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[Zip] Ubiquiti UniFi Dream Machine Pro $632.40 Delivered @ Wireless 1 eBay

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FYZ15

Cheapest I have seen in a little while. ~10% less then the AU $50.00 off with code HGT120 active at the moment. Looks like the cheapest its been on OzBargin since 2022 for the Unifi Dream Machine (UDM) Pro.

Need to pay with Zip Pay.

Original Coupon Deal

Ubiquiti UniFi Dream Machine Pro Delivered $632.40 @ Wireless 1 eBay
Ubiquiti UniFi Dream Machine Pro Delivered $632.40 @ Shopping Express Clearance eBay

$0.85 cheaper at these stores I have no experience with:
Ubiquiti UniFi Dream Machine Pro Delivered $631.55 @ shallothead ebay
Ubiquiti UniFi Dream Machine Pro Delivered $631.55 @ Digilife Online ebay

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closed Comments

  • +2

    Been keenly watching the price of these for an overhaul of the home wifi network.

    Really unsure as to when to pull the trigger as the unifi wifi 7 gear seems to be a little flaky along with the large outlay required for 2.5gbit switching…

    Might need to wait another 6-12 months

    • Ubiquiti UniFi WiFi 7 U7-Pro $314.10 https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/850468

    • +1

      If you want to upgrade your backbone and APs to 2.5gb+, it's going to set you back a pretty penny if you go full Ubiquiti stack - especially if you're all in with cameras and PoE.

      My mate recently moved into his new house and with my guidance decided to do it right from the start. Earlier in the year he dropped around $6k on a Dream Machine SE, 24 port Enterprise PoE switch, 3x U6-Enterprise (the U7-Pro weren't out when he bought them and in the U6 range it was only the Enterprise that had the 2.5gb backbone), plus a smattering of G3-Flex for indoors and G5-Bullet/Pro cameras for outdoors.

      I have a similar setup at my house and the speed and reliability of the connections is impressive.

      If I was setting up from scratch and had the money to throw at it, I'd be going the new Dream Machine Pro Max, 24 port PoE Enterprise Switch, U7-Pro units. Given the announcement that Fibre Internet in Australia is going to get an upgrade to 2.5gb shortly, if you want to take advantage of those speeds you need to have sufficient backbone throughout your house to handle it, otherwise it'll be a waste. That being said, we're probably 5 years away from 2.5gb Internet being affordable for the average consumer and I expect they'll be marketing it towards business at least for the first 2-3 years. Also no idea yet as to how much NBN will try to charge consumers to upgrade their existing NTD to support the 2.5gb connection.

      • If I was setting up from scratch and had the money to throw at it, I'd be going the new Dream Machine Pro Max, 24 port PoE Enterprise Switch, U7-Pro units.

        Next project with a complete rack overhaul. Costly but like you say definitely worth it.

        Do you have CAT6A cables running all around your house?

        • The entire house is cabled yes, but not fully with 6A (I've been in the house 20 years and primarily cabled it that long ago). There have been additions to cabling over time obviously … but I'm still getting 2.5gb throughput where it matters though :)

          The 24 port PoE Enterprise switch is amazing as 12 ports are 2.5gb and 12 ports are 1gb with all of them being PoE. So all my APs, my main workstation, and my NUC with Hyper-V are all plugged into 2.5gb ports, and my NAS I've plugged into a 10gb SFP port. You then use the 12x 1gb ports for other core equipment that you want to have lower latency connections.

          As all my house is cabled and most rooms have 2 ports, I obviously have more than 24 ports required, so I do have a US-24-250W as well which I've setup 2x 1gb aggregation ports to the Enterprise switch to create a 2gb backbone between the two switches. This secondary switch powers all my cameras and connects the rarely used ports throughout the rest of the house.

      • Can you share where you read that Australia is going to get an upgrade to 2.5gb ?

      • Why the enterprise over a pro max? Poe++ might be a bit more beneficial vs losing some 2.5gb. Plus you get lighting 😂

        • I hadn't really considered the pro max because I bought my enterprise before the pro max was announced/released. Enterprise has 4 extra 2.5gb ports which I'd probably consider more useful than the wanky lighting.

          • +1

            @nathanos: Main benefit is the POE++, lighting is a freebie

      • I feel as if you could do it for $2-3k if you bought used enterprise equipment…

        • Occasionally some of the higher end gear does appear on the secondhand market, but most of the time the sellers know what they have and aren't letting them go for less than maybe two-thirds the retail cost.

          These items usually get snapped up pretty quick as well. Grab them if you can.

          I bought my Enterprise 24 port PoE switch new from a reputable eBay drop ship seller for $1,099 which was a crazy cheap price nearly 2 years ago.

  • Dont want a zip credit check to save some money

    • Best I can do then is HGT120 ($50 off) for $694

  • The features sound good .. but any recommendations for something similiar without the need for cameras?

    I don't have any Ubiquiti devices currently .. so perhaps this is overkill?

  • With all of the updates to the older unifi gateways, I wondering if an update to this is not far off? I am referring to something that has 2.5gbe ports.

    • There isn't a UDM with full 2.5GbE ports yet.

      There is a new UDM Pro Max that only has 2.5GbE WAN.

      (1) 10G SFP+*, (8) GbE RJ45 LAN ports
      (1) 10G SFP+*, (1) 2.5 GbE RJ45 WAN ports

    • I think the issue here is the cost for the 2.5gb ports is relatively high in comparison to the 1gb ports. To try to keep the cost of their devices down they typically don't bundle many 2.5gb ports with all the other functionality into an all in one device.

      The good thing about the Ubiquiti routers is that anything with multiple WAN/LAN ports can typically be customised in the console to change from WAN to LAN and vice-versa. This means if the device has at least 1x 2.5gb port and 1x SFP+ port (or just 2x SFP+ ports), then you can easily daisy chain one of the ports into a 2.5gb switch of your choosing - thus giving yourself the ability to handle a 2gb Internet speed.

      It does seem like 2.5gb is becoming more popular, so you're probably right that over the next year or two there is likely to be an all in one 2.5gb combo device - but I don't work for Ubiquiti and I don't have any idea of their planned roadmap.

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