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expired Posted by xlnc • Sep 3, 2024
expired Posted by xlnc • Sep 3, 2024

Linksys LN1301 Tri-Band AX4200 WiFi 6 Wireless Router

+ Free Shipping

$20

$25

20% off
Amazon
1,237 Comments 370,810 Views
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Deal Details
Update: This popular deal is still available

Woot via Amazon has Linksys LN1301 Tri-Band AX4200 WiFi 6 Wireless Router on sale for $19.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member xlnc for finding 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 megakimcheelove | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • This price matches this previous Frontpage Deal (+59).
    • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this Product:
    • 1 Year Linksys Warranty
  • About this Store:

Original Post

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

Woot via Amazon has Linksys LN1301 Tri-Band AX4200 WiFi 6 Wireless Router on sale for $19.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member xlnc for finding 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 megakimcheelove | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • This price matches this previous Frontpage Deal (+59).
    • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this Product:
    • 1 Year Linksys Warranty
  • About this Store:

Original Post

Written by xlnc

Community Voting

Deal Score
+136
Good Deal
Visit Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: Linksys LN1301 WiFi Router - Tri-Band WiFi - Plug-n-Play Setup - Covers up to 2700 sq. ft. - Speed up tp 4.2 Gbps - Handles 40+ Devices

Deal History 

Sort: Most Recent
Post Date Sold By Sale Price Activity
08/01/24Amazon$25 popular
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Top Comments

I have to disagree with you there. I have 64 devices connected to four LN1301s in a router + mesh network and performance has been decent and stable for nearly a week now. I have 16 IP cameras streaming 1080p video 24/7 as well. (Half of them via Ethernet bridging with the mesh nodes)

Mind you that I only have 100Mbps Spectrum internet but I do stream/direct play 4k videos from a Plex media server to several Amazon Firestick 4k devices without issue. Overall IMO you would be hard pressed to find such relatively decent hardware for so cheap; especially a Mesh network.

It wasn't all smooth at first mind you. I kept getting disconnects; especially with the streaming IP cameras. But I discovered by disabling Express Forwarding all my streaming issues went away. (CA>Connectivity>Administration>Express Forwarding)

I'm guessing that Cisco's/Linksys' proprietary Express Forwarding routing protocol was causing havoc with the IP cams streaming capabilities. Also, disabling Node Steering seemed to make things more stable as well; mesh nodes no longer disconnect from the router when Node Steering is disabled. (CA>Wi-Fi Settings>Advanced>Node Steering)
User feedback across two years indicates better performance with all three off. Express forwarding seems to negatively affect streaming. Node steering interferws with Google Home and Apple Homekit. Client steering slows connection down if you have more than one router.

Of course, user experience can vary so feel free to experiment. if the routers are giving you problems, try turning these features off and see if it works
Still waiting for mine to ship from the last $15 deal. Just checked and Woot says SEPT 13. Hasn't even shipped yet.

It's not a deal if you never receive it.

1,236 Comments

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Sep 9, 2024
95 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
Sep 9, 2024
zx5b4
Sep 9, 2024
95 Posts
Yesterday, I finally received one of the four LN1301 I ordered on 8/27 from Woot.

I have an Edgerouter X running with hardware offloading on a 1G line, and gets near 1G up and down (the ER-X cannot do up and down simultaneously at 1G), I have around 70 leases on the Er-X and around 30 static.

I am using 3 R7800 in AP mode over 2 stories and 4600 sqft and I have very good coverage, some slow spots, but manageable. I easily get 600+ Mbps down and 500+ Mbps up from the R7800 on wifi on the 160mhz ax211 devices. I plan to replace the R7800s with the LN1301 4-node mesh.

Testing speeds by connecting the one LN1031 I received to the existing LAN and connecting to its wifi (no other changes made) gets about 650 Mbps down, and 500 Mbps up on the same devices.

Before I take my whole network down, I am wondering:

1. Should I remove the Edgerouter X and use LN1301 as the main router to get full 1G duplex?
1a, Should I mod firmware to DD-WRT or OWRT with nss or keep stock?
1c. Should I keep the Edgerouter X and use LN1301 in stock bridge mode?
2. Is there any benefit to mesh nodes or should I mod the firmware and use these as additional APs?

Appreciate your thoughts based on your experience with the LN1301s.
Sep 9, 2024
1,531 Posts
Joined Nov 2011
Sep 9, 2024
NikoZ
Sep 9, 2024
1,531 Posts
Quote from zx5b4 :
Yesterday, I finally received one of the four LN1301 I ordered on 8/27 from Woot.

