TP-Link TL-WR841N 300 Mbps Wireless N Cable Router, Easy

TP-Link TL-WR841N 300 Mbps Wireless N Cable Router

TP-Link TL-WR841N 300 Mbps Wireless N Cable Router, Easy Setup, WPS Butto


N300 Wireless N RouterTL-WR841NWPAIP-QoS

WPA / WPA2 Encryptions

WPA/WPA2 encryption standards ensure your wireless connection is safe from intruders.

WPS

Instantly setup WiFi connections simply by pressing the “WPS” button.

IP QoS

IP based bandwidth control allows administrators to determine how much bandwidth is allotted to each PC.

Easy Setup

Either using the optimized user interface and setup wizard or the CD (included) setup wizard will allow you to get ‘online’ quickly and easily.

2
Wireless Spec N300 AX1800 AC1750 AC1200 AC1200 N450
Wi-Fi type (Dual-band or Tri-band) Dual-Band Dual-Band Dual-Band Dual-Band
Total Wi-Fi Speed (and per band) Up to 300Mbps Up to 1800Mbps Up to 1750Mbps Up to 1167Mbps Up to 1167Mbps Up to 450Mbps
Wi-Fi Range and Coverage Good Premium Better Good Good Good
Wi-Fi Type Wi-Fi 4 Wi-Fi 6 Wi-Fi 5 Wi-Fi 5 Wi-Fi 5 Single-Core
Ethernet Ports 10/100Mbps (4 LAN + 1 WAN) ports 3 GbE LAN ports + 1 GbE WAN port 4 GbE LAN ports + 1 GbE WAN port 4 GbE LAN ports + 1 GbE WAN port 10/100Mbps (4 LAN + 1 WAN) ports 10/100Mbps (4 LAN + 1 WAN) ports
USB Ports 2x USB 2.0 1x USB 2.0
Quality of Service (QoS) Bandwidth control assign your preferred device with more bandwidth Quality of Service (QoS) controls let you prioritise the network traffic for unstoppable video streaming and gaming Quality of Service (QoS) controls let you prioritise the network traffic for unstoppable video streaming and gaming Quality of Service (QoS) controls let you prioritise the network traffic for unstoppable video streaming and gaming Bandwidth control assign your preferred device with more bandwidth Bandwidth control assign your preferred device with more bandwidth
Guest Network and Parental Control
App


Weight: 907 g
Dimensions: 11.68 x 17.53 x 3.3 cm; 907.18 Grams
Brand: TP-Link
Model: TL-WR841N
Colour: White
Batteries Included: No
Manufacture: TP-Link
Dimensions: 11.68 x 17.53 x 3.3 cm; 907.18 Grams

27 Responses

  1. Belle7787upmjs says:

     United Kingdom

    Wanted to create a WiFi zone for my converted detached garage. I ran an ethernet cable from the house to there and was planning on using an older wifi modem/router as a hotspot. After banging my head against the problem for 3 nights…I gave in and bought this…5 mins and it was sorted. It has a dedicated hotspot mode, now my gaming pc is hardwired to it and my garage has WiFi for my phone and other devices etc. Please not this is just a router, not a modem.

  2. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Easy to set up with amazing wireless speed. This router is so good it actually covers the downstairs better than the Hub in some areas and the most important it is very cheap.

  3. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I liked this router. It’s very easy to set up and it has a whole host of new features for me to play around with. Signal hardly drops and reaches all parts of my house that were previously dead spots.

  4. TrevorDelong says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 4 From Our UsersUnfortunately I was seduced by the Vodafone Super Fast Broadband marketing.
    Unbeknown to me was the fact that the new “Super Vodafone Hub” is not backward compatible with smart plugs, bulbs & other devices that only run on 2.4ghz wifi. Vodafone say that it is, but trust me (and many others) it’s not!!!
    I purchased this TP n router, set it up as an access point & plugged it into the offending Vodafone router & it has solved all our Smart device connectivity issues.
    Great bit of kit, simple to set up & does what it says on the tin.

  5. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Firstly I just want to say it does help give your wifi a stable connection and does extend a-bit to other rooms in your house. But I feel like it doesn’t really increase or maximise your wifi speed but overall it’s good to have for your house if you live with a lot of people.

