This was posted 10 months 14 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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NETGEAR AC750 EX3110 Wi-Fi Range Extender $49 (Was $89), EX6110 $59 (Sold Out, was $129) + Delivery ($0 C&C) @ Scorptec

50

A reasonable Wi-Fi range extender for a good price - the EX3110 is $9 cheaper than the best historical price on camels, while the EX6110 is $39 cheaper than the historical best of $98. I recently bought the EX3110 to replace a decade-old extender and it gives a reasonable speed with no dropouts at over 20m from the modem.

Stock appears to be low on the EX6110.

https://www.scorptec.com.au/product/networking/access-points…
https://www.scorptec.com.au/product/networking/access-points…

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closed Comments

  • +2

    Go mesh and never look back.

  • +1

    wifi extenders are the worst networking device ever made

    far better (in order of best to worst):

    Staticice: https://staticice.com.au/cgi-bin/search.cgi?q=+TP-Link+PA902…

    Step 1) plug 1 powerline adapter in near current wifi router
    Step 2) plug CAT cable from any of the current wifi routers LAN ports into powerline adapter
    Step 3) put the other (remote) powerline adapter where you need better wifi and pair them
    Step 4) buy a cheap wifi router (second hand ones abound) and connect to it either via wifi or via CAT cable to a laptop, open its management page and login
    Step 5) turn off DHCP, set same SSID and password as original wifi network, reboot and then disconnect
    Step 6) stick the cheap wifi router on the end of CAT cable from the powerline adapters into wifi router
    Step 7) test with a device - it, like the wifi router you just configured, should become a client of the original wifi router and should get near seamless connectivity as you wander about. And yes you can buy additional powerline adapters and cheap wifi routers and repeat (pair additional powerline adapters to existing, configure wifi router and turn off DHCP and set same SSID and password). Ill take that over spotty mesh any day

    Cheaper than mesh, and depending on your power circuit (ymmv, but my results for houses made 80's+ has been very good), faster and more stable too. For a friend with a very long house and renting this was the only way to get her usable internet throughout the house…when i met her she was about to buy her second wifi extender….to again halve her bandwidth…the horror. Instead she got powerline adaptors and thanks to her stockpiling spare Telstra gateways, a very cheap day out (just the powerline adapters) for years worth of stable internet housewide

    • mesh for all other distances/cases where you cant/wont run cables. ymmv, but ive never been overly impressed by them, and they can cost $$$
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