Netgear Nighthawk X6 AC3200 (R8000) Overview
Tweak Town “Best Features Award”: “NETGEAR’s Nighthawk is a great solution for users with many devices, each using different wireless technologies. This router gives you the best of all worlds in one package, without sacrificing performance.” Full Review NETGEAR Nighthawk X6. Support Thank you for purchasing this NETGEAR product. After installing your device, locate the serial number on the label of your product and use it to register your product at You must register your product before you can use NETGEAR telephone. Jul 24, 2014 The Good The all-new Netgear R8000 Nighthawk X6 AC3200 Tri-Band Gigabit Wireless Router has powerful hardware and excellent Wi-Fi data rates on.
Is it ever the ideal time to purchase another item? I’d say no, on the grounds that there’s never an ideal time to survey another item, either. There’s continually something ideal around the bend that guarantees to be quicker, better, less expensive. However, you won’t know whether those cases are valid until somebody tests them.
A valid example: I spent the primary portion of this current week benchmarking Netgear’s Nighthawk X6 Wi-Fi switch (otherwise known as the Netgear R8000), with the goal that I could distribute this audit today. Benchmarking requires some serious energy, as does examination and composing. Asus chosen to ship its all-new RT-AC87U Wi-Fi switch on Wednesday, and my eval unit showed up today. Is it better, quicker, less expensive than the Nighthawk X6? At this moment, all I know is that it costs $20 not as much as Netgear’s switch regardless of its status as the principal “Wave 2” 802.11ac switch.
The Nighthawk X6 does not bolster MU-MIMO, but rather it has a procedure for supporting bunches of remote customers. Netgear portrays it as a “tri-band” switch, which is somewhat of an extend. Regardless it works on just two recurrence groups—2.4-and 5GHz—simply like its top of the line contenders, yet this switch is remarkable in that it has three Wi-Fi radios to bolster three autonomous remote systems. Here’s whatever is left of what I know.
The Nighthawk X6 is not the quickest switch I’ve tried. As you’ll see from the execution outlines, that qualification still has a place with the Linksys WRT1900AC (once more, I have not yet benchmarked the Asus RT-87U). What’s more, if your remote system streams video to only maybe a couple gadgets, you most likely needn’t bother with a switch with the Nighthawk X6’s propelled capacities.
Be that as it may, if your remote system needs to bolster a few PCs, tablets, cell phones, TVs, and different gadgets—in addition to heritage gadgets on the 2.4GHz band—and you’re encountering slack, dropouts, or other availability issues when a few customers are gushing media in the meantime—Netgear’s switch is recently the ticket. All things considered, the Nighthawk X6 is the initial 802.11ac switch I’ve tried that can possibly uproot the 802.11ac switch you may effectively claim.
As I said in the opener, the Nighthawk X6’s essential distinguishing strength is its three discrete Wi-Fi radios. Out of the crate, it utilizes one SSID for its 2.4GHz system (for 802.11b/g/n customers) and one SSID for both of its 5GHz systems (for 802.11a/n/air conditioning customers). As you most likely are aware, supposed first-wave 802.11ac switches like this one accomplish huge data transfer capacity by holding two 40MHz channels to make one channel that is 80MHz wide.
Keeping in mind the end goal to abstain from having the two systems venture on each other, the Nighthawk X6 bonds two channels at the lower end of the 5GHz range and two channels at the higher end (the higher channels convey more power). When you start associating remote customers to the normal SSID, the switch naturally allots every customer to the most proper system. (You can likewise abrogate this and relegate the two 5GHz systems diverse SSIDs.)
Netgear’s Smart Connect include first decides whether the switch needs to play out any heap adjusting. On the off chance that the quantity of existing customers on each system is more prominent than three, the switch will associate the following new customer to whichever organize has the least responsibilities. In the event that there are less than three customers on each system, or the numbers are equivalent, the switch looks at the customer’s speed and doles out new 802.11a, 1×1 802.11n, and 2×2 802.11n customers to the higher-control 5GHz (channels 148 through 161). I tried the switch utilizing channels 6 and 10 on the 2.4GHz band, and channels 44 and 48 and channels 153 and 149 on the 5GHz band.
The switch additionally assesses every customer’s flag quality, blending customers with frail signs to the powerful channels and customers with solid signs to the low-control channels. In the event that Smart Connect establishes that heap adjusting isn’t vital, the switch naturally allocates 802.11ac and 3×3 802.11n gadgets at short range to the low-control channels and any 5GHz gadgets at long range to the powerful channels.
The Nighthawk X6 conveys throughput up to 1.3Gbps with 3×3 customers on each of its 5GHz systems, and it underpins 256 QAM encoding on the 2.4GHz recurrence band to convey throughput up to 600Mbps with 3×3 customers that bolster 256 QAM. The condition (1300 x 2) + 600 equivalents the AC3200 showcasing number that Netgear embellishes on the switch’s case.
Does that mean you can hope to see your remote system convey throughput of 3200Mbps? Hell no, that is quite recently the whole of the remote throughput on every one of the three systems. What’s more, those are hypothetical numbers that don’t consider convention overhead and a ton of different things. You’ll never observe real execution that high. Your switch’s execution won’t make your Internet association any quicker, either. The reason you might need to move up to another switch is to help the speed of your home system.
The Nighthawk X6 puts on a significant show, with double shading LEDs revealing the status of energy, Internet availability, its three Wi-Fi systems, its two USB port associations, and its Ethernet associations (it has a four-port gigabit switch and a gigabit WAN port). In the event that that is excessively light contamination for you, flip the flip switch in the back to turn them off. Catches on top of the switch empower WPS and flip the Wi-Fi radios now and again (to spare power, or to catch down your system while you’re in the midst of some recreation).
Netgear Nighthawk X6 AC3200 (R8000) User Manual Download PDF
Netgear R8000 Nighthawk X6
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