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expiredachhu26 posted Aug 26, 2024 12:37 PM
expiredachhu26 posted Aug 26, 2024 12:37 PM

Linksys LN1301 Tri-Band AX4200 WiFi 6 Wireless Router

+ Free Shipping w/ Prime

$15

$50

70% off
Woot!
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Deal Details
Update: This very popular deal is still available.

Woot! has Linksys LN1301 Tri-Band AX4200 WiFi 6 Wireless Router on sale for $14.99 when you apply coupon code GEARUP4FALL at checkout. Shipping is free for Amazon Prime Members (must login with your Amazon account and select a shipping address in order for Woot to apply free shipping) or is otherwise $6 per order.

Thanks to community member achhu26 for sharing this deal.

About this Item:
  • Covers up to 2700 sq. ft.
  • Handles 40+ devices
  • Speed up to 4.2 Gbps (AX4200)
  • WiFi 6 Tri-Band
  • Quad-Core Processor
  • MU-MIMO and OFDMA

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff
  • This price is $5 less than our popular +58 Frontpage Deal from earlier in the month.
  • Includes 1-Year Linksys Warranty.
  • Coupon Code: Limit one use per customer. Valid through 9/1/2024 or while supplies last.
  • Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
  • If you're not a student, there's also a free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.

Original Post

Written by achhu26
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Update: This very popular deal is still available.

Woot! has Linksys LN1301 Tri-Band AX4200 WiFi 6 Wireless Router on sale for $14.99 when you apply coupon code GEARUP4FALL at checkout. Shipping is free for Amazon Prime Members (must login with your Amazon account and select a shipping address in order for Woot to apply free shipping) or is otherwise $6 per order.

Thanks to community member achhu26 for sharing this deal.

About this Item:
  • Covers up to 2700 sq. ft.
  • Handles 40+ devices
  • Speed up to 4.2 Gbps (AX4200)
  • WiFi 6 Tri-Band
  • Quad-Core Processor
  • MU-MIMO and OFDMA

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff
  • This price is $5 less than our popular +58 Frontpage Deal from earlier in the month.
  • Includes 1-Year Linksys Warranty.
  • Coupon Code: Limit one use per customer. Valid through 9/1/2024 or while supplies last.
  • Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
  • If you're not a student, there's also a free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.

Original Post

Written by achhu26

Community Voting

Deal Score
+447
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Top Comments

RainGater
787 Posts
240 Reputation
Yes, Linksys LN1301 is a terrific router with 2 GB RAM and 1 GB of flash. Insane! I thought my Netgear R7800 with 512 MB RAM is pretty good until the specs on LN301 blows the R7800 out of the water and is a tri-band router as well!

With wireless mesh (instructions below), it's one heck of a deal and blows DECO AX5000 deal out of the water, imho.

EDIT: UPDATED instructions for enabling MESH (thanks to @rbtcordell for the original source):

1-Setup your Main router completely.

2-Plug your child node using the wan port to the main router lan port, wait for a solid purple light on the child node before proceeding

3-Log into your main router web admin.

4-Click on CA at the bottom right.

5-Click on Connectivity and CA Router setup.

6-Click on both Add Wired and Add Wireless nodes buttons. Wait for the Add wireless button to re-enable.

7-Click Done adding Child Nodes and then Apply.

8-Now the child node light should start flashing purple and turn into a mesh mode when it turns blue.

9-Disconnect Ethernet and wait for blue light again.

10-Move node to desired location.
avalon
13953 Posts
11169 Reputation
LN1301 now has dd-wrt beta support by BrainSlayer

https://forum.dd-wrt.com/phpBB2/v...?p=1304991

openwrt release notes

https://github.com/asd333111/open...ax-fd13d50

disassembly photos for the curious

https://imgur.com/a/linksys-ln130...ly-YJM1qfw


qualcommax: ipq807x: add support for Linksys MX4300 (LN1301)

Hardware specification:
========
SoC: Qualcomm IPQ8174
Flash: 1GB (Micron MT29F8G08ABBCAH4 or AMD/Spansion S34MS08G2)
RAM: 2GB (2x Kingston B5116ECMDXGJD or ESMT M15T2G16128A DDR3L)
Ethernet: 4x 10/100/1000Mbps (Qualcomm QCA8075)
WiFi1: 5GHz ax 2x2 (Qualcomm QCN5054 + Skyworks SKY85755-11) - channels 36-64 (low band)
WiFi2: 2.4GHz ax 2x2 (Qualcomm QCN5024 + Skyworks SKY85340-11)
WiFi3: 5GHz ax 4x4 (Qualcomm QCN5054 + Skyworks SKY85755-11) - channels 100-177 (high band)
LED: 1x RGB status (NXP PCA9633)
USB: 1x USB 3.0
Button: WPS, Reset
chunjuan
226 Posts
283 Reputation
set it as an Access Point.
1. Disable DHCP (optional)
2. Set the device to Bridge Mode under Connectivity tab
3. Connect cable from your router to a LAN port.
4. Get some nail polished and a round sticker to cover the annoying flashing right light.
5. Click the 'AC' at the bottom of the page to see the detail configurations of wifi.