  6. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    some devices require a 2.4ghz wifi network, and this does exactly that – so I bought it and although the aforementioned devices are not always recognizing the ssid/password combination, I’m positive its the devices’s software and not the router’s fault. I’m a happy camper with this purchase, does exactly what I was looking for. It works very well and it is also cheap AF. 🙂

  7. Ryan Waniata says:

     United Kingdom

    Cheap, easy to set up with amazing wireless speed. Bought it to spread wireless signal upstairs where the Virgin Media Hub 3 struggles and this router is so good it actually covers the downstairs better than the Hub in some areas. Sadly only 100Mbps wired connections from it hence the 4/5

  8. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 4 From Our UsersI am a Virgin Media customer. The Superhub 3 was constantly dropping devices connected using Wi-Fi but wired connections were stable. So I have put the Superhub in to ‘cable’ mode and used this product to provide Wi-Fi connectivity. It has been installed for about 4 weeks now and not a single dropped connection. Job done. Easy to set up (for me because I dabble with Wi-Fi and home LANs). The user interface is straight forward and easy to use. Highly recommended.

  9. MorrisKieran says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 4 From Our UsersI recently upgraded to the TP-Link AX1800 Wi-Fi 6 Gigabit Dual Band Wireless Router, and it has been a game-changer for my home network. The router is incredibly fast and reliable, with a strong signal that reaches every corner of my house. The setup process was straightforward, and the accompanying app made it easy to customize my network settings and manage my devices. I have noticed a significant improvement in my internet speeds, and I can now stream 4K video and play online games without any lag or buffering. The router also features advanced security protocols, which give me peace of mind knowing that my network and devices are protected. Overall, I am extremely satisfied with my purchase and would highly recommend the TP-Link AX1800 to anyone looking to upgrade their home network.

  10. dsbs42 says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 2 From Our UsersA basic review with what impressed me about this router. I did some decent research into what would help out my issue which was a very poor Virgin hub4 box which had been supplied as an upgrade when I took out gig fibre package. I specifically asked for the hub5 when taking out the upgrade as my previous hub3 had given me shocking Wi-Fi which resulted in me doing like many and turning it to modem mode. I had read the hub5 was improved but not the 4 which I heard was actually worse. Anyway the 4 turned up and I complained which got me no where so I took it into my own hands. I was going to spend a little more and toyed with the higher spec versions in the TP range but thought that this one looked decent and offered Wi-Fi 6 which is something I was keen on. Ordered for 70, turned up the next day and it was installed. Very straightforward using the tether app and the coverage around my house is excellent. Coverage great and the speeds are fantastic. Without getting technical, quoting speed tests, all I can say is that it is blooming great and really pumps out the speed that is supplied in by Virgin. Yes the speeds vary as you go around the house but for me they are great and I accept that my hardwire connections are going to give better than Wi-Fi at distance from the router.
    Others have said it but it really is worth moving away from ISP supplied routers if you want anything decent and this is only a mid ranged hub. I am very happy.

  11. CharlotLevine says:

     United Kingdom

    I’ve had nothing but issues with the Virgin Media hub 3 (4-year-old tech) and Virgin basically ignored my issues. With working from home, we really needed a good wi fi connection to the office, the kitchen, and outside. This has hands down solved it all!

    The setup is very easy, just a case of putting the Virgin router on modem mode, then connecting this TP-Link router and that’s it. Works like a dream. (Make sure to turn off the Virgin router before you connect the TP-Link router, then turn it back on or else you’ll get an orange internet light.

    Can’t fault the signal, WI FI 6 is brilliant, and so far today, I’ve had no WI FI dropouts. I even tested the signal in the garden which is nearly 60 ft away and the signal is good (Good enough to stream music)

    I also got this because if I need to, I can extend it using the TP-Link Deco mesh systems

    Highly recommend!

    Also, I’ve had no issues with the heat, I saw reviews about it being hot to touch, it’s warm, like any other electrical device.

    Updated 12/04/2022. — This is amazing! I’ve had no dropouts since installing this. WIfi 6 is fast and all devices in the house are connected without issue. Highly recommend this! This solved all my Virgin wifi issues. Update on the warmth…Not hot at all and it has been on since I installed it.

    Parental controls are quite handy. I can set time limits for their devices. You can name the devices on your network so you can see what is connected.

  12. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 6 From Our UsersI bought the AX20 because the Virgin Media Hub 5 was giving me a lot of trouble – it’s awful with some mobile phones and it continually dropped signal. When setting up, I followed the steps of putting the VM Hub into ‘modem mode’, plugging all the cables into the TP-Link, and powering it on.

    The result? A little red light on the TP-Link router indicating there was no internet connection. Hmm. I had a look online and came to the conclusion I had done everything correctly. So I went to the TP-Link support page and by chance looked at the firmware for this router. Wouldn’t you know it! There was a bug fix in the latest (as of 11/03/22) that “Fixed the bug that the router can’t get WAN IP in some cases”. Sounded like it fixed my issue!

    So, I downloaded the new firmware to my laptop, connected the router to my laptop via Ethernet, and followed the steps on the support page to get it updated. Now it works wonderfully and I have a stable connection that is much better than the VM Hub 5!

    Cracking result!

  13. Carrie Lavergne says:

     United Kingdom

    This is a cheap single band router, which I used as a Cat6-wired access point to extend network in new house. For what it is it was OK, but the limitations showed fairly quickly and I quickly regretted the purchase.

    + easy to set up
    + cheap
    – LAN ports only 10/100 not gigabit
    – 2.4GHz only

    Having added a few IoT devices (Echo dots in a few rooms, smart plugs etc) I found the 2.4GHz band getting very crowded and phones and tablets that you needed bandwidth would suffer. The limited range of 5GHz from main router basically meant my phone, tablet or laptop would lock onto the 2.4GHz band and stick with it, rather than change back up to 5GHz, and would get constant drop-outs and inability to watch video. QoS controls didn’t seem to help things – I obviously tried this first.

    Buy cheap, buy twice. Learned this the hard way.

    After months of sticking with it and frustration, I bit the bullet and bought a dual band router to act as an access point and ‘forgot’ the 2.4 GHz network from the priority devices. Now I get 5GHz all over the house and can browse freely again.

    So if you want to extend the 2.4GHz network or if you don’t have many devices then this is probably good enough. I had a few devices plugged into the LAN ports on this router (eg Sky mini box) and the lack of gigabit was an issue here.

  14. lasvegasnvblog says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 168 From Our UsersPurchasing a new Router is a big decision. Will it perform better than my current one? Will coverage improve? Am I purchasing the new technology too early? Will an extra 50 spent really make a difference?

    This took me some time to decide, I looked to spend no more than 150. Finally deliberating between the AX20 (AX1800) and the AX50 (AX3000), after looking at the ASUS RT-AX82U too. I read through tech reviews, ‘top 20 routers of 2021’ and the reviews here.

    My goal, was to improve the poor coverage of the Virgin Media Hub 3 – a common theme throughout many Wi-Fi router reviews.

    Finally I decided on this AX20 (AX1800) due to:-

    1. Having 400Mbps of internet and only max. 4 streaming devices at any time, AX1800 still delivers 450Mbps theoretically to each (1.8Gbps/4)
    2. Filtering Amazon reviews by Virgin and seeing predominantly AX1800 purchases and feedback
    3. Price – couldn’t justify the extra 30 for the extra 600Mbps of bandwidth, which is unlikely to change speed at device

    Happy days, that was the decision made – phew!

    Before it arrived, I went through the house and every room recording all speeds whilst two streaming devices going. Downstairs near the Virgin Hub was always reliable 300+Mbps. Kitchen varied and signal dropped off significantly (lost it completely 3/7 mornings a week). No signal near front door and very low (4-20Mbps down/3-8Mbps Up, 15ms jitter) in upstairs bedrooms above kitchen and front door area.

    Boy oh boy was I pleasantly surprised by the purchase!

    New speed in upstairs bedrooms of around 52Mbps down and 35Mbps Up and only 2ms jitter. Similar story for main bedroom, which would again suffer from 1-2 bars on wifi; now a strong signal – couple of results below:-

    Main Bedroom (room above but ~12m to left of router)
    from: 59.4Mbps down, 20.8Mbps up, 14ms ping, 71ms jitter
    to: 95.5Mbps down, 36.5Mbps up, 11ms ping, 3ms jitter

    Front Door Area (farthest point from router)
    from: 72Mbps down, 27.5Mbps up, 10ms ping, 12ms jitter
    to: 91.4Mbps down, 36.4Mbps up, 11ms ping, 4ms jitter

    Also, to point out that the front door, although holding during testing, only had 1 bar if lucky of WiFi, often cutting out. Now it has at least 2 and has not cut out once.

    We are only on day 3, but no crashes yet either – if anything adverse happens I will update this, but for now one happy camper!

  15. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Purchased TP-Link Archer AX1800 because my Virgin Hub v.3 does not provide a reliable connection. As I have to give many lectures and do skype/teams/zoom etc. calls while still working from home my unreliable connection was a huge issue. I had to switch to my mobile internet very often to have a smooth call or live lecture. Signal was also weak in some parts of the garden ironically where my chair normally is.

    TP-Link Archer AX1800 has provided with a much better signal especially after I separated the 2.4 and 5 Ghz channels. My devices would automatically connect to the 2.4 Ghz channel and if it works well 5 GHz could provide with a faster connection in some places.

    After looking into TP-Link software I realised that there are some other cool features this router could be used for. One of them is the use of VPN set up directly on the router and then VPN could be assigned to specific devices, so now I don’t have to connect to my University VPN each time, my laptop is always connected to it.

