🌐 Elevate your network game with unstoppable outdoor Wi-Fi power!
The TP-Link CPE710 is a professional-grade outdoor wireless access point featuring 802.11ac technology delivering up to 867Mbps on the 5GHz band. Its 23dBi high-gain directional antenna and 2×2 MIMO configuration optimize long-distance transmission with enhanced beam directivity and noise reduction. Built for durability, it boasts an IP65 weatherproof enclosure plus robust ESD and lightning protection. Centralized management via Pharos Control and easy installation with snap-lock parts make it ideal for demanding outdoor networking environments.
Brand | TP-Link |
Product Dimensions | 36.2 x 28 x 20.6 cm; 1.72 kg |
Item model number | CPE710 |
Manufacturer | TP-Link |
Series | CPE710 |
Color | White |
Connectivity Type | Wi-Fi |
Wireless Type | 5 GHz Radio Frequency, 802.11ac |
Power Source | Solar |
Operating System | OpenWRT |
Are Batteries Included | No |
Item Weight | 1.72 Kilograms |
E**D
Great if it thinks there's no radar
The kit itself is great and works fine, you need a pair of them, set receiving one as the access point and wire that into a separate ap-mode router, then log your phone etc into the receiving router wifi. Plug the other into your main router that is connected to the web and set it as the transmitter side. The main issue you might have frustration with is the connection dropping if it thinks it detects radar on the frequency it is using, it doesn't tell you this is the reason it just loses connection which you can monitor in the admin software. This is the 'DFS' system you can read into where it has to take itself off the frequency for a certain amount of time then scan for other clean channels, check it doesn't think those have radar on them and reconnect to one of those, this can be a never ending cycle. There can be a lot of false positives especially in heavy residential areas with reflective surfaces or real ones say near a marina where boat radar will exist, weather stations etc. In some countries all the permitted frequencies for public use are DFS ones, other counties have frequencies for the public to use that aren't DFS channel frequencies so the connection stays up even if it thinks it sees radar. You can see which channels are available in which countries in the settings and you pick the country you are in. I think Wikipedia lists available channels and their DFS status for various countries.
ع**ي
ما كمل اسبوع و عطلان
عاطل في اقل من اسبوع
N**M
price to much high
price to much high than product quality
K**K
!
No good working
C**0
unbelievable
excellent work
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
3 days ago