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Velop Dual Band AC1200

Linksys - Velop Dual Band AC1200

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Based on 1 year's data from Feb 24, 2026 How it works

Liked most:

5

0


"4 storey 12 unit apartment bldg 100% coverage, no issues"


"this gives me bullet proof wifi around the house and garden seating area"


"rock solid and roaming works flawlessly."

1

0


"They are easy to set up"

4

0


"Able to provide seemless internet in all 7 apartment units. 1 for each apartment."


"I have a ~6000 square foot house across 3 levels. I use 1 unit upstairs, 2 units on the main level and 1 unit downstairs. No dead spots and I get good reception outside as well."


"4 storey 12 unit apartment bldg 100% coverage, no issues"

3

0


"Linksys Velop was a game changer for my Google Home experience."


"I work from home, and stream calls throughout the day and I have a generous amount if IOT throughout the house."


"All of them having 20-30+ clients."

Disliked most:

1

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"I would only get the speed I pay for in the room the router is in, but as soon as I go into the next room, it drops to around 200 mbps. ... Upstairs, it drops even further, even with the second point, unless you are hardwired into the second point."

0

1


"I would only get the speed I pay for in the room the router is in, but as soon as I go into the next room, it drops to around 200 mbps. ... Upstairs, it drops even further, even with the second point, unless you are hardwired into the second point."

Reddit IconMission-Ad9571 1.0
r/InternetPH β€’ Mesh System Recommendations β†’
9 months ago

Got 7 velop nodes all wired backhaul. Able to provide seemless internet in all 7 apartment units. 1 for each apartment. All my nodes are bought second hand in FB marketplace at barely 30% of the original price. 😁

r/InternetPH β€’ Pano pumili ng wifi mesh? β†’
9 months ago

Bile ka 2nd hand market at around 30% price lng, OP yang mesh systems ng carrier. I use 6 velop nodes. 3 MX5300 wifi6(bought for 5k ea, bnew price 18k ea, 3 AC1200 most basic velop(bought for 700ea, bnew price 2.5kea). Parent node is MX5300. All connected via wired backhaul. 4 storey 12 unit apartment bldg 100% coverage, no issues, also better ask your carrier to bridge mode your ONT to avoid double NAT issues.

Reddit IconCole_LF 0.6
r/amazoneero β€’ eero is really great: the comparison you never ask for β†’
12 months ago

I mean, if it Ain't broke don't fix it? I had a 2 mesh Linksys Velop system about 3 to 4 years old. It got around 600-650mbps on my phone in the same way as the gateway router and pretty solid 300mbps everywhere else around the house. I got the Max 7 from eBay half price as pretty much new. I just have one and everywhere in the house gets 900mbps now. (my internet is 900 down) Well, the bathroom is through a few brick walls so is about 800-850mbps there. My network wifi was fine. Had no reason to upgrade. Just saw the Max 7 on offer and wanted to future proof.

Reddit IconS1nnah2 0.4
r/wifi β€’ Home Wi-Fi recommendations β†’
8 months ago

so, In my house I have the cupboard under stairs where the modem lives. I plug one mesh node into that (it acts as the router) then i have two lan ports. one goes to the lounge and the other to my office. Out of the lounge lan port theres a switch that i plug another mesh node into and the TV, hifi, sky box & xbox. Similar deal up in the office where i plug the final mesh node and hardware my gaming/office PC's. this gives me bullet proof wifi around the house and garden seating area plus hardwired pings on my gaming equipment. mesh is a linksys wifi 5 job

Reddit IconBosa_McKittle 0.1
r/homeoffice β€’ Best mesh WiFi system? Need a reliable option. β†’
3 months ago

