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?
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 370,995 Views
Visit Amazon
Good Deal
Save
Share
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
246
Leave a Comment
To participate in the comments, please log in.

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

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Sep 10, 2024
28 Posts
Joined Aug 2018
Sep 10, 2024
Krayhons
Sep 10, 2024
28 Posts
Quote from SlySol :
It's kind of random, but I did run across a couple of other MX4300 routers showing up publicly online that appear to be running a firmware 3.10.2 and say Linksys at the top and "powered by Tanaza" at the bottom …

http://75.140.16.20/
http://47.6.177.195/

And Linksys has some info on their website about "Third Party Software Used In MX4300v1 Version 3.10.2" which it seems like may be related to that FW …

https://downloads.linksys.com/sup...3.10.2.pdf

Nothing useful really, but just random tidbits. Smilie

Yes this is exactly what I'm seeing on my router. Fwiw, woot refunded me immediately for the unit. I bought another through Amazon to replace it
Sep 10, 2024
774 Posts
Joined Dec 2010
Sep 10, 2024
RainGater
Sep 10, 2024
774 Posts
Quote from Guy767 :
Woah there my prickly peculiar penguin avatar buddy; don't get your network knickerbockers in a bunch! laugh out loud /joke

Seriously though, I was just trying to give you and the community here an example how disabling Express Forwarding can help sometimes; it all depends on your network topology, how many devices connected etc. Express Forwarding for some; being yelled at by RainGaters for others...

I preemptively apologized about the static IP recommendation too and inferred you already were cognizant of it; I was just hoping to contribute to the conversation here and perhaps help others with the advice.
I appreciate you trying to educate the community but when you "quote" someone and respond, it's obvious that you are directing your response at that person. In any case, duly noted that your honest response is to educate the public in large and no problems with it.

FWIW, enjoying the $20 MX4300 fire sale as it's ONE heck of a deal! I got TWO running in wireless mesh mode (stock) and getting unbelievable speeds on my phone at the other end of the house and hit 475 Mbps out of a 500 Mbps link - insane, to say the least!

PS: Waiting for the 3rd to one arrive tomorrow!
Sep 10, 2024
295 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
Sep 10, 2024
ArtisanalChicken32
Sep 10, 2024
295 Posts
Quote from JoKeR_ :
Apologies if this has been asked before. Are you able to separate the Wi-Fi bands or are they connected to one single band?

Yes. Stock you get to separate both 2.4ghz and 5ghz bands. Default configuration you can only change channel settings for 2.4ghz radio and 5ghz1 radio for lower 5ghz channels(36-48). If you select the CA button on the Wifi page, it will show the two 5ghz radios and you can set another SSID for channels 149-165. Most likely you will pick and choose what range to use and just use one radio since this only supports 80mhz channel width anyway. I did a channel scan and decided to use the second 5ghz radio as lower channels were congested.
Sep 10, 2024
295 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
Sep 10, 2024
ArtisanalChicken32
Sep 10, 2024
295 Posts
Quote from poohbie :
Seems Express Forwarding isn't a problem for single router setup, but causes problems for most people for mesh setup.
Quote from poohbie :
Haven't seen any complaints about Express Forwarding in single router mode, except that using Priority/QoS effectively disables Express Forwarding, and all packets have to be processed through software by the CPU if you prioritize just even 1 client. So some Linksys users (not of this particular router) were finding that using Priority/QoS actually slowed all clients down to not be worth using.
Am on single router mode so I'll keep it on for now and experiment, thanks. Do you think having my old router connected as a wired AP would also benefit from disabling express forwarding? Or is that a different part of network topology that the setting doesn't affect like it would for mesh?
Last edited by ArtisanalChicken32 September 10, 2024 at 07:11 AM.
Sep 10, 2024
803 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
Sep 10, 2024
FreshPrinceSumNLips
Sep 10, 2024
803 Posts
Question for those using this in AP Mode. The light at the top corner stays RED. Supposedly, this indicates NO INTERNET. But I wish to confirm, it really means no modem connected? Reason is I can connect a device by WIFI to the Linksys and I do get Internet.

https://store.linksys.com/support...eNum=59249
Last edited by FreshPrinceSumNLips September 10, 2024 at 07:42 AM.
Sep 10, 2024
152 Posts
Joined May 2016
Sep 10, 2024
Trialchicken
Sep 10, 2024
152 Posts
Quote from FreshPrinceSumNLips :
Question for those using this in AP Mode. The light at the top corner stays RED. Supposedly, this indicates NO INTERNET. But I wish to confirm, it really means no modem connected? Reason is I can connect a device by WIFI to the Linksys and I do get Internet.

https://store.linksys.com/support...eNum=59249

For some reason I also had a red light while having Internet. I just rebooted the router and it went to blue. It was already setup and accessible.
Sep 10, 2024
658 Posts
Joined Jul 2007
Sep 10, 2024
espy
Sep 10, 2024
658 Posts
Quote from starfoxinstinct :
Yes OpenWRT does lower speeds a little bit. I went from about 700mbps to 500mbps maximum. Range also decreased slightly. But connection is stable, and I have so much control now that it's worth it to me. Primarily VLAN control so the my iot devices and chromecast can't spy on or hack me, but I can access them just fine through the firewall.

But if you don't like to tinker, and need few options, better to just stick with stock.

How do you access your Chromecast if it's on a different VLAN?