    Another cool feature – you can set up VPN server as well. It seems to work fine but will be properly tested when I travel abroad.

    An ability to connect an USB drive is cool as well. Now I don’t need to connect to an external drive to run TimeMachine, it is done automatically from my network. I added several shared partitions as well for the rest of the family to store files… The only issue here is that the router has a USB2.0 connection while it would be better to have a USB3.0

    The guest wifi network is another useful feature which can be switched on/off by Alexa.

    So far very happy with the purchase.

  16. Adam Green says:

     United Kingdom

    Using this in conjunction with a Netgear power line to create a second WiFi network in our home. Our Victorian town house has a complete WiFi dead zone at the rear of the property, which is where my home office currently is – on the third floor loft extension. The kitchen and garden also fall in this dead zone. We don’t need high power usage in these areas, just enough stable internet to run smart speakers, stream music, access printer and Run work based video conferencing – Skype, zoom, teams. For less than 15 the back of the House now has WiFi and even in the garden I’m getting 15-20 Mbps download and strong signal. That’s three floors below where the router is located. My office laptop is rock solid and connected to this via the power line – which takes the main broadband connection to the spare bedroom. The router then beams that over the secondary network giving whole house WiFi for a total cost of 60.00. see speed test picture.

    There is a drop in speed from the main router and this router is only a 2.5 GHz not 5. But I don’t need all the toys for this network. Speeds I’m getting are more than adequate and then some. I streamed HD video content without issue – so it even copes with that. Yes you can buy a better router, yes I’m sure you can spend 100s on mesh networks and get better performance, but this combination has delivered whole house stable WiFi at plenty enough speed and capacity for 60.00.

    This router is plug and play. You can just use the SSID network name and passcode on the bottom of the router. You’d be up and running in less than a minute. Or you can go into the settings and configure it in different ways or change the network name and password. To keep it simple, I just ran it as a separate network – I changed the SSID to the same name and password as the rest of the House – just labeled it as”zone two” so it was clear which network we were connecting too. Necessary because some rooms now receive both network signals. This one is less fast than the main one and this router is less capable than the “nighthawk” running the main system, so smart TV and high demand connections should be managed through the main network connection. That said, this router is more than capable of delivering strong and stable 40 Mbps downloads and uploads. That’s perfectly good enough for most users very happy.

    5.0 out of 5 stars Cheap as chips. Fast stable strong WiFi signal. Sets up in less than 5 mins

  17. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 4 From Our UsersThis router is really good. It’s so simple to set up. You plug in your Ethernet connection to the blue Ethernet port on the router, head into the TP Link app where you set it up and then you’re ready to go. The app itself is really good, you’re able to change the routers original name and password to your own, see who’s connected to it, block users, use it as a router and there’s even a mode where it can be used as a range extender of your original network. If you need to log into the router in the app, the username & password (standard on most routers) is ‘admin’. The router is quite small (which is expected for the price). It’s nearly the size of my hand which means that it does lack range in terms of WiFi signal strength. If you’re looking to use this as a main router for the house, I’d definitely consider the more expensive routers. But if you need a quick and cheap fix for your WiFi in a ‘dead zone’ in the house, this is perfect. For an example of WiFi speed, my Ethernet plug is 50mbps and through WiFi on this router, I get between 40-45 mbps which is quite good.

    4.0 out of 5 stars Great for the price!

  18. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Did you know that BT Home Hubs put out a free hotspot signal you can hook into? When ever you see BTWiFi-With-FON or similar then it’s a signal you can use for free with a FON account or a BT Broadband account.

    A typical scenario is that you don’t have your own WiFi in a building but you can see other peoples BT-FON services. You can hook into them and log in with your own credentials (don’t pay for it as it’s silly money for the HotSpot service) . The problem is the service does not reach when you want to be.

    Solution, use the TP-Link WR841 in WISP mode to connect to the BT-FON hotspot. You will still have to sign in to the BT page as normal but once done you can hook up anything and everything to the TP-Link. All you mobile devices, your printer, desktop and laptop computers.

    By positioning the TP-Link where it gets the best signal you are then free to sit yourself where you’re comfortable.

    I expect the same thing would work with any other hotspots you have the login for.

    ==================
    Followup 2020/05/20
    ==================
    I sold this to a friend living in digs with no WiFi service. He had connected himself to a BT-WiFi BT-FON service picked up from a neighbour and signed up to the 15/month deal. The signal was a bit weak and he was only getting 200kbps. With this in WISP client mode he can get 16meg plus his own WiFi and LAN.

    ==================
    Followup 2020/10/29
    ==================
    I bought another one. WiFi was getting saturated and pings went to 4000mS. Solution was to set bandwidth shaping. I set 20mbps overall and individually gave each IP address 10meg. No one complained and Rocket League nolonger warns of ping latency. I may increase those caps if all goes well.

