Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 34 examens experts du Buffalo WZR-D1800H AirStation 1750 Gigabit Dual Band Router et l'estimation moyenne est 76%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour Buffalo WZR-D1800H AirStation 1750 Gigabit Dual Band Router.
August 2013
(76%)
34 Avis
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Utilisateurs
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0 Avis
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With the AirStation Extreme AC1750 Gigabit Dual Band Wireless Router, Buffalo steps up its game: The router offers great new management software and good performance. There's a lot to love about this router, but frustrating remote access and mobile manage...
Extrait: Five years ago, we didn't have homes with a dozen wireless nodes and the need to run HD video to multiple screens. Today we do. Our 802.11n networks, especially on the 2.4 GHz band, are swamped. Can 802.11ac save the day? We test six routers to find ou...
Publié: 2012-09-03, Auteur: Neil , review by: techradar.com
802.11ac support, 2.4GHz and 5GHZ support, 3x3 antenna, 4x Gigabit LAN ports, WAN port
802.11ac Draft 2, Outperformed by other routers, Poor 5GHz performance, FAT32 only NAS support
You'd be foolish to invest in any 802.11ac kit at this stage, but the technology shows promise and is the only way forward to increase speed beyond the existing 5GHz 802.11n standard. Beyond that, this is a very fast 2.4GHz router and a decent 5GHz route...
Extrait: Buffalo's Airstation 1750 wireless router uses the new Wifi 802.11ac standard, which works at speeds of up to 1,300Mbits/sec on paper, or three times faster than 802.11n technology. This is a ‘draft' product as the standard is not yet approved, but it ...
Range and performance in 11ac mode, Stylish, Plenty of advanced features, Backward compatibility
Expensive (few 11ac devices available), Single USB port (no USB 3)
A good taster for what's to come, and capable of excellent range and performance, but the lack of other 802.11ac devices means you will need to shell out another £129.99 for the matching bridge to fully benefit....
First 802.11ac router, 802.11ac performance obliterates 802.11n, 2.4GHz & 5GHz Dual Band
Weak 802.11n performance, Expensive, especially with media bridge, Aged, poor browser interface
The Buffalo AirStation 1750's D1800H router gives a tantalising glimpse into the future of Wi-Fi. Combined with the D1300 media bridge it produces speeds far beyond anything we have seen from 802.11n equipment. Having to buy a separate media bridge to enj...
Outstanding range and performance in 802.11ac mode, Easy configuration, Concurrent 2.4GHz/5GHz operation, Unobtrusive design, Hardware switch for router/bridge mode, Supports multifunction USB printers
Expensive, Flimsy stand, Single USB 2.0 port, No guest wireless access or multiple SSID support, No 3G dongle support
Although it's fairly well specified, the AirStation 1750 does lack some useful features commonly found on high-end consumer routers, such as a guest wireless network, multiple SSIDs and 3G support. The lack of USB 3.0 is also disappointing, and the sin
Good throughput and range. Excellent interface. Can operate as router, access point, or bridge. Feature-packed.
Mobile management interface fairly useless. External access to attached USB drives messy to set up. Flimsy mounting structure
With the AirStation Extreme AC1750 Gigabit Dual Band Wireless Router, Buffalo steps up its game: The router offers great new management software and good performance. There's a lot to love about this router, but frustrating remote access and mobile manag...
The WZR-D1800H ties with TRENDnet's TEW-812DRU for the bottom (#6) rank among AC1750 class products. As noted earlier, its failure to run the tests with 60 dB attenuation caused its low 2.4 GHz range ranking, which didn't help its total ranking. The large...