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expiredDigitaldac posted Mar 08, 2024 09:10 PM
expiredDigitaldac posted Mar 08, 2024 09:10 PM

TP-Link Archer AX1450 WiFi 6 Dual-Band Wireless Router

+ Free Shipping

$36

$59

38% off
Walmart
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Deal Details
Walmart has TP-Link Archer AX1450 WiFi 6 Dual-Band Wireless Router on sale for $36. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member Digitaldac for sharing this deal.

About this Item:
  • 4x Fixed High-Performance Antennas
  • Guest Network:
  • 1x 5 GHz Guest Network
  • 1x 2.4 GHz Guest Network
  • SPI Firewall
  • Access Control
  • IP & MAC Binding
  • Application Layer Gateway
  • 1x Gigabit WAN Port
  • 4x Gigabit LAN Ports

Editor's Notes

Written by SaltyOne | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • Rated 4.7 out of 5 stars from customer reviews.
    • At the time of this posting, our research indicates that this is $16.99 lower than the next best available prices from similar reputable merchants starting from $52.99. -SaltyOne

Original Post

Written by Digitaldac
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Walmart has TP-Link Archer AX1450 WiFi 6 Dual-Band Wireless Router on sale for $36. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member Digitaldac for sharing this deal.

About this Item:
  • 4x Fixed High-Performance Antennas
  • Guest Network:
  • 1x 5 GHz Guest Network
  • 1x 2.4 GHz Guest Network
  • SPI Firewall
  • Access Control
  • IP & MAC Binding
  • Application Layer Gateway
  • 1x Gigabit WAN Port
  • 4x Gigabit LAN Ports

Editor's Notes

Written by SaltyOne | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • Rated 4.7 out of 5 stars from customer reviews.
    • At the time of this posting, our research indicates that this is $16.99 lower than the next best available prices from similar reputable merchants starting from $52.99. -SaltyOne

Original Post

Written by Digitaldac

Community Voting

Deal Score
+41
Good Deal
Visit Walmart

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Model: TP-Link Archer AX1450 WiFi 6 Dual-Band Wireless Router

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Top Comments

code65536
971 Posts
634 Reputation
No, you're thinking of WiFi 5. WiFi 5 supported only the 5GHz band, so all WiFi 5 routers did WiFi 5 on 5GHz and fell back to WiFi 4 for 2.4GHz.

One of the features of WiFi 6 is that it supports both the 2.4 and 5GHz bands, and one of the benefits of upgrading from WiFi 5 to WiFi 6 is that you're getting a 2-generation upgrade for the 2.4 band. While 2.4 isn't exciting like 5, it is the longer-range band, and WiFi 6 offers improvements to efficiency and congestion management for that band.

The vast majority of WiFi 6 routers will have two WiFi 6 radios, one for 2.4GHz and one for 5GHz. This model, which BTW, is exclusive to Wal-Mart, cheaps out by having just one WiFi 6 radio for the 5GHz band and using a cheap legacy WiFi 4 radio for the 2.4GHz band.

Anyway, "AX1800" is generally the low-end budget spec for a "pure" WiFi 6 system (almost 600 on 2.4GHz, plus 1200 on 5GHz). "AX3000" is a midrange pure WiFi 6 system (almost 600 on 2.4GHz, plus 2400 on 5GHz from the use of wider channels). And you can spot the gimped systems by the "AX1500" or "AX1450") (300 or less on 2.4GHz, plus 1200 on 5GHz).

The real kicker is that "pure" WiFi 6 routers that support WiFi 6 on both bands are not that much more expensive. For example, look at these past SD threads:
https://slickdeals.net/f/15515443
https://slickdeals.net/f/15902134
https://slickdeals.net/f/15969214
https://slickdeals.net/f/15961666
code65536
971 Posts
634 Reputation
Note that this device does WiFi 6 only in the 5GHz band. It uses WiFi 4 on the 2.4GHz band.
Furtive
182 Posts
42 Reputation
Why is this comment eerily similar to the OP description? Are these bots?

