I’m gonna be moving into a new place soon and I’ll be setting up the Internet there. I want to experiment with setting up a local network with static IPs just for learning and fun, so I want my own router. I don’t want something hard to use because other people will be using the internet from it too. I don’t really know what the router market looks like, and I don’t want to support Reddit, so I’m asking here.

Ideally, this router would:

  • Be under $150 (but I might be willing to go a bit higher)
  • Be easily purchasable (no AliExpress specials)
  • Not sell data to corporations
  • Have a long life, ideally through easily set-up open source firmware but reputable proprietary is fine
  • Have good enough antennas to propagate signal across a small house
  • Support up to 500Mb/s sustained speeds

What do you think? Thank you for your help!

  • pirat@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    3 days ago

    So far I’m satisfied with our GL.INET Flint 2 (GL-MT6000). The price is within your range, and you can buy it directly from the manufacturer. It comes with OpenWRT and they’ve made it pretty easy to e.g. run your own wireguard VPN and AdGuard Home (like PiHole) for all your connected devices. The coverage is decent, and upgrading gave me WiFi in the second bathroom where the old router (10+ years old) could never reach. According to their own specs it has Wi-Fi speeds of 1148Mbps (2.4GHz) and 4804Mbps (5GHz), though I haven’t made my own measurings to verify those, and VPN speeds are lower at 190Mbps wired for OpenVPN and 900Mbps wired for Wireguard. At least this router has been very stable for the half year we’ve had it, and I haven’t experienced any bottlenecks from our modest usage.