    ==================
    Followup 2022/05/01
    ==================
    Switching Internet providers leaves us with no service. No problem, I’ve switch it to WISP mode and connected to BT WiFi. My FON account seems to have expired so I bought a month’s connection for 39. So far at 10meg it’s much better than Virgin 530meg. Quik Internet 60meg is going to be so much better than Virgin 530meg.

    5.0 out of 5 stars BT-FON range extende

  19. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 3 From Our UsersTHIS REVIEW COMES IN 2 PARTS – ONE FOR THE ROUTER AND ONE FOR AMAZON

    Firstly, the router itself is a little belter and an absolute skoosh to set up. I bought it to replace an older Belkin G11 router that sadly began to drop its connection several times in a day which necessitated it to be switched off/on every time it froze. I followed the instructions that came with it and by doing this I was up and running in literally 10 – 15 mins. Just bung in the mini CD that comes with it and follow the on screen instructions and you will have no problem. There is also a quick installation guide enclosed. Read this before placing the cd in the disc drive. It comes with a power plug and a short ethernet cable to link it with your modem. It has been up and running now for over a week and not dropped out once and for this I give it a full 5 stars. I would also have no hesitation in recommending this router and at such a low price (Just under 20) is an absolute bargain.

    SADLY THE SAME CANNOT BE SAID ABOUT AMAZON

    I had to buy two of these routers. My first one was purchased via Amazon but when it arrived it was simply in an unsealed box, with no outer packaging and no bubble wrap. When I opened the box, the mains plug did not have a tie wrap around it and was just loose. The Ethernet cable that came with it had a couple of bends/kinks in it and I just knew this unit had been somewhere else before it came to my house. IT WAS NOT NEW but was being sold as new!!! I sent it straight back to Amazon for a full refund stating why I was returning it but sadly there was very little concern on their part.
    I then looked on line for the same router and found one at DABS. It arrived within a couple of days sealed and also came protected in an outer box, so I knew this was a new item. WELL DONE DABS BUT SHAME ON YOU AMAZON !!! For your dishonesty I wouldn’t even give you 1 star.

  20. HiramFennescey says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 3 From Our UsersI’d suffered and endured the dubious Virgin Media “Superhub” long enough. I decided I’d try a new router after reading all the similar problems on the Virgin Media forums.

    I didn’t want to spend too much money, so reading the generally positive reviews of this router, and that others had even used it for the same reason, I went for it.

    Setting it up was incredibly simple, although I have had previous experience. But honestly the hardest part was probably setting the old VM box to “Modem” mode.. Anyway! Afterwards I wired in this new router, logged on to it wirelessly, went into its admin menu, clicked the automatic setup wizard and…. Bosh. Done! I didn’t bother with the enclosed CD, I guess it would’ve installed unnecessary gunk on my PC, I have no idea what’s on it. So setup took literally a couple of minutes, including untangling wires. Really easy.

    Performance has been fantastic. I immediately noticed a dramatic improvement over the old VM box. Before I’d have to click on a link on my wirelessly connected PC, and wait. Then perhaps click again. Same with all other devices. It was like the router just wasn’t bothering to connect to the internet. Now it works properly. Ping and download speeds are epic. Before the ping could be pretty high, and download speeds could sometimes be fast, but somewhat variable and inconsistent. Now downloads are fast and rock steady.

    We have an xbox hooked up via wireless, in a bedroom the opposite end of the flat (It’s a late 70s build with some pretty thick concrete walls to get through). It used to hover around the 1 bar of signal on the xbox “Find Wireless” section. Now it hovers around the Maximum point, occasionally dropping only by 1 bar. Playing games had gotten to the impossible point, and party chat was a stuttering mess of choppy voices and impossible to understand. Now, perfect. So signal is strong and very dependable.

    I stream media to a wireless radio, xbox etc. Worked perfectly out of the box.

    My wireless printer that had seemed very temperamental before is now fully co-operating.

    I read a couple of reviews where people said they had to reset… Mines been on permanently for a few weeks now without a single issue. I did ensure that I had the latest firmware on the TP-Link website, turns out it already had it installed. Maybe that helps? Anyway its behaved perfectly for me.

    So overall I rate this a fantastic router for my pretty basic needs. 20 for this is a bargain. It made my Virgin Media internet work how it was supposed to be. How Virgin who had such a fantastic reputation for speed could then couple that with such a poor piece of equipment is unbelievable. But this solves it. It’s just a shame that I have to keep my stupid, large “Superhub” hooked up in modem mode alongside this great router.

    Buy it. It’s great.