103 Comments

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Mar 09, 2024 03:27 PM
4,551 Posts
Joined Aug 2007
pug_sterMar 09, 2024 03:27 PM
4,551 Posts
I brought a refurbed Netgear R6700AX last year for less than this. Was hoping for a router with at least a usb to be used to connect to usb external hard drive but it doesn't. That sucks.
Mar 09, 2024 03:29 PM
275 Posts
Joined May 2013
ReardenRMar 09, 2024 03:29 PM
275 Posts
Quote from JasonDB :
Ahhhh why would somebody bother hacking most people? What are they gonna do turn on and off and change the patterns on my Govee lights and change the settings on my TV?
Do you have streaming accounts? Social media accounts? Indoor security cameras? Amazon, Google, or credit card accounts? Banking or investing online? Do you use your phone or tablet on your home network - any sensitive apps on your phone? Those could be targets.
Last edited by ReardenR March 9, 2024 at 10:39 AM.
Mar 09, 2024 03:29 PM
1,633 Posts
Joined Apr 2010
yoFuMar 09, 2024 03:29 PM
1,633 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank yoFu

Beware https://cybernews.com/security/am...-firmware/

All wifi routers have security problems. All normal consumers can hope to do it get sufficient updates from reputable companies that have long support periods. In general, that isn't what TP-Link does. Beware.

At this point, there are just a few wifi-router consumer companies that strive to have fixes for their equipment. One of them was really bad and got sued by the FTC. In the settlement with the FTC, they agreed to 20 yrs of oversight, following security best practices, and they've been doing it. That company is Asus. I picked up a used Asus Wifi-6 router to use as an AP inside the house last month for $38. The other companies that I believe do their best to patch and have long support periods are Asus, Netgear, MikroTik, and Ubiquiti. The last two have nerd-friendly offers, not so great for normal people. I've had wifi connection issues with Netgear stuff and had to replace the wifi part of the router with a Ubiquity AP. So, those are the choices for people who care about security to consider. Watch out for similar-sounding names. There are a few out there trying to make sales based on the reputation of others.

I decided to to get off the "buy new router every 3-5 yrs" treadmill and switched to a purpose built x86-64 box that supports openwrt, dd-wrt, pfSense and OPNSense routing software - among others. I've had that router for about 10 yrs now and expect it will last another 10 yrs. Every week, I patch the current OPNSense software as part of my normal server patching processes. About 1-2 times every month, there are updates as they close security issues and fix flaws. Almost all of the flaws are in the web-GUI used. I think that is very common for all these small routers.

I'm always surprised that people spend $150+ for a home wifi router. Unless you have a huge home or one made with concrete walls between interior rooms, it just isn't needed.
2
1
Mar 09, 2024 04:25 PM
35 Posts
Joined May 2009
hehehe2Mar 09, 2024 04:25 PM
35 Posts
TP Link has wireless connections limited to 32 max , with more and more smart home devices, that number is not enough for some users, just be aware
Mar 09, 2024 04:35 PM
221 Posts
Joined Nov 2014
jaydillyoMar 09, 2024 04:35 PM
221 Posts
Quote from Furtive :
Why is this comment eerily similar to the OP description? Are these bots?
I am also not a bot. Beep beep boop boop.
Mar 09, 2024 05:46 PM
275 Posts
Joined May 2013
ReardenRMar 09, 2024 05:46 PM
275 Posts
Quote from yoFu :
Beware https://cybernews.com/security/am...-firmware/ [cybernews.com]

