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Ask HN: Ubiquiti vs. Mikrotik vs. PC Engines for Home Network?

5 pointsby johnnycarcinalmost 7 years ago
I am looking to upgrade&#x2F;refactor the networking in my home, primarily the wifi setup. Currently I have a Netgear R6400 that just doesn&#x27;t seem to be cutting it (even with dd-wrt or the other options installed). I&#x27;m in a ~3200 sqft home, no brick or anything, just wood and drywall. The &quot;demarc&quot; location for our cable modem is in the basement which is also where the patch panel is. I have cat5 ran to most of the rooms, although the jack in each room is sometimes in a not-so-helpful location.<p>I have seen a lot of people complimenting the three brands in the title but they all seem to have their own issues...<p>The Ubiquiti stuff looks really cool, I&#x27;m just not sure how interested I am in essentially being locked into their offerings once I start. They are also the priciest it appears.<p>With the Mikrotik and PC Engines stuff it seems like you typically get the router part, but still need to provide the wifi APs which doesn&#x27;t get me very far and potentially has me back to using Ubiquiti APs.<p>Having a router with something like pfSense running on it is awesome, but not really a requirement. I also don&#x27;t want to have to tinker with the setup every week. I&#x27;m looking for something that is solid and stable, without vendor lock-in and price does matter (no enterprise type stuff).<p>Any ideas or suggestions from the HN folks?

2 comments

noonespecialalmost 7 years ago
I&#x27;ve used them all by the hundred.<p>Mikrotik is very &quot;opinionated&quot; on how you configure and use them. Some people love this. I&#x27;ve come to loath them whenever and wherever I see them. Professional grade price and hassle for amateur grade performance. (on the bright side, they&#x27;ve been pretty stout physically... I had one unknowingly working <i>underwater</i>)<p>Ubiquiti is what I use everywhere I need commercial grade &quot;stuff&quot; I can hand off to a customer. Also very picky about using their software to configure and use the parts, but all free, can self-host and very easy for novices to get the hang of.<p>At home, I&#x27;ve been using PC Engines since &quot;WRAP&quot; with addon Atheros cards for wifi and my own custom spin of read-only debian. Its a full on server in a router box. It can do anything. The best for hacking by far.
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gonzoalmost 7 years ago
&gt; Having a router with something like pfSense running on it is awesome, but not really a requirement. I also don&#x27;t want to have to tinker with the setup every week.<p>I barely &#x27;tinker&#x27; with mine.<p>If you have the skills, an &#x27;embedded&#x27; PC with linux, freebsd or openbsd on it is all you really need. If you want 802.11 (WiFi), it&#x27;s best to stick with linux. (OpenWRT runs on x86 if that&#x27;s what you&#x27;re used to.)