppy' over time so you're constantly having to tighten them, good to know the same issue doesn't exist on the R9000 :)
Thanks!
- AdewaleDec 06, 2016Luminary
got a converter the size of a brick to start using my R9000 until i'm able to get a 100-240V power adapter. i'm piffed Netgear didnt pack this type of premium unit with a universal adapter from the get go
- DodgeDeBouletDec 06, 2016Apprentice
Given that these devices must conform to local regulations for frequency and power output, selling them with mains adaptors specific to the region they're designed for is probably more a CYA thing than an attempt to save a few nickels/pence/pesos/yen/etc ...