I decided to to get off the "buy new router every 3-5 yrs" treadmill and switched to a purpose built x86-64 box that supports openwrt, dd-wrt, pfSense and OPNSense routing software - among others. I've had that router for about 10 yrs now and expect it will last another 10 yrs. Every week, I patch the current OPNSense software as part of my normal server patching processes. About 1-2 times every month, there are updates as they close security issues and fix flaws. Almost all of the flaws are in the web-GUI used. I think that is very common for all these small routers.
Any comments on the use of products like the routers Gl.Inet sells? I have used them as my "main" router with my mesh and switches downstream. I'm using the Google/Nest mesh that came with my WiFi (which does a decent job) but it does not have native VPN support and is not configurable outside of the "Home" app. For the mesh function, its fine but I like a little more security. Thinking not as secure as your setup but more secure than most of the mainstream routers.
Last edited by ReardenR March 9, 2024 at 10:59 AM.
Mar 09, 2024 05:50 PM
3,405 Posts
Joined Dec 2008
missellieMar 09, 2024 05:50 PM
3,405 Posts
Quote from ijamjl :
Hoping this will be at least as good as my router that came with my spectrum service (500mbps plan). Tired of paying a monthly fee for a router. Thanks OP
Quote from stuffedwallet :
Am in the same boat. I bought this one from Amazon (https://a.co/d/bSubm77). Haven't opened it yet.
Wondering how these two products compare.
Post back when you test these out. I have spectrum 500 mbps too but have 30 devices at one house and 15 at another. I'm using a Linksys router that is handling the 30 devices but their app. bricked after the last update. The Spectrum router at the other house is very good, solid and fast, but they recently jacked up the monthly fee... ridiculous!

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Mar 09, 2024 05:58 PM
312 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
ijamjlMar 09, 2024 05:58 PM
312 Posts
Quote from yoFu :
Beware https://cybernews.com/security/am...-firmware/

All wifi routers have security problems. All normal consumers can hope to do it get sufficient updates from reputable companies that have long support periods. In general, that isn't what TP-Link does. Beware.

At this point, there are just a few wifi-router consumer companies that strive to have fixes for their equipment. One of them was really bad and got sued by the FTC. In the settlement with the FTC, they agreed to 20 yrs of oversight, following security best practices, and they've been doing it. That company is Asus. I picked up a used Asus Wifi-6 router to use as an AP inside the house last month for $38. The other companies that I believe do their best to patch and have long support periods are Asus, Netgear, MikroTik, and Ubiquiti. The last two have nerd-friendly offers, not so great for normal people. I've had wifi connection issues with Netgear stuff and had to replace the wifi part of the router with a Ubiquity AP. So, those are the choices for people who care about security to consider. Watch out for similar-sounding names. There are a few out there trying to make sales based on the reputation of others.

I decided to to get off the "buy new router every 3-5 yrs" treadmill and switched to a purpose built x86-64 box that supports openwrt, dd-wrt, pfSense and OPNSense routing software - among others. I've had that router for about 10 yrs now and expect it will last another 10 yrs. Every week, I patch the current OPNSense software as part of my normal server patching processes. About 1-2 times every month, there are updates as they close security issues and fix flaws. Almost all of the flaws are in the web-GUI used. I think that is very common for all these small routers.

I'm always surprised that people spend $150+ for a home wifi router. Unless you have a huge home or one made with concrete walls between interior rooms, it just isn't needed.
Mind explaining what this x86-64 box is? I only have basic home user networking knowledge. Would love more info and how to have a better, secure home network, and share your philosophy about buying a new router every few years.
Mar 09, 2024 06:02 PM
275 Posts
Joined May 2013
ReardenRMar 09, 2024 06:02 PM
275 Posts
Quote from donldmn :
You should check the logs on your router some time. I get random ip addresses from Russia trying to get in my home network like every 10 minutes.
I was using a Pi-Hole to block ads and was amazed at the number of times Google, Amazon, Netflix and Apple ping my network - not to mention lots of unknown sites - many foreign. Lots of traffic trying to get in. Most probably benign but who knows??
Last edited by ReardenR March 9, 2024 at 11:06 AM.
Mar 09, 2024 06:25 PM
29 Posts
Joined May 2009
sampahbauMar 09, 2024 06:25 PM
29 Posts
Quote from hehehe2 :
TP Link has wireless connections limited to 32 max , with more and more smart home devices, that number is not enough for some users, just be aware
says who? i have almost 40 devices connected everyday with the old tplink router and still going strong
Mar 09, 2024 07:18 PM
971 Posts
Joined Sep 2005
code65536Mar 09, 2024 07:18 PM
971 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank code65536