I have an Edgerouter X running with hardware offloading on a 1G line, and gets near 1G up and down (the ER-X cannot do up and down simultaneously at 1G), I have around 70 leases on the Er-X and around 30 static.

I am using 3 R7800 in AP mode over 2 stories and 4600 sqft and I have very good coverage, some slow spots, but manageable. I easily get 600+ Mbps down and 500+ Mbps up from the R7800 on wifi on the 160mhz ax211 devices. I plan to replace the R7800s with the LN1301 4-node mesh.

Testing speeds by connecting the one LN1031 I received to the existing LAN and connecting to its wifi (no other changes made) gets about 650 Mbps down, and 500 Mbps up on the same devices.

Before I take my whole network down, I am wondering:

1. Should I remove the Edgerouter X and use LN1301 as the main router to get full 1G duplex?
1a, Should I mod firmware to DD-WRT or OWRT with nss or keep stock?
1c. Should I keep the Edgerouter X and use LN1301 in stock bridge mode?
2. Is there any benefit to mesh nodes or should I mod the firmware and use these as additional APs?

Appreciate your thoughts based on your experience with the LN1301s.
If wireless speed is your priority on a Qualcomm cpu router, stay with stock firmware. You will give up wireless speed by using openWRT or DD-WRT for extra functionality. If you have another router then use that as the main router for the functionality and use these in bridge mode.
1
Pro
Sep 9, 2024
2,844 Posts
Joined May 2011
Sep 9, 2024
Guy767
Pro
Sep 9, 2024
2,844 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Guy767

Quote from LavenderCabbage729 :
Can these be used as Wi-Fi extender without having mesh network. I've xfiniti provied router+modem if that matters
Yes, you can put a single Linksys LN1301 in Bridge/AP Mode and connect its WAN port to a LAN jack on your router via a very long ethernet cable. However, IMO you want 2 LN1301s for this; one for the Bridge/AP that's connected to your xfiniti router and another LN1301 for a mesh node which the Bridge/AP is the parent/master to truly extend your wifi at least 3,000 sqft. (Providing that you optimally/strategically place the mesh node)

Actually I would recommend at first using 2 Linksys LN1301s for a simple Bridge/AP + Mesh setup as it's relatively easy to configure and a good way to see if the LN1301s will work for you before using several LN1301s as a true Router+Mesh solution.

You need to change the Static IP address before switching to Bridge mode though. (CA>Connectivity>Internet Settings>Type of Internet Connection>Static IP Once that's done THEN switch to Bridge Mode)

For Bridge/AP Mode your Static IP address should look something like this... (Replace question marks with your relevant IP info)

Code:
Internet Address:	192.168.?.?? (The IP address that you want the LN1301 to have)
Subnet Mask:	255.255.255.0
Default Gateway:	192.168.?.?? (The IP of the router that you want the LN1301 to act as a bridge for)
DNS1:	192.168.?.?? (IP of your router that the LN1301 connects to as a bridge)
DNS2:	8.8.8.8 (Google DNS Service)
Quote from RainGater :
I have Express Forwarding enabled on MX4300 ever since I got the two units (less than a week) and no issues whatsoever.
In Bridge/AP + mesh mode I had 4 LN1301s working great without having to fiddle/tinker with Express Forwarding or Node Steering. Only when I tried switching to a true router+mesh setup did I encounter problems. (IP cams kept disconnecting and was unable to stream properly)

Only by disabling Express Forwarding and Node Steering was I able to make my 4 LN1301s router+mesh setup work reliably. I'm thinking that each situation/network topology is unique though and that Express Forwarding or Node Steering can be left alone if everything is working for you.

Since I have 64 devices connected which sixteen 24/7 streaming 1080p IP cameras are a part of; disabling Express Forwarding and Node Steering made a huge difference/improvement. I went from a virtually unusable network with constant disconnects and streaming video frequently freezing to a rock solid/reliable LAN.

I like to reiterate that making sure you have no IP conflicts in your network is crucial as well. If you can; manually assign static IPs for all your devices in their network settings. You can check for IP conflicts in the LN1301's Troubleshooting section. (CA>Troubleshooting>Status)

If your devices have no innate way to assign static IPs then Manually Add Device Reservation in the LN1301's settings. (CA>Connectivity>Local Network>DHCP Reservations>Manually Add Device Reservation).

