The most reliable router that exists is?

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Looking for a router that pretty much never dies / resets / hangs (i.e. instant death in game / disconnect from work VPN etc).

I currently have a AC Router, which is fast, but it literally dies once or twice a day at random intervals. It actually nicely resets itself (which is good) to sort it, but it means the internet goes down for like a min, and its interaction with works VPN means I have to restart my POS work laptop (there goes 10mins).

Sooooooo.

Is there an ultimately stable router? It needs gigabit ethernet is the only must. Decent wireless would be nice as well.
 
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OP
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Well if money is no issue then pfSense and maybe an Ubiquiti access point would be best.

What is your current router and how is everything connected?
£200 would be my price ceiling I think.

I currently have a chinese "AFOUNDRY Dual Band Wireless AC Gigabit Router,6 External Antennas,Three Processors router"
It looks bad arse. But yeah.

Is there an alternative to pfSense that effectively runs on windows? If such could turn the home server into the home router I guess.
 
Soldato
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Think that's probably the first time I've even heard of AFOUNDRY. Looking at reviews they even comment that the router itself is unstable.

If you want an all in one solution and something a little more simple to use, the Asus routers will do fine. RT-AC86U I think fits in your budget, but if you want to save a bit more, I can vouch for the RT-AC68U which has been rock solid for me for the past few years.
 
Soldato
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Reality is you probably don't need something with the 99.999% reliability uptime stuff. It sounds like a "decent" home router will suffice. You could look at Ubiquiti Edgerouters, they are very stable set and forget kind of devices.
 
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Think that's probably the first time I've even heard of AFOUNDRY. Looking at reviews they even comment that the router itself is unstable.

If you want an all in one solution and something a little more simple to use, the Asus routers will do fine. RT-AC86U I think fits in your budget, but if you want to save a bit more, I can vouch for the RT-AC68U which has been rock solid for me for the past few years.

2nd vote from me for the Asus routers, I also have a RT-AC68U and find it to be a very good router. That said, doesn't matter what router you have if the line it's connected to isn't stable and keeping the connection up.
 
Caporegime
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I’d widen your search to just “a router that works”. To get away from the problems you’re having you don’t need something with crazy reliability claims, you just need a piece of hardware that isn’t broken.
 
Soldato
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A Ubiquiti setup is very stable, it's just comes down to if you want to break from consumer all-in-one devices.
Because what you call a "Router" OP is a Switch, Router, Access Point all in one device.
 
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My pfSense box has an impeccable reliability history. It hasn't gone down once in the years I've been using it. It's current uptime is 2 months and that blip was only due to a power outage that affected the whole house.

It started life as an fanless HTPC and I added a second NIC to turn it into a router... so it's fast, silent, very reliable and didn't cost much at all...

Then I can only ever recommend access points for your wireless... a Ruckus R310 is dirt cheap and will wipe the floor in both range and throughput with any consumer-grade wifi router.

You could update your home server to be a virtualised system and run pfSense virtualised... all you need are 2 NICs in that PC (or a dual/quad NIC you can pick up dirt cheap second hand)... then your budget can go towards a really good access point. The Ubiquiti APs are pretty good, especially for their price point... but even they are junk compared to Ruckus.

You can pick up a Ruckus R310 on ebay for under £200... otherwise the R500 is an older model but almost as good and I've seen them go for under £150.
 
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My pfSense box has an impeccable reliability history. It hasn't gone down once in the years I've been using it. It's current uptime is 2 months and that blip was only due to a power outage that affected the whole house.

It started life as an fanless HTPC and I added a second NIC to turn it into a router... so it's fast, silent, very reliable and didn't cost much at all...

Then I can only ever recommend access points for your wireless... a Ruckus R310 is dirt cheap and will wipe the floor in both range and throughput with any consumer-grade wifi router.

You could update your home server to be a virtualised system and run pfSense virtualised... all you need are 2 NICs in that PC (or a dual/quad NIC you can pick up dirt cheap second hand)... then your budget can go towards a really good access point. The Ubiquiti APs are pretty good, especially for their price point... but even they are junk compared to Ruckus.

You can pick up a Ruckus R310 on ebay for under £200... otherwise the R500 is an older model but almost as good and I've seen them go for under £150.
Thanks i might try this, do a virtual instance. I mean i dont need to, but a good opportunity to learn i guess.
 
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Another vote for pfSense visualised, you do not even need multiple network interfaces if you have the right kit. I currently have 2 VDSL PPPOE connections and the WAN interface running over 1 port to my GEN8 HP Microserver.

Using a Cisco 1921 with 2 VDSL HWICS I put the Cisco in bridge mode to pass over the PPPOE and management interface to pfSense using 3 VLANS. Works perfectly so far.
 
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Soldato
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I’d widen your search to just “a router that works”. To get away from the problems you’re having you don’t need something with crazy reliability claims, you just need a piece of hardware that isn’t broken.

Agreed.

Not even my boggo vm router has the issues the op has. Sounds like crap/faulty hardware.
 
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