  21. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I have a Virgin Superhub downstairs and using ethernet my Mac and PC laptops get 30+ mbps.

    When they are in the same room as the superhub, on wifi my Mac gets 16mbps and the Dell gets 23mbps.

    When they are upstairs, on wifi my Mac gets gets 5mbps and the PC gets 15mbps.

    Because of the poor wifi speeds upstairs I have used two long ethernet cables, to get the 30+ mbps.

    USING THE TPLink TLWR841N
    ——————————————-

    With the TPLink downstairs and using ethernet my Mac and PC laptops still get 30+ mbps.

    When they are in the same room as the TPLink, on wifi my Mac gets 21 mbps and the PC gets 23mbps.

    With the TPLink downstairs and the Mac and PC upstairs; on wifi my Mac gets gets 8mbps and the PC gets 18mbps.

    WHAT I DO NOW
    ————————

    I moved the TPLink upstairs and connected it to the superhub by one long ethernet cable and connect two shorter ethernet cables to the laptops which, as expected still get the full 30+ mbps.

    Another benefit is that I have now connected my printer to the TPLink so it is a network printer used by both the Mac and the PC.

    OBSERVATIONS AND CONCLUSION
    —————————————————

    With wifi in mind (in preference to cables all over the place), I had read several reviews of this and other routers and was swayed by a video review by Geeky Ranjit (check him out on you know where) which implied great wifi range.

    The wifi improvement was not that dramatic and all along I had in mind to use ethernet and have this router upstairs.

    On that basis it does exactly what I want and at at 20 I recommend i

  22. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 12 From Our UsersI’m not very computer-savvy but now we have 2 wi-fi enabled phones in the house and I’m shortly buying a chromebook, I thought it’s about time I had wi-fi. Basically I bought the TP-Link due to the high number of excellent reviews.
    I was dreading fiddling around with my PC but once I had pulled the computer desk (and vacuumed behind it!) I plugged in all the wires as per the instructions and bingo, my iPhone was connected via wi-fi. It took all of 5 minutes. However, my PC said that it had no internet connection so I put in the CD supplied with the router and followed the simple instructions. I did it 3 times and eventually got it working by unplugging everything, plugging back in and re-starting. All in all it took 20 minutes (but another hour to sort out the wife’s junk in and on the desk!
    I’d highly recommend this unit – it was simple to set up, is small and unobtrusive and works like a dream. In fact, upon returning home, my phone connected to my wi-fi some distance away.
    I’ll review my review in a few months and let you know if there are any problems.

    Oh, by the way, I’m on Virgin cable if that assists you in making a purchase.

    TP-Link – many thanks for a fab purchase – I’m very happy!!

    Updated review:- 31/12/2013

    I have owned this router for over a year now and I am VERY happy with its performance. We now have no less than 8 wi-fi-enabled gadgets regularly sucking internet through it and giving our phones, tablets and chrome-books excellent service. It sits on the computer desk flashing away 24 hours a day and doesn’t even get warm. The reception is excellent downstairs (where the router is sited) and the signal strength is indicated as high upstairs in the bedrooms but its very hard to get phones/tablets etc working at full speed upstairs. I’ll probably buy a wifi repeater for upstairs and see how that goes. However, its not a major problem and, as I said, we get great sevice downstairs and even in the garden.
    This is probably one of my best purchases on amazon. You don’t need to have a large data bundle from your phone provider when you can use the wifi at home.
    For info we are still on Virgin cable and these are the products we use on wifi:-
    1 iPhone 3GS (yes I know very old!)
    2 ipad minis
    2 Hudls
    1 Samsung Galaxy S2 phone
    Samsung Chromebook
    Desktop Dell PC

  23. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 2 From Our UsersI am an average user with reasonable IT literacy and this is the first time I have purchased and set up a Wi-Fi router and I cannot fault this product for price, ease of use and quality. This was bought as an upgrade to my D-Link WiFi router as this couldn’t provide wireless N protocol, provide weak and patchy signal and since there is a third PC user in the household we have been experiencing service drop-outs.

    The new bit of kit took very little time to install hooked up by a LAN ethernet cable and visiting tplinklogin.net and entering the default user name admin and password admin and following the quick setup menu option. I also updated firmware via TP-Link website (easily found in Google by entering make and model details – note you MUST check which version the router is as the website tells you). Signal strength is much improved, to date I have not had any need to re-set the router because users had been kicked of the Wi-Fi network and transferring files between PCs on a Windows 7 Homegroup seems to work much better than before.

