![]() ![]() To get going, I installed the Linksys app on my iPad Pro there’s also an Android version. The only way to set up the Linksys MR9600 is to use the company’s phone and tablet app. Both the Netgear Nighthawk and TP-Link Archer AX6000 use at least one-third more electricity. Assuming you pay the national average of 13 cents per kilowatt hour of electricity, it has an estimated annual power bill of $6.80. If the router is used for roughly 12 hours a day but remains turned on and at idle for the rest, the MR9600 is one of the most economical routers. Plus, at idle the MR9600’s consumption dropped to 3.8-watts. While all this was going on, the video came through without any stutters, freeze-ups or out-of-sync audio.Įven when it was working intensely, the MR9600 used only 8.1-watts of power, more than one third less than the Netgear Nighthawk AX8’s 13.0-watts. The router easily passed our saturation test that has four systems doing different tasks: An iPad Pro played music on Spotify, a Macbook Air displayed YouTube video, a Dell XPS 15 was streaming an Internet radio station’s content and an HP Elitebook copied and saved files from a networked RAID server. Over a week of continual use, the MR9600 streamed movies, played music, supported online gaming and was used for gathering email. The MR9600 might be best used in an open floor plan residence with few obstructions, like a loft. ![]() With a range of 85-feet, it matches the TP-Link Archer AX6000. Each was well off the pace set by the Netgear AX8’s 1.077Gbps for wall penetration and the TP-Link Archer AX6000’s 667.3Mbps for floor penetration. It was able to deliver 219.1Mbps in the wall penetration test and 72.6Mbps in the floor penetration test. It did poorly in our wall and floor penetration tests, which show how well a device copes with passing a Wi-Fi signal through a home’s obstructions. On the downside, at 75-feet, the router would occasionally bump the Dell XPS 15 test system off the network, forcing us to manually reconnect. Still, the MR9600 outperformed two top 802.11ac (aka Wi-Fi 5) routers, the Netgear RS400’s 566.7Mbps and the TP-Link Archer C2300’s 682.3Mbps.Īt 50- and 75-feet, the MR9600 was able to move 363.3Mbps and 227.0Mbps, which puts it closer to the TP-Link Archer AX6000’s performance (396.4Mbps and 149.5Mbps) and ahead of the Netgear Nighthawk AX8 (277.1Mbps and 142.3Mbps) at these mid-range distances. Its output was closer to, but still behind, the TP-Link Archer AX6000’s 884.4Mbps. With throughput of 822.0Mbps at 15-feet, it delivered 40 percent lower throughput to the test device compared to the Nighthawk AX8’s class-leading 1.383Gbps of data at the same distance. Using Ixia’s ixChariot network simulation software in a 100-year old house, we found the Linksys MR9600 to be a competent, but underwhelming router that was well off the pace set by the Netgear Nighthawk AX8 (RAX80). Linksys Max Stream MR9600 review: Performance The back panel also has LEDs to show which ports are active, but there’s no way to turn the lights off. The light turns red when there’s no Internet feed. It’s purple when being configured, blinks blue when starting up and is solid blue when everything is working. Upfront, the MR9600’s two large LEDs show its WPS status and the operational condition of the router. The back of the router has buttons for turning it on and off, resetting the system and using the router’s WPS (Wi-Fi Protected Setup) system for quickly adding devices to the network. Overall, the MR9600’s connection panel is a lot less cluttered than the likes of the TP-Link AX6000 but it lacks the ability to aggregate two of its wired ports to create a high-performance 2Gbps channel for gaming and storage gear, a feature both the TP-Link and Netgear models offer. ![]() With a WAN port, four LAN ports and two USB 3.0 connectors, the MR9600 lacks the Netgear Nighthawk AX8 (RAX80)’s USB-C port and the TP-Link Archer AX6000’s extra four LAN ports. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |