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Online Centre: TP-Link Archer D5 AC1200 Wireless DualBand Gigabit