1,158 Comments

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Aug 30, 2024 10:41 AM
1,387 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
ProAm500Aug 30, 2024 10:41 AM
1,387 Posts
Quote from Shawndak07 :
These were likely built and marketed prior to covid. These were designed for offices. Guess what's sitting empty right now?... Not to mention companies don't have money to make network & computer updates in this economy.
Do you even know what you're talking about? These are not even close to small enterprise level devices. Second, you realize IT departments have ALWAYS had to fight to get funding for upgrades to hardware forever right? IT budgets have always been slim.
Last edited by ProAm500 August 30, 2024 at 04:52 AM.
4
Aug 30, 2024 11:06 AM
638 Posts
Joined Mar 2011
loxppAug 30, 2024 11:06 AM
638 Posts
Quote from qning :
I pay monthly to rent my router.
Renting router from isp is not smart
Aug 30, 2024 11:14 AM
618 Posts
Joined May 2011
tnoogenAug 30, 2024 11:14 AM
618 Posts
Quote from ProAm500 :
Do you even know what you're talking about? These are not even close to small enterprise level devices. Second, you realize IT departments have ALWAYS had to fight to get funding for upgrades to hardware forever right? IT budgets have always been slim.
Yep, agree. These are not enterprise level devices in any way. "Linksys HomeWRK for Business | Secured by Fortinet" is the marketing for these. HomeWRK is the keyword in this product marketing name. "Linksys and Fortinet have joined forces to provide high-performance WiFi for the home with enterprise-grade security that is easy to deploy and manage." Simply, they think Businesses will buy these and hand-out to people who work remotely. The idea is to make it easier for Employee to simply plug-it into their home internet to connect to work.

Not a very thought-out idea. This thing is more secured than having single point VPN on a laptop? There is so many insecure point of access on the router. Others in the home can connect wireless, wired, or even usb. Is it easier? Maybe for your IT/Boss to control and monitor you at home but not for the Employee. You suppose to teach them to go in and configure this versus they've already been trained using VPN?
2
Aug 30, 2024 11:31 AM
843 Posts
Joined Jul 2018
Shawndak07Aug 30, 2024 11:31 AM
843 Posts
Quote from ProAm500 :
Do you even know what you're talking about? These are not even close to small enterprise level devices. Second, you realize IT departments have ALWAYS had to fight to get funding for upgrades to hardware forever right? IT budgets have always been slim.
I love that you conveniently left out the statement that I was correct on (Router speeds) and brought up the other statement that I already dropped. Also if you dig a little deeper these are mentioned to be enterprise level tech for "Fast mesh Wi-Fi for corporate and home networks."

Nobody knows why these clearly failed to sell and are being fired auctioned off. I took a stab at it. I was somewhat correct. Companies clearly did not want or have the money to spend on these.

btw all your responses, in the app, look like a bunch of gibberish html coding. Just thought you'd like to know.
Last edited by Shawndak07 August 30, 2024 at 05:41 AM.
Aug 30, 2024 11:55 AM
936 Posts
Joined May 2010
bikerbanditoAug 30, 2024 11:55 AM
936 Posts
Quote from buy_now_think_later :
Openwrt
Thanks. Do you know if flashing the beta OpenWRT now (vs. waiting for a stable release) will make it unnecessarily difficult to upgrade to a future version of OpenWRT? If not, I'm flashing this asap.
Aug 30, 2024 12:24 PM
1,155 Posts
Joined Jul 2013
buy_now_think_laterAug 30, 2024 12:24 PM
1,155 Posts
Quote from bikerbandito :
Thanks. Do you know if flashing the beta OpenWRT now (vs. waiting for a stable release) will make it unnecessarily difficult to upgrade to a future version of OpenWRT? If not, I'm flashing this asap.
The upgrade should be fine. Also there are 2 partitions on this router so you can only install on one and leave factory version on second in case something goes wrong. Make sure to check you variant and flash correct version to avoid bricking
Aug 30, 2024 12:27 PM
807 Posts
Joined Jun 2015
illusion27Aug 30, 2024 12:27 PM
807 Posts
Quote from buy_now_think_later :
The upgrade should be fine. Also there are 2 partitions on this router so you can only install on one and leave factory version on second in case something goes wrong. Make sure to check you variant and flash correct version to avoid bricking
I had flashed openwrt only to find out that this build did not support vpn. Is there a more recent openwrt build? I was thinking of going the ddwrt route precisely for this reason.