In 220 sqm, you shouldn't need more than 3 nodes, unless you want more coverage outside, but with too many as you've already experience, they will sometime fight for the best signal, even more so when they are just wifi based. If you can get more Cat6 installed, the location of the router (primary node) becomes irrelevant since they will all share the same exact signal with the same bandwidth so you should be able to test it now and confirm better coverage. If you have baseboards, they make 1/4 round that has channels in them where you can hide the Cat 6, and if that's not an option there are some manufacturers who make flat cables. As for me personally, both system have been challenging but that is more related to my own person situation than the hardware. The Linksys Velop system started out great, but as my need for IoT devices grew, the system struggled a bit. I came to find out well after the fact, the nodes which I thought I set up as wired, someone defaulted back to wireless which impact my bandwidth for devices connected to it. I ended up giving them to my inlaws since the coverage at their home sucked and they have been working perfectly since. I moved over to the Night Hawk system on the recommendation of a friend who has their gaming router and overall it has been really good. It took a lot of additional setup and tweaking to get it up and running at full capacity. The biggest challenge I had (again my own issue, not product issue), was I forgot how many of my IoT devices only run off 2.4 gHz. The Night Hawk system (unlike the Velop) has a default SSID that combines the 2.4 and 5 gHz bands. The Velop had these automatically separate with different SSID's. Due to this, some of my IoT devices had trouble connecting and I regularly lost their signal. (see Ring Cameras, smart switches/outlets, etc) so this meant I had to reconfigure my network with customized networks. But on the Nighthawk system this works differently than I was used to. The main 2.4/5 ghz network will always remain, so I had to create a custom standalone 2.4ghz network and then reconnect all my IoT devices to that. This was a tedious effort, but again, this was my fault, not the hardware/software. Since I have finally got all of that figured out, its run flawlessly. I have a 1GB fiber line. If the device is hardwired, I will get 850 Mbps (up and down) on average (www.speedtest.net). On a wireless device it will vary from 100Mbps to 500Mbps which is dependent on how much bandwidth is being used at any give time. The coverage is better than the Velop overall. I have a few friends who have the Orbi systems and swear by them. Since I run a lot of wired, I wanted some more raw high performance in certain locations. (Night Hawk lets you prioritize devices better IMO) I both game and run a home theater server so I stream not only from the net, but also across the network from that service to 4 different locations in the house. Even if they are all running at the same time, the wired connection means they don't bog down and don't impact the wireless bandwidth that is remaining. The Orbi overperforms with wifi only based stuff and provides a stable network across a larger area. From what I understand the setup is also easier on the Orbi. If and when my night hawk system dies, I will seriously consider and Orbi system but thats not going to be for quite a long time.

Reddit Iconbutterwm 0.1
r/amazoneero β€’ I'm considering leave eero and switching to another mesh Wi-Fi brand. Does anyone have a better solution? β†’
3 months ago

I had a TP-Link BE85 setup before this and returned it because of constant disconnects which is a known issue with them. I felt like their speeds were higher than Eero but the disconnects and the complexity of three separate SSID’s versus a single one made Eero a better choice. Prior to that, I owned an AMPLIFI Alien setup that I really liked. One of my units started having issues and needed replaced after several years. AMPLIFI has decided not to continue supporting the Alien product anymore so that was stuck on WiFi 6. Before the AMPLIFI setup I owned a Linksys Velop system and it was absolute trash. I don’t think there is a such thing as a perfect mesh system because if there was I would have bought it. That being said, I am sharing the same frustrations as you with the recent firmware updates.

Reddit IconCrabbieMike 0.1
r/HomeNetworking β€’ Needs a recommendation for a good mesh system for gigabit internet β†’
5 months ago

We recently moved into a new home and now have gigabit internet. I have tried two different systems so far: the Linksys Velop system with two points. I would only get the speed I pay for in the room the router is in, but as soon as I go into the next room, it drops to around 200 mbps. Upstairs, it drops even further, even with the second point, unless you are hardwired into the second point. I am currently using the Nest Wifi router with four points, but I now only get a maximum speed of 500 Mbps downstairs and 150 Mbps upstairs, even with two points upstairs. Unfortunately, the Nest points don't have Ethernet, so I can't check that speed.The house is 1,328 sq ft. I just need a system that gets my speeds better for both downstairs and upstairs, as it is needed in both areas.

Reddit Iconguichanism92 0.1
r/HomeNetworking β€’ Does your mesh system perform well? β†’
8 months ago

Installed Deco x68s at my place, x55s at in laws, x55 pros at friends, and Linksys Velops at other friends, all hardwired, rock solid and roaming works flawlessly. All of them having 20-30+ clients.

Reddit IconMiserableoldbugger 0.1
r/sonos β€’ Mesh network recommendations β†’
2 months ago

I use a pretty old Linksys Velop with 4 nodes, the only upgrade was running wired backhaul from all the nodes via unmanaged netgear switch. Not had the system very long 6 months, arc ultra 2 era300 2 era100 and a sub 4. Not had any network connection issues yet.

Reddit IconNo_Variety_8105 0.1
r/HomeNetworking β€’ Advice for improving Wi-Fi coverage in a 1930s brick house (FTTP, Vodafone, UK) β†’
5 months ago

I have a similar house and tried Linksys Velop and Asus ZenWifi AX mesh options. Neither were terribly reliable. In the end I ran a couple of Ethernet cables and now have two InstantOn AP22 access points which provide great coverage and have been rock solid.

Reddit IconOdelay_gavacho 0.1
r/HomeNetworking β€’ Please share your experience with the Asus ZenWiFi BT10 β†’
2 months ago

I’ve spent the last couple days trying to get the BT10 to have a stable signal. Like clockwork it drops out every ~15 minutes. Finally gave up and went back to my old velop which is rock-solid. Back to the store with this one.

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