Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expiredsberg010 posted Jan 22, 2024 06:17 PM
expiredsberg010 posted Jan 22, 2024 06:17 PM

Select Home Depot Stores: 3-Pack Google WiFi AC1200 Mesh Router Power Adapter

(Availability May Vary)

$50

$200

75% off
Home Depot
131 Comments 151,875 Views
Visit Home Depot
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Deal Editor's Note: This offer is valid In-Store only at select locations. While we cannot confirm in-store pricing/availability, we are promoting this deal to the Frontpage due to comments from forum members reporting success in finding these prices available locally.

Select Home Depot Stores has 3-Pack Google WiFi AC1200 Mesh Router Power Adapter (White; GA02434-US) on sale for $50 valid for in-store purchase only.

Thanks to community member sberg010 for finding this deal

Note, product availability/pricing may vary depending on location. Please check your local store for pricing/details.

About the Product
  • Google WiFi AC1200 Mesh Router
  • WiFi 5 Standard
  • Dual Band (2.4 + 5 GHz)
  • Up to 1.2 Gbps Combined Speeds
  • AC1200 WiFi Connectivity
  • 1500 Sq. Ft. Per Router Coverage
  • 2 Per Point Ethernet Ports
  • Compatible w/ Previous Gen of Nest/Google WiFi

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff
  • Offer valid for in-store purchase only
  • Product Number: 314658117 for reference
  • Not all locations will have product at price/stock
  • Product/pricing may vary depending on store
Additional Notes
  • Please see original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion - Discombobulated

Original Post

Written by sberg010
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Editor's Note: This offer is valid In-Store only at select locations. While we cannot confirm in-store pricing/availability, we are promoting this deal to the Frontpage due to comments from forum members reporting success in finding these prices available locally.

Select Home Depot Stores has 3-Pack Google WiFi AC1200 Mesh Router Power Adapter (White; GA02434-US) on sale for $50 valid for in-store purchase only.

Thanks to community member sberg010 for finding this deal

Note, product availability/pricing may vary depending on location. Please check your local store for pricing/details.

About the Product
  • Google WiFi AC1200 Mesh Router
  • WiFi 5 Standard
  • Dual Band (2.4 + 5 GHz)
  • Up to 1.2 Gbps Combined Speeds
  • AC1200 WiFi Connectivity
  • 1500 Sq. Ft. Per Router Coverage
  • 2 Per Point Ethernet Ports
  • Compatible w/ Previous Gen of Nest/Google WiFi

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff
  • Offer valid for in-store purchase only
  • Product Number: 314658117 for reference
  • Not all locations will have product at price/stock
  • Product/pricing may vary depending on store
Additional Notes
  • Please see original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion - Discombobulated

Original Post

Written by sberg010

Community Voting

Deal Score
+75
Good Deal
Visit Home Depot

Price Intelligence

Model: Google GOOGLE GA02434 US GOOGLE GA02434 US

Deal History 

Sale Price
Slickdeal
  • $NaN
  • Today

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

leovip
2048 Posts
660 Reputation
I have both this (rental property) and the second gen (main home). And I've had nothing but issue's the last 4 years with the second gen. 1st gen has been rock solid. In my opinion 2nd gen was a huge step back. 1st gen is true mesh where your can daisy chain them in a row so 1st router does not have to overlap with 3rd meaning you can cover huge areas. 1st gen covers a 15,000sq ft property end to end no issues with 3. 2nd gen is hub and spoke model so if your modem is in the corner of the house having 3 won't help as they must all be overlapping the main router. Also, coverage on 2nd gen sucks. From 10ft my speed goes from 500mbps to 45, huge speed drop from node to node. They're worse than old repeaters which had a 50% speed drop. I wish they had updated these instead of changing to the crappy hub and spoke model which defeats the purpose.
revaldo29
396 Posts
154 Reputation
I've had these for four years , 4 of them covering 6k sqft. Multiple cameras, phones, ipads, streaming devices, and video game systems. I've reset been maybe 2-3 times in those 4 years. I pull 100 Mbps throughout the house which has been plenty for our family of 6 to surf the web, stream 4k content, and online gaming. For $50 this is a great deal and adequate for many.
sberg010
140 Posts
168 Reputation
Yes I would definitely not spend $200 on this but it is $50

130 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Jan 23, 2024 04:06 PM
3 Posts
Joined Jan 2024
NervousRose4727Jan 23, 2024 04:06 PM
3 Posts
I own a hotel abroad and need a system that will hold constant speeds a be able to hold a lot of devices at once. Is there a recommendation? I know this system of course can't do that but do not know much about mesh systems and WiFi extensions.
Jan 23, 2024 04:23 PM
2,343 Posts
Joined Feb 2008
jnadsJan 23, 2024 04:23 PM
2,343 Posts
Quote from NervousRose4727 :
I own a hotel abroad and need a system that will hold constant speeds a be able to hold a lot of devices at once. Is there a recommendation? I know this system of course can't do that but do not know much about mesh systems and WiFi extensions.
For that type of thing usually Ubiquiti is recommended.

