My Linksys E2500 wireless router got zapped by lightening. To replace it I ordered the "Buffalo High Performance High Power N600 Gigabit Dual Band Wireless Router". That's a mouthful, so the model number works better WZR-600DHP.
I had burned the DD-WRT into my Linksys E2500 because a couple of months after I bought it a popup occured which stated that a security update was important and should be installed. But, before I approved its installtion I HAD to sign up for a Cisco Cloud account! I canceled the installation and did some DDG'ing and found out that Cisco and several other mfgrs were forced by the gov (NSA, CIA ?) to install a back door in the router. Cisco, not letting the opportunity pass, decided to require the cloud account signup. I decided not and sought out a Tomato or DD-WRT solution. DD-WRT was a much better firmware than that which Cisco put on their router AND it gave me control over features that Cisco didn't give access to through their HTML pages.
In researching which router to buy I noticed that several are beginning to offer firmware built using Linux. Buffalo offered DD-WRT preinstalled! That was too good an offer to pass up. Today the Buffalo arrived.
I unpacked it, connected it up, plugged in an ETH cable to my Eth0 port and turned it on. The ETH0 wired connection connected immediately, of course. And so did the wireless! Of course, there was no security, but Joe and Sally Sixpack would consider it a job done and be satisfied with the instant connection. The gateway is 192.168.11.1 and the name and password are "admin" and "password".
Being familiar with DD-WRT navigating the firmware via the web connection was painless. I set up one band with an SSID of "GreyGeek", setting it to 2.4GHz, and a second band as GreyGeek5, setting it to 5GHz. I enabled the firewall and made some adjustments to it and used my MAC address to force it to dispense 192.168.11.100 to my wired connection during boot up. That allows me to use that IP address for my IPv6 Hurricane tunnel, instead of the IP address the cable modem dispenses.
With the E2500 our iPhones could only connect with the 2.4GHz wireless band, regardless of any settings I made in the Cisco to offer only the %GHz band. With the Buffalo my iPhone6 connected immediately to the 5Ghz band. With the 2.4GHz Linksys my top DL speed was 30Mbps, with most readings averaging around 10Mbps. With the Buffalo 5GHz my iPhone DL's at 77Mbps with 6.3Mbps up. That's the top speed offered by my Spectrum service.
I'm really pleased with the Buffalo. Now, the only thing left to test is its durability.
I had burned the DD-WRT into my Linksys E2500 because a couple of months after I bought it a popup occured which stated that a security update was important and should be installed. But, before I approved its installtion I HAD to sign up for a Cisco Cloud account! I canceled the installation and did some DDG'ing and found out that Cisco and several other mfgrs were forced by the gov (NSA, CIA ?) to install a back door in the router. Cisco, not letting the opportunity pass, decided to require the cloud account signup. I decided not and sought out a Tomato or DD-WRT solution. DD-WRT was a much better firmware than that which Cisco put on their router AND it gave me control over features that Cisco didn't give access to through their HTML pages.
In researching which router to buy I noticed that several are beginning to offer firmware built using Linux. Buffalo offered DD-WRT preinstalled! That was too good an offer to pass up. Today the Buffalo arrived.
I unpacked it, connected it up, plugged in an ETH cable to my Eth0 port and turned it on. The ETH0 wired connection connected immediately, of course. And so did the wireless! Of course, there was no security, but Joe and Sally Sixpack would consider it a job done and be satisfied with the instant connection. The gateway is 192.168.11.1 and the name and password are "admin" and "password".
Being familiar with DD-WRT navigating the firmware via the web connection was painless. I set up one band with an SSID of "GreyGeek", setting it to 2.4GHz, and a second band as GreyGeek5, setting it to 5GHz. I enabled the firewall and made some adjustments to it and used my MAC address to force it to dispense 192.168.11.100 to my wired connection during boot up. That allows me to use that IP address for my IPv6 Hurricane tunnel, instead of the IP address the cable modem dispenses.
With the E2500 our iPhones could only connect with the 2.4GHz wireless band, regardless of any settings I made in the Cisco to offer only the %GHz band. With the Buffalo my iPhone6 connected immediately to the 5Ghz band. With the 2.4GHz Linksys my top DL speed was 30Mbps, with most readings averaging around 10Mbps. With the Buffalo 5GHz my iPhone DL's at 77Mbps with 6.3Mbps up. That's the top speed offered by my Spectrum service.
I'm really pleased with the Buffalo. Now, the only thing left to test is its durability.
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