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Aug 30, 2024 12:30 PM
1,155 Posts
Joined Jul 2013
buy_now_think_laterAug 30, 2024 12:30 PM
1,155 Posts
Quote from illusion27 :
I had flashed openwrt only to find out that this build did not support vpn. Is there a more recent openwrt build? I was thinking of going the ddwrt route precisely for this reason.
It supports everything as long as you are willing to build yourself. Once release builds are available it will be like just another openwrt router but that's not the case as of now. The pr is open and developers working on it to get it merged into mainline
Last edited by buy_now_think_later August 30, 2024 at 06:40 AM.
Aug 30, 2024 12:48 PM
1,155 Posts
Joined Jul 2013
buy_now_think_laterAug 30, 2024 12:48 PM
1,155 Posts
Quote from NikoZ :
I have an eero pro 6 AX4200 mesh system now with 3 nodes. Would this be even worth switching to as it's also AX4200? My eeros have been bullet proof as far as stability goes and still constantly receive updates.
No unless you like to tinker and have some use case especially want to use openwrt
Aug 30, 2024 12:55 PM
2,454 Posts
Joined Jan 2019
blahbooboo2Aug 30, 2024 12:55 PM
2,454 Posts
Quote from NikoZ :
I have an eero pro 6 AX4200 mesh system now with 3 nodes. Would this be even worth switching to as it's also AX4200? My eeros have been bullet proof as far as stability goes and still constantly receive updates.
You answered your own question
Aug 30, 2024 01:01 PM
1,604 Posts
Joined Nov 2011
NikoZAug 30, 2024 01:01 PM
1,604 Posts
Quote from blahbooboo2 :
You answered your own question
Yea, you're right. bulb
Aug 30, 2024 01:06 PM
1,604 Posts
Joined Nov 2011
NikoZAug 30, 2024 01:06 PM
1,604 Posts
Quote from buy_now_think_later :
No unless you like to tinker and have some use case especially want to use openwrt
I have a glinet router upstream of them anyway so likely not any use case for me. Seems like a great deal for those who don't have a decent router yet though so it's tempting as a backup.
Aug 30, 2024 01:32 PM
126 Posts
Joined Dec 2016
poorchaseAug 30, 2024 01:32 PM
126 Posts
Quote from NikoZ :
Yea, you're right. bulb
It can't hold a candle to my eeros, so you may want to not try fix it if it's not broken. And your 6 pros sound fancier than what I've got: I have eero pro (AC) and a set of 6+'s. I've only tried linksys stock though. But, with stock it's 10-15% slower than my AC eero pros, except an occasional super fast measurement. Then it's quite a bit slower than my eero 6+, again except occasionally when it decides to use the faster back haul 6ghz radio.
It uses a dynamic back haul set up so it decides on the fly which band to serve clients and connect to other nodes on. I turned off the slower 5ghz band all together to force the faster speed, so it's now faster than the AC eeros, but still 20% slower than the eero 6+ .
Last edited by poorchase August 30, 2024 at 07:48 AM.
3
Aug 30, 2024 01:44 PM
55 Posts
Joined Dec 2017
SpecmanAug 30, 2024 01:44 PM
55 Posts
Quote from chunjuan :
set it as an Access Point.
1. Disable DHCP (optional)
2. Set the device to Bridge Mode under Connectivity tab
3. Connect cable from your router to a LAN port.
4. Get some nail polished and a round sticker to cover the annoying flashing right light.
5. Click the 'AC' at the bottom of the page to see the detail configurations of wifi.
This looks like what I plan to do with the two that I purchased with the second unit hardwired in the attic. Hoping this is better than my current Netgear R8500.

I would also like to control/ manage the internet data since I am capped at 1.23TB/ month or at least see what is using too much data.

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Aug 30, 2024 01:51 PM
1,092 Posts
Joined Sep 2022
TealIdea227Aug 30, 2024 01:51 PM
1,092 Posts
Quote from taabbccbbaa :
Mesh with wired backhauls would be the way to go then.
I am well aware of what the distinction is, but yet it hardly matters for people who have higher priorities than making use of it.
1

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