You can get them cheap on eBay and manage them remotely, and they are reliable with a lot of users.

Also they are power-over-ethernet so you only need to string 1 cable to deploy.


Only bad thing is you need one of their stupid gateway manager thingys, but you can set up a Raspberry Pi to act as a gateway manager.
Jan 23, 2024 05:32 PM
7 Posts
Joined Dec 2022
MellowKestrel6453Jan 23, 2024 05:32 PM
7 Posts
Have them for 4 years and counting. No issues with device disconnecting. Perfect if you have internet plans around 500 mbps.
Last edited by MellowKestrel6453 January 23, 2024 at 10:36 AM.
Jan 23, 2024 05:50 PM
4,502 Posts
Joined Dec 2012
Slickone_Jan 23, 2024 05:50 PM
4,502 Posts
Quote from FishKilla :
No. And it is really old tech. It is AC the latest is AXE. For the price if you need something on the cheap I guess it isn't bad for $50 but you can get a TP link 2 node mesh AXE that will cover 5000 sq ft for about $200+/-
Is that this one?
https://www.amazon.com/Deco-Mesh-...5JHPH?th=1
Jan 23, 2024 06:27 PM
5,857 Posts
Joined Jan 2008
MarathiJan 23, 2024 06:27 PM
5,857 Posts
Quote from newarkhiphop :
What happens if you have 1GPS?
He obviously meant to say "1 Gbps" !
Jan 23, 2024 06:35 PM
5,857 Posts
Joined Jan 2008
MarathiJan 23, 2024 06:35 PM
5,857 Posts
Quote from FishKilla :
No. And it is really old tech. It is AC the latest is AXE. For the price if you need something on the cheap I guess it isn't bad for $50 but you can get a TP link 2 node mesh AXE that will cover 5000 sq ft for about $200+/-
I suggest to buy high gain antenna enabled AX1800 or AX3000 routers for around $30 each (Tenda/Wavlink etc brands) and switch their mode to wired AP with the same SSID/Pass and this way create a high end mesh-like-setup yourself !
In fact many of these $30 WiFi6 (AX) routers have USB 3.0 ports as well to build a NAS setup (by attaching external SSDs) apart from their high-gain antennas.
I am currently in the process of replacing all my AC routers by these AX models while keeping the same SSID/Pass for the seamless mesh upgrade.
In my opinion, these full-fledged routers in wired AP mode will perform much better (while behaving like "mesh" if you keep the same SSID/Pass) compared to the expensive "official mesh nodes" like in the current deal.
Last edited by Marathi January 25, 2024 at 02:25 PM.
Jan 23, 2024 06:36 PM
3 Posts
Joined Jan 2024
NervousRose4727Jan 23, 2024 06:36 PM
3 Posts
Quote from jnads :
For that type of thing usually Ubiquiti is recommended.

You can get them cheap on eBay and manage them remotely, and they are reliable with a lot of users.

Also they are power-over-ethernet so you only need to string 1 cable to deploy.


Only bad thing is you need one of their stupid gateway manager thingys, but you can set up a Raspberry Pi to act as a gateway manager.
Thank you! I'll look into this