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Sep 10, 2024
29 Posts
Joined Nov 2020
Sep 10, 2024
RedMachoDevil1
Sep 10, 2024
29 Posts
hi gang- trying to set up DD-WRT so that one of the 3 radios is an SSID that goes to openVPN (and it fails to closed - meaning that if for whatever reason openvpn is not connected and running the traffic is blocked) and that the other 2 SSID's are regular - anyone have luck setting this up? I currently run a separate set of routers for the non-OpenVPN traffic - but it seems i can combine this all
Sep 10, 2024
53 Posts
Joined Aug 2011
Sep 10, 2024
aznhin88
Sep 10, 2024
53 Posts
Quote from RedMachoDevil1 :
hi gang- trying to set up DD-WRT so that one of the 3 radios is an SSID that goes to openVPN (and it fails to closed - meaning that if for whatever reason openvpn is not connected and running the traffic is blocked) and that the other 2 SSID's are regular - anyone have luck setting this up? I currently run a separate set of routers for the non-OpenVPN traffic - but it seems i can combine this all
1.Enable kill switch
2. Use policy based routing by IP address. Assign a static IP to your device first then add that IP to the PBR. I am not aware what options there are to route via 1 specific radio. Might have to ask on the ddwrt forums.
Sep 10, 2024
10 Posts
Joined Sep 2024
Sep 10, 2024
FantasticSummer4165
Sep 10, 2024
10 Posts
in AP mode stock firmware: is there an option to reboot via web UI? ssh access possible?
Sep 10, 2024
78 Posts
Joined Dec 2020
Sep 10, 2024
RevPizzaguy
Sep 10, 2024
78 Posts
Question for those using in "Bridge Mode" as standalone/mesh AP's with stock firmware. I was messing around with it a bit and it looks like using it in Bridge Mode kills the device list functionality, so you can't see what device is connected to what AP or what SSID/band from the Linksys management page and be able to do any kind of management for that device (kick, force to reconnect, etc). I'm used to Ubiquiti and Zyxel AP's (lot more control than I actually need), but this implementation seems extremely sparse for any kind of management. Is that everyone else's experience?

Also, noticed when I setup a static IP for the "parent" before I switched to bridge mode, that after I flipped into bridge mode, it ignored my static IP and just grabbed one from my main router anyway. Anyone else experience that?

These are more "toys" than anything else for me to play around with, so nothing mission critical. If they work out for my uses, cool, if not, doesn't matter.
Sep 10, 2024
145 Posts
Joined Sep 2008
Sep 10, 2024
s11018
Sep 10, 2024
145 Posts
Quote from Trialchicken :
For some reason I also had a red light while having Internet. I just rebooted the router and it went to blue. It was already setup and accessible.
Do you have the cable going to the AP plugged into internet port or one of the other 3 ethernet ports? From another post where person had same issue, the cable is supposed to get plugged into internet port on AP.
Sep 10, 2024
191 Posts
Joined Oct 2015
Sep 10, 2024
dlinders10
Sep 10, 2024
191 Posts
I was successful in getting these set up in a wireless mesh using the stock firmware. It was really finicky though to get setup.
Sep 10, 2024
828 Posts
Joined Oct 2017
Sep 10, 2024
kpb321
Sep 10, 2024
828 Posts
Quote from Harvi :
I have a "no stupid" question: main node is in basement and second mesh node is on 2nd level. the opposite corner of my third level has the worst possible speed while the same corner on the 3rd level is blazing fast. Where should I place my third mesh? fast spot in 3rd level? If so, does it connect to mesh on 2nd level or main node in basement ?
Wireless is always a bit of YMMV so you will have to try it out and see. Your room layout, building materials and even furniture can all impact wireless signals. A giant metal cabinet will block a lot of wireless signal for example. Using a laptop or cell phone to get an idea of where you have strong signal might help you figure out a good place to put the router.

Assuming you don't have wired Ethernet anywhere up on the third floor you'll want to try a few different locations and see how it works. Generally you want someplace in-between so that the router has a strong signal and good performance both when talking to another router and when talking to your device in that opposite corner. Ideally, you want the router talking directly to the parent router in the basement not talking to your router on the second floor and having an extra hop to the basement. The fast corner in the third floor might be a good spot but generally directly above and below a router isn't necessarily great for signal strength but it's hard to tell for sure with no external antenna's to see what the coverage pattern might look like.

Adding a wired ethernet run for the third floor router would be great if there's a way you can do that. You might have more flexibility in how and where you do that which might help make it practical. You could also look at something like MOCA if you happen to have a Coax run you can use or even a powerline adapter if nothing else seems to work.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Sep 10, 2024
828 Posts
Joined Oct 2017
Sep 10, 2024
kpb321
Sep 10, 2024
828 Posts
Quote from Krayhons :
Yes this is exactly what I'm seeing on my router. Fwiw, woot refunded me immediately for the unit. I bought another through Amazon to replace it
I wonder if it is possible to flash the router with DD-WRT or OpenWRT or even back to stock firmware using the flash processes for one of the open source firmware. Could end up with a free fully functional router after a little bit of work. I got mine yesterday and wouldn't complain at all if I got it for free because of that. I mainly got it for tinkering with because $15 is too cheap to resist. I'm happy with my AIMesh from my ASUS AX routers so I didn't see any need to get 2 or 3 to replace my current setup.
1

Related Searches

Popular Deals

View All

Trending Deals

View All