    A couple of points to help a complete novice (so Mum if you’re reading start taking notes):
    1. You may not appreciate is that this item requires you to have a modem (in my case the box which came from Virgin Media is a cable modem), it connects to that to add Wi-Fi transmission.
    2. To enjoy the advertised 300 Mb per sec connection to the internet you’ll need to be receiving such a connection from your internet service provider so do not be surprised if after installing this device does not provide a dramatic speed boost. Think of it like plumbing: You may have installed a big tap on your bath, but if the water pressure hasn’t changed your tub will likely take just as long to fill.

    In short, I’m very happy with this having paid just 20 (October 2012)

  24. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 7 From Our UsersFrom messing around with MS ICS (internet connection sharing) from the PC’s motherboard gigiabit LAN to share internet with the onbaord 54g WiFi AP was getting silly. Its an older Win XP thing, and new firewalls are kinda leaving it out, because it’s a pain. Anyway, I did get that to work after a few days of messing about, and I learnt a few things.
    I needed a WiFi router!

    **This came delivered in retail box, wrapped in clear shrink wrap plastic (manufacturer packaging) with “documents enclosed” clear window and Amazon’s stickers attached. It wasn’t what I was expecting from frustration free packaging. I’m kinda pleased I received a retail box, but at the same time disappointed Amazon spent no effort to conceal the item from the postal service or anyone else. It’s just to let people know, and is no reflection on the product review**

    OK, it’s got a UK 3 pin power supply (I read the lower end models may not??).
    A short RJ45 CAT5 cable is included.
    The antennas can be bent straight out of the back, for vertical mounting. They feel sturdy enough I guess (how often are you gonna move them?).
    It can be mounted vertically either way up thanks to the slots on the rear that slip over screw heads.

    Setup was really simple. The guide gives simple easy to follow hookup instructions, for “ADSL modem” read “any modem ADSL or cable” – it doesn’t have its own modem in built, you need to use your ISP modem or ADSL modem.
    Don’t bother with the mini CD, just open your browser and login to […], and you have access to the different settings that the modem can offer. Click the “quick setup” option, follow the instructions, and choose “dynamic IP” as that is most likely (it says that in the pamphlet). Clone your MAC address, and that’s the wired side done (assuming connecting main PC via Ethernet).
    WiFi network setup is really simple too, foolow instructions, use WPA2-PSK, enter an 8 digit multi character password (letters, numbers, and symbols @:& etc), change the network name (SSID) if you like. That’s done.

    Security settings were surprisingly straight forward to adjust. I wanted to Hide the name of the network, so people don’t see it when scanning. This is called “disabling SSID broadcast” and there’s a check box next to “broadcast SSID” – easy?
    I wanted to stop other devices from using the network (if they did manage to find it) so needed MAC filtering, which blocks all machine access codes (identifying numbers of all devices (network cards, dongles, PCs etc) except for ones on your allow list. Add new, enter the MAC address (you can find it in WiFi stats if its connected to your WiFi network), give it a name, and allow it – done.

    So yeah, it’s password encrypted with one of the better encryption methods, the network name is hidden, and it denies access to any machine/device except for the ones I have listed. Of course these things *can* be broken, but only by someone trying really hard and being particularly determined.

    I also specified that only my main PC has access to change any router settings, and that is actually always wired to the router – so another good security point.

    There’s some parental controls and stuff like that, whereby certain sites can be blocked at certain times from certain users – all seemingly advanced but easy to setup – there’s a pattern here!

    Took me about 5mins to bounce through all the settings and have the internet radio playing on a netbook in one room, whilst surfing on the main pc in the bedroom.

    In use (1x wired PC + 1x netbook wifi) it’s 2.7watts consumption, that’s a lot lower than that Virgin superhub thing (from what I’ve heard its over 12watts!). Of course you have to add the 6watts or whatever that your modem uses to the total bill from running the network.

    There’s no real impact on a 10mbps cable connection, maybe 0.2mbps drop but maybe not. It’s not noticeable.

    I’m still having a trouble setting up a Local network (LAN) between the WinXPhome PC and Win7Starter netbook, but thats because the 2 OS’s are network crippled to some extent, and I don’t know quite what I am doing. I did it once using my Motherboard Wifi, but wasn’t sharing internet then. It’s definitely possible, I just need to find the right settings.

    In summary, yes very easy to get up and running. Everything is included to pop it in between your existing modem and the PC you were using (connected via Ethernet RJ45). Low power consumption. OK, it’s a bit flimsy feeling, but it’s not something you are gonna be carrying around a lot!

