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    Hardware for home usage

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    • O
      oppland
      last edited by

      A wireless AP can be as cheap as $15.

      I'm using this one for one section of the house that is blocked from my main AP:  http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833704147&cm_re=tplink--33-704-147--Product  It might not be enough for a larger space, but it's working really well for me.

      SG-2440

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      • S
        simplei
        last edited by

        @oppland:

        A wireless AP can be as cheap as $15.

        I'm using this one for one section of the house that is blocked from my main AP:  http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833704147&cm_re=tplink--33-704-147--Product  It might not be enough for a larger space, but it's working really well for me.

        i will be also using a tp-link product for wireless ap. I will be flashing with openwrt btw.  ;)

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        • P
          Paul47
          last edited by

          My wireless is this (from dmesg):

          ugen4.2: <ralink>at usbus4
          run0: <.0> on usbus4
          run0: MAC/BBP RT3070 (rev 0x0201), RF RT3020 (MIMO 1T1R), address xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
          run0: firmware RT2870 loaded

          That is, a usb-based AP. If I had to do it over again I might go ahead with an ethernet-based AP as everybody here seems to think it makes a lot more sense and is simpler to configure. Also I thought I read somewhere that higher wireless speeds are available in that configuration. I am limited to 802.11g speeds.

          I am using the embedded solution, just running off a USB flash drive. Can't get any cheaper…</ralink>

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          • ?
            Guest
            last edited by

            I'm curious to know if you have considered http://www.ecs.com.tw/LIVA/
            I am in a similar predicament as I need to build a new router. Low power consumption and high performance and reliability are on top of my priority list. What troubles me most with the traditional mobos is the multi-voltage power inlet that needs an on board power converter module or a full blown PC power supply (heat dissipation and reliability/durability issues).
            HK

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            • ?
              Guest
              last edited by

              @simplei:

              @oppland:

              A wireless AP can be as cheap as $15.

              I'm using this one for one section of the house that is blocked from my main AP:  http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833704147&cm_re=tplink--33-704-147--Product  It might not be enough for a larger space, but it's working really well for me.

              i will be also using a tp-link product for wireless ap. I will be flashing with openwrt btw.  ;)

              Not sure which model of TP-LINK you're intending to use, but watch out; the cheaper models have very limited storage. I once installed openwrt on a TL-WR841N ($20), it worked flawlessly but it was useless for all intents and purposes because it ran out of space as soon as I entered a few firewall rules or DHCP leases.

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              • M
                messerchmidt
                last edited by

                use a netgear r7000 with ddwrt for wifi.

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                • R
                  rjcrowder
                  last edited by

                  @simplei:

                  Hello all,

                  I am trying to configure a home pfsense hardware.
                  My intention is to use pfsense for both firewall and wireless access solution.

                  I am thinking on using d410pt as board.
                  I will be adding basic hdd like 80 gb and 2 gb ram.
                  I will be directly connecting my adsl modem to pfsense and i will disable adsl modem's wireless radio.

                  I want to add a pci card to d410pt for wireless solution.
                  But i couldn't find a product to solve this issue. There are several mini pci cards but d410pt not compatible with mini pci.

                  I am thinking on using freeradius for wireless access control.

                  Can anyone give some advice to me on this topic ?

                  Thanks

                  If you're still interested in the d410pt let me know… I just picked up five of them off of eBay for $50. Larger mini-itx case than I'd prefer but it has a 3.5" 160GB HD and 2 gigs of memory. Not all of the face plates are complete and I yanked the CD drives just cuz they weren't necessary. I added a dual PCI broadcom NIC so there are now 2 gig ports and one 100 mb port. They seem to run just fine and are very quiet.

                  At any rate - I don't need all of them. I'd sell at least 2 of them for my cost - $60 plus shipping if anyone wants one.

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                  • stephenw10S
                    stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                    last edited by

                    @haleakalas:

                    I once installed openwrt on a TL-WR841N ($20), it worked flawlessly but it was useless for all intents and purposes because it ran out of space as soon as I entered a few firewall rules or DHCP leases.

                    That's surprising because the various versions of that all have 32MB RAM which, by OpenWRT hardware standards, is quite a lot. Many SOHO routers are 8MB (and 2MB flash). I guess things have moved on quite a bit since the original WRT54 (16mb?).

                    @messerchmidt:

                    use a netgear r7000 with ddwrt for wifi.

                    I imagine that work well. It's pretty far from a $15 TP-Link unit though to be fair.  ;)

                    Steve

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                    • ?
                      Guest
                      last edited by

                      @stephenw10:

                      @haleakalas:

                      I once installed openwrt on a TL-WR841N ($20), it worked flawlessly but it was useless for all intents and purposes because it ran out of space as soon as I entered a few firewall rules or DHCP leases.

                      That's surprising because the various versions of that all have 32MB RAM which, by OpenWRT hardware standards, is quite a lot. Many SOHO routers are 8MB (and 2MB flash). I guess things have moved on quite a bit since the original WRT54 (16mb?).
                      Steve

                      I thought that I would have plenty of space too, but as soon as I installed openwrt there was very little space left. I don't have that setup any longer as I put back the original firmware but I recall that there was less than a megabyte of free space left and I wondered why anybody would bother to port wrt on such limited hardware.
                      Halea

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                      • stephenw10S
                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                        last edited by

                        Hmm. I have an old Buffalo wla-g54 here that runs OpenWRT flawlessly. It's 16MB RAM 4MB ROM. However it's an older version, I don't think current will run on it. I know that when moving to newer kernels they had to abandon some of the older Broadcom SoCs.

                        Steve

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                        • R
                          rjcrowder
                          last edited by

                          Gargoyle works great on a lot of the TP-Link hardware… nice interface on top of OpenWRT.  Personally, I think most TP-Link hardware hits a sweet spot between cost and quality.

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