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Jan 23, 2024 11:24 PM
241 Posts
Joined Aug 2021
Kheiri23Jan 23, 2024 11:24 PM
241 Posts
Stupid question here but I wanted to ask since after you connect this with router it has a different name and password does changing main router password effects the devices connected with mesh network? do they also disconnect or since it is connected with ethernet it doesn't get effected.
Jan 24, 2024 04:32 AM
374 Posts
Joined Dec 2004
Stan03Jan 24, 2024 04:32 AM
374 Posts
Quote from SlickPicture457 :
Where did you buy it?
Check "DataCom" aisle, my store had a tag there with clearance price for this router advertised, I had to bring it to the front desk and they pulled up the last unit from the locked storage near registers.
Jan 24, 2024 11:13 AM
5,539 Posts
Joined Nov 2007
boazbJan 24, 2024 11:13 AM
5,539 Posts
How does oen check if therir local store has it in stock at that price, without physically driving ot each store?
Jan 24, 2024 12:26 PM
3,242 Posts
Joined May 2020
HE1Jan 24, 2024 12:26 PM
3,242 Posts
Just picked up two, hiding on a pallet
Jan 24, 2024 01:22 PM
1,284 Posts
Joined Dec 2015
FishKillaJan 24, 2024 01:22 PM
1,284 Posts
Quote from Slickone_ :
Is that this one?
https://www.amazon.com/Deco-Mesh-...5JHPH?th=1
Yes, that is one. That goes on sale from time to time for $199, I think it was $160 around prime day. There are plenty of others, but this one works well for the money and is simple to setup.
Jan 24, 2024 01:34 PM
1,284 Posts
Joined Dec 2015
FishKillaJan 24, 2024 01:34 PM
1,284 Posts
Quote from Marathi :
I suggest to buy high gain antenna enabled AX1800 or AX3000 routers for around $30 each (Tenda/Wavlink etc brands) and switch their mode to wired AP with the same SSID/Pass and this way create a high end mesh yourself !
In fact many of these $30 WiFi6 (AX) routers have USB 3.0 ports as well to build a NAS setup (by attaching external SSDs) apart from their high-gain antennas.
I am currently in the process of replacing all my AC routers by these AX models while keeping the same SSID/Pass for the seamless mesh upgrade.

In my opinion, these full-fledged routers in AP mode will perform much better (while behaving like "mesh" if you keep the same SSID/Pass) compared to the expensive "official mesh nodes" like in the current deal.
Well I hate to tell you this but your opinion is just that and I can tell you have no idea what you are talking about so maybe do a little research before you post.

Having a bunch of APs with the same SSID/password does not a mesh network make.

You can research, but a mesh network works together and is aware of the other devices, and will adjust things accordingly. Besides that, if you don't have a wired connection, you can backhaul to a wired AP over wireless. Your just a bunch of APs won't do that, they need a wire.
Jan 24, 2024 01:49 PM
870 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
Szuch123Jan 24, 2024 01:49 PM
870 Posts
Had these exact ones for years (I think I bought them from Costco).

Super easy to use. Plug and play. App holds your hand.

The original app was much easier (and honestly better), but Google melded everything into Google Home, which is fine but a little confusing finding what you need.

I have 900/20 Mbps Xfinity, my bottleneck is actually my modem (Xfinity has several year deals that expire, they keep offering the deals at higher speeds, started at 500 or 700 IIRC). Modem ARRIS SURFboard SB8200 DOCSIS 3.1, can go up to 1 Gbps but according to their marketing Xfinity maxes around 800.

Anyway, main Papa mesh puck gets (just tested but generally similar on average) 882/26 Mbps with direct to modem Ethernet connection.

The next mesh point that's completely across the house upstairs, "great connection" according to app, gets 300/20.

I've wired through the crawl space to the attic but haven't finished running down the wall, which will give me 100% wired mesh.

And that's it. The whole house.
I think I've had to reset the entire thing...5 times, maybe, since I bought it? And usually it's a neighborhood outage issue.

For me, it was the ease of setup.

It seems like newer mesh systems use upgraded Wifi protocols, more bands (dual vs tri etc.), but since I haven't had any issues with connectivity, streaming 1080 - 4k, etc. I'll likely keep them until they explode. I also remember when I bought these, they're lest customizable. coming from... I can't remember the name but whatever router everyone touted years ago, flashed with dd-wrt, which honestly I had nothing but issues with, this was a piece of cake.

Just my 0.02
Last edited by Szuch123 January 24, 2024 at 06:54 AM.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Jan 24, 2024 02:03 PM
2,003 Posts
Joined Feb 2004
porkyJan 24, 2024 02:03 PM
2,003 Posts
I have had mine (Gen 1) for close to five years now. I bought mine from Costco. It was 4-pack set, and I sold one on eBay. The remaining 3 have been solid for the time I have been using it. One time, one of them lost connection. I thought it was dead, but resetting it fixed the issue.
I have a 300mbps connection and I get a 90 throughput at all times. Enough for my family and my WFH activities. I have considering upgrading to WiFi 6/6E, but at 300 odd dollars, I am in no hurry to upgrade.

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

Trending Deals