OP possibly means scheduled turn off, brilliant feature for the kids Wi-fi network in the evenings!You mean hiding the SSID? It's completely pointless.
OP possibly means scheduled turn off, brilliant feature for the kids Wi-fi network in the evenings!You mean hiding the SSID? It's completely pointless.
You mean hiding the SSID? It's completely pointless.
If you don't mind separates, get an Openreach HG612 modem (match the chipset to your fibre cabinet type e.g. ECI or Huawei), a Ubiquiti USG router and a Ubiquiti AC LR. Should be around your budget.
For an all-in-one the Netgear Nighthawks are good.
Out of interest how would I work out what modem my cabinet is using? cheers.
The easiest way to tell is from the line stats on a router/modem that is able to display them. Failing that you'd have to locate your cabinet in the street, you can get the cabinet number from the BT wholesale checker and compare the design with this website:
https://kitz.co.uk/adsl/fttc-cabinets.htm
If you want to go the UniFi route, you'd need a HG612, USG, UniFi AP, switch and a cloudkey (optional).
The separate modem gives you more options. Is there a router that can act as a vpn server? Does the Ubiquiti stuff offer this?
I need to replace the HH6 with something that allows me access to my home network. I need to access devices on my network avoiding port forwarding to prevent these devices from having access to the internet if you know what I mean.
What does everyone think of the mesh kits? No good vs Ubiquiti APs? I have an R7000 which I use but my house has lots of Steels in and the signal degrades quickly.
Ok great - I'll have a look at the UAP-Pro then. Will one typically handle an average size house?
If you run a separate modem then a MikroTik Hex (RB750Gr3) would do what you want. Great router, brilliant VPN server as it will hardware offload, can push 450Mb of encrypted traffic. Costs <£60