Quote from ijamjl :
Mind explaining what this x86-64 box is? I only have basic home user networking knowledge. Would love more info and how to have a better, secure home network, and share your philosophy about buying a new router every few years.
Generally speaking, when you buy a "WiFi router", you're really buying a 3-in-1 device. In a professional setting, each of these three functions would be handled by a separate device, but for home use, they're almost always combined into a single device for the sake of convenience and simplicity.

The device has a wireless access point, a network switch, and a router. The access point provides connectivity for WiFi devices, the switch lets you connect multiple Ethernet devices together, and the router is your gateway to the Internet.

The access point and the switch are fine; they have a small attack surface and are not threats. The router is complicated because it connects your home network to the Internet and is more open to attacks, and there are groups that try to break into consumer-grade routers, knowing that they are rarely updated and thus can contain security flaws.

I personally have a dedicated router, and then I have a couple of WiFi routers that I use as access points / switches, with the routing component disabled (all WiFi routers support this mode of operation--AP mode--where the routing component is turned off and the WiFi router stops acting like a router and is just an access point and switch).

And there are lots of options for a dedicated router; one would be to get a dedicated PC running something like opnsense, which is what the person who you quoted was referring to with "x86-64", but frankly that's like swatting a fly with a sledgehammer; it's overkill for the typical home scenario, not that efficient, and requires a good amount of technical know-how (if you have to ask what "x86-64" meant, you probably should not be going down this route). A MikroTik router would probably be slightly a better fit, but it's still not for novices, and honestly just a cheap consumer-grade router capable of running OpenWRT would be more cost-effective and solve the same problem (but also not for novices). Remember, the main issue isn't the hardware, but rather the software that's running on that hardware, so if the hardware supports something like OpenWRT, it should be fine.
Last edited by code65536 March 9, 2024 at 12:25 PM.
1
Mar 09, 2024 08:37 PM
955 Posts
Joined Oct 2017
kpb321Mar 09, 2024 08:37 PM
955 Posts
Quote from G3H :
Needed a budget TP-Link as a wireless bridge. But was told (by TP-Link) none of its routers can be used as one.
I don't know if any of their devices support a wireless bridge mode but I expect that a one mesh setup would work as a wireless bridge in addition to the mesh setup. I use Asus and their AI Mesh but for them the Ai Mesh node also works as a wireless bridge and I don't see why TP-Link would be any different. Assuming you already have a TP-Link main router that is Open Mesh compatible something like an AX21 or AX1800 would probably work well.
Mar 09, 2024 08:45 PM
1,809 Posts
Joined Sep 2007
ericfwMar 09, 2024 08:45 PM
1,809 Posts
Is this better than the TP-Link AC1750?
Mar 09, 2024 10:05 PM
1,638 Posts
Joined Dec 2006
eyeslickMar 09, 2024 10:05 PM
1,638 Posts
Quote from ranova :
Does this support easy mesh?
Date: 2023-07-21Language: Multi-languageFile Size: 15.49 MB
odifications and Bug Fixes
1. Add the EasyMesh function;

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Mar 09, 2024 10:10 PM
5,514 Posts
Joined Jan 2004
ranovaMar 09, 2024 10:10 PM
5,514 Posts
Quote from eyeslick :
Date: 2023-07-21Language: Multi-languageFile Size: 15.49 MB
odifications and Bug Fixes
1. Add the EasyMesh function;
Thanks, that's legit, could just buy 3 of these around the house and mesh them all for much cheaper than a traditional mesh system

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