    ==I always buy from Amazon, not a merchant. Speedy free saver delivery, ordered Friday gone 10pm, arrived Monday==

  25. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 7 From Our UsersHi

    After not being able to stay connected on Mario Kart online via wireless last week (6 feet away from the hub!!!), I’d had the final straw with the BT Homehub 3 which I use for Bt Inifinity.
    And so I set out to replace it and alas landed here. So:

    The Good:
    Easy to replace
    (Up and running in 5 mins. Literally replace the hub and go to 192.168.0.1 on your PC and change connection type to PPPE and enter your username as [email protected])
    Better wireless speeds
    Before connected via the Homehub where the PS3 is located would get less than 1mb via wireless. Now It tends to get 6mb via the new router.
    Wired connections seemed to have remained the same (30mb for me)

    The Bad:
    The range seems worse (using G only)
    Where I would have got 3 bars before I get 2 now but everywhere else in the house is full strength. However that said the speeds are still better.
    One of the aerials feels loose
    I’m not sure if there is anyway to check that this aerial is fully functioning

    Anyways my main point is if you are looking to replace your homehub on infinity this will do the job for 20. (I struggled to find a straight answer of what routers will work on infintiy. It’s cable connection routers not ADSL routers. Hope this helps.) I should also point out all of my connections are via G network. Again this should be taken into consideration when I’m describing this products range and speed.

    So in conclusion I’ve not really had it long enough to fully comment on the wireless improvements but I would say so far so good. I was able to play an online match and stream music last night in the room that before would snail along and repeatedly drop connection. Therefore from what I can tell thus far I would say if you want rid of the homehub this is a worthwhile purchase.

  26. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 8 From Our UsersOkay, time for full disclosure – I bought this router because I a) needed a router (seriously?) and b) I wanted something cheap that I could flash with DD-WRT or OpenWRT.

    It’s a nice little white box that does exactly what it says on the tin. I ran the default firmware for a couple of days in case it decided to throw a rod while in my care – electronics tend to fail early if they fail at all – and for this period, it was perfectly functional.

    DD-WRT is open-source router firmware – it’ll run on a large subset of extant router models and it basically gives you the software capablities typically offered by a reasonably high end router. OpenWRT is a distant cousin – it offers a superset of the DD-WRT functionality but in a less friendly package. In effect, it gives you a mini-linux system and a library of software aimed at wireless and wired communication. For example, you can in principle set a system up to offer wireless mesh networking – I’ve not tried this so don’t rush out and buy one on the strength of this comment unless you can afford the hit.

    My WR841N is currently running OpenWRT with UPnP, decent firewalling, some basic network monitoring snd not much else. The longest uninterrupted run has been 25 days of continuous routage. It would be longer barring the fact that I keep fiddling with the setup.

    So, cheap router, works well, offers great flexibility if you’re a nerd.

  27. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 148 From Our UsersI purchased this based on a couple of reviews on Amazon from fellow Virgin Superhub owners (thank you for your reviews!) Posting my review so others in similar positions can make the best choice.

    I was having issues with internet speed from my Virgin Superhub over wireless. Wireless signal was strong but internet was non-existent most of the time over wireless (wired was fine for the laptop/TV/Xbox, but my mobile & tab needed wireless). Using the Virgin Media forums I changed channels, position of hub, and finally switched from 2.4Ghz to 5Ghz. This improved internet access but only when my phone or tab was literally in view of the hub – in any other room I got no signal – a common fault with 5Ghz apparantly. Also, my girlfriend’s iPhone 3GS didn’t work on 5Ghz, so she was only able to use 3G which wasn’t conveneient or cost effective.

    So I went to Amazon based on reviews for TP-Link routers on the Virgin site. I was told all I needed to do was put my Virgin Superhub into modem mode. I try to convince myself that I understand technology, but I only lie to myself….I really thought I was not going to get this right first time but I was very wrong. The TP-Link has such an easy setup and the Virgin advice makes putting the Superhub into modem mode very easy.

    Without repeating all the instructions, go to Virgin’s helpdesk and look up Modem Mode. Simply follow their instructions and make sure you wait until the hub’s front light goes purple. Attach all ethernet connections to TP Link router and attach cable between hub and router (I used right hand port on hub, and dedicated port on router). Once they were all switched on, I followed the TP Link instructions and I was ready. Really was that easy. It took less than 10 minutes and then another 5 minutes to change the settings on my electronics as I changed the name and password on the router.

    (EDIT: I also manually switched the channel. I checked for unused ones on WiFi Manager app on my android phone – this may not be necessary for everyone, but try it if you are still having problems)

    I have had a huge increase in wireless signal distance and strength around the house and even in the garden (about 50 metres from the router and 2 walls in between). I am getting very fast internet connection and data transfer around the house. I highly recommend this router – this is not just value for money, it is exceptional value for money as I now get internet at the speed I am paying for.

    If you have any questions about set up and don’t understand the very correct but sometimes baffling advice some intelligent reviewers give, don’t hesitate to ask for a dumbed down version from me.