Sorry to be needlessly pedantic as you seem pretty knowledgeable when it comes to networking. But I would recommend before tinkering with Express Forwarding and Node Steering if you are having network reliability and streaming issues is to confirm first that there's no IP conflicts on your network. IP conflicts can be sneaky and insidious; especially when a large number of devices are connected and DHCP is enabled on your router.
Last edited by Guy767 September 9, 2024 at 04:06 PM.
2
1
Sep 9, 2024
78 Posts
Joined Jul 2021
Sep 9, 2024
supersteveart
Sep 9, 2024
78 Posts
By separating the 2nd 5ghz band, will the firmware know to use it exclusively for the backhaul?
Sep 9, 2024
689 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
Sep 9, 2024
ToddlerTN
Sep 9, 2024
689 Posts
Can anyone give me advice on how to use this as a dedicated VPN device? My goal is to attach this to my existing router, enable a new WiFi network, and route all traffic using the new WiFi network through NordVPN in order to stream foreign services from Canada or the UK.
Sep 9, 2024
95 Posts
Joined Apr 2014
Sep 9, 2024
lucluke
Sep 9, 2024
95 Posts
Quote from Guy767 :
Yes, you can put a single Linksys LN1301 in Bridge/AP Mode and connect it's WAN port to a LAN jack on your router via a very long ethernet cable. However, IMO you want 2 LN1301s for this; one for the Bridge/AP that's connected to your xfiniti router and another LN1301 for a mesh node which the Bridge/AP is the parent/master to truly extend your wifi at least 3,000 sqft. (Providing that you optimally/strategically place the mesh node)

Actually I would recommend at first using 2 Linksys LN1301s for a simple Bridge/AP + Mesh setup as it's relatively easy to configure and a good way to see if the LN1301s will work for you before using several LN1301s as a true Router+Mesh solution.

You need to change the Static IP address before switching to Bridge mode though. (CA>Connectivity>Internet Settings>Type of Internet Connection>Static IP Once that's done THEN switch to Bridge Mode)

For Bridge/AP Mode your Static IP address should look something like this... (Replace question marks with your relevant IP info)

Code:
Internet Address:	192.168.?.?? (The IP address that you want the LN1301 to have)
Subnet Mask:	255.255.255.0
Default Gateway:	192.168.?.?? (The IP of the router that you want the LN1301 to act as a bridge for)
DNS1:	192.168.?.?? (IP of your router that the LN1301 connects to as a bridge)
DNS2:	8.8.8.8 (Google DNS Service)


In Bridge/AP + mesh mode I had 4 LN1301s working great without having to fiddle/tinker with Express Forwarding or Node Steering. Only when I tried switching to a true router+mesh setup did I encounter problems. (IP cams kept disconnecting and was unable to stream properly)

Only by disabling Express Forwarding and Node Steering was I able to make my 4 LN1301s router+mesh setup work reliably. I'm thinking that each situation/network topography is unique though and that Express Forwarding or Node Steering can be left alone if everything is working for you.

Since I have 64 devices connected which sixteen 24/7 streaming 1080p IP cameras are a part of; disabling Express Forwarding and Node Steering made a huge difference/improvement. I went from a virtually unusable network with constant disconnects and streaming video frequently freezing to a rock solid/reliable LAN.

I like to reiterate that making sure you have no IP conflicts in your network is crucial as well. If you can; manually assign static IPs for all your devices in their network settings. You can check for IP conflicts in the LN1301's Troubleshooting section. (CA>Troubleshooting>Status)

If your devices have no innate way to assign static IPs then Manually Add Device Reservation in the LN1301's settings. (CA>Connectivity>Local Network>DHCP Reservations>Manually Add Device Reservation).

Sorry to be needlessly pedantic as you seem pretty knowledgeable when it comes to networking. But I would recommend before tinkering with Express Forwarding and Node Steering if you are having network reliability and streaming issues is to confirm first that there's no IP conflicts on your network. IP conflicts can be sneaky and insidious; especially when a large number of devices are connected and DHCP is enabled on your router.

Awesome summary, thanks!
Sep 9, 2024
304 Posts
Joined May 2014
Sep 9, 2024
aintaboutdislife
Sep 9, 2024
304 Posts
Quote from ToddlerTN :
Can anyone give me advice on how to use this as a dedicated VPN device? My goal is to attach this to my existing router, enable a new WiFi network, and route all traffic using the new WiFi network through NordVPN in order to stream foreign services from Canada or the UK.
You will need install the OpenWrt firmware on it. Then setup up openvpn on it afterwards. https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-us...lient-luci

Use a openvpn cfg file for the server you want from the nord website. https://nordvpn.com/ovpn/
Last edited by aintaboutdislife September 9, 2024 at 04:40 PM.

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Sep 9, 2024
11 Posts
Joined Oct 2019
Sep 9, 2024
Prasanjit
Sep 9, 2024
11 Posts
Quote from RainGater :
I have Express Forwarding enabled on MX4300 ever since I got the two units (less than a week) and no issues whatsoever.

In fact, I have enabled Express Forwarding on my Linksys MR9000 mesh mode (2 nodes) for over two years and I get almost full bandwidth on my 500 Mbps link, both upload and downloads and the uploads are consistently in the 510 Mbps range.

FWIW, I am super duper impressed with stock firmware on these Linksys units as they are much better than OpenWRT, imho.

PS: I have node steering + client steering enabled as well.

I got trouble on YouTube streaming. The wifi connection will drop. Now after disabled express fwd, so far so good.
Sep 9, 2024
1,129 Posts
Joined May 2010
Sep 9, 2024
BuyMoreChuck
Sep 9, 2024
1,129 Posts
Quote from zhalie :
I connected this router to my t-mobile ac1900 via wire, for my 300mbps fios, download speed boosted from 235 to 263 and upload speed boosted from 217 to 343. Testing device is my 5th gen ipad pro. I am very happy with the performance.
Thanks, this is helpful.
Sep 9, 2024
1,129 Posts
Joined May 2010
Sep 9, 2024
BuyMoreChuck
Sep 9, 2024
1,129 Posts
Quote from poohbie :
Can anyone access their cable modem's web interface through this Linksys router? I could access my Motorola CM8200A cable modem's web interface (http://192.168.100.1/) through an Asus RT-AC68U but not through this Linksys running on stock firmware. Can't check the cable modem stats anymore!
I could not access the linksys via the IP address, probably because my modem also had an eero mesh on it. But I was able to my router.local You might want to see if your modem has something similar, I know AT&T does.
Sep 9, 2024
573 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
Sep 9, 2024
drblofeld
Sep 9, 2024
573 Posts
Quote from desidude2000 :
Why OpenWRT instead of stock firmware? The reason is not just Mesh. Yes Mesh works with stock firmware if you're patient but a whole range of other things that you may want to do with a quad core + 2GB ram can only be done if we "open things up". Those include things such as VPN, Ad blocking and USB port access. Stock firmware is quite minimal in its features.

Does open wrt slow down connection speed in comparison to stock?
Last edited by drblofeld September 9, 2024 at 04:53 PM.
Pro
Sep 9, 2024
1,616 Posts
Joined Jul 2018
Sep 9, 2024
spacers
Pro
Sep 9, 2024
1,616 Posts
I did manage to install the openwrt but not finding any straight forward instructions on how to setup mesh, especially with the dedicated WIFI band for wireless backhaul. Can anyone point me to any openwrt tutorial or instructions to configure the mesh setup?
Sep 9, 2024
3 Posts
Joined Jun 2018
Sep 9, 2024
tonyb8923
Sep 9, 2024
3 Posts
I've got a 2 level townhouse that's 1300sf. We don't game, but we use Yttv for tv streaming, 2 phones, and 2 work laptops. Should I put one on each floor or will one do the trick? My current archer is crapping out, so this timing is good. The $25 is damn near nothing, so if I'll notice a difference I'll go for it.
Thanks!
Sep 10, 2024
1,446 Posts
Joined Jan 2006
Sep 10, 2024
whodiini
Sep 10, 2024
1,446 Posts
Quote from taller238 :
To be clear, in order to make a Linksys mesh, one of the Linksys router has to be main router, correct? That will kill the existing Asus AiMesh for sure.
Is it possible to connect one Linksys router to Asus router as AP, and use other Linksys routers as Linksys mesh?
yes. I have one as an AP and 2 child nodes as mesh to the AP. That way you dont have to get rid of your router. I also use another device as a router

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Sep 10, 2024
872 Posts
Joined Aug 2015
Sep 10, 2024
PhuongN1949
Sep 10, 2024
872 Posts
Quote from tonyb8923 :
I've got a 2 level townhouse that's 1300sf. We don't game, but we use Yttv for tv streaming, 2 phones, and 2 work laptops. Should I put one on each floor or will one do the trick? My current archer is crapping out, so this timing is good. The $25 is damn near nothing, so if I'll notice a difference I'll go for it.
Thanks!

Yes. That would be ideal, one on each floor. I bought 2 of these in the previous deal and that's what I plan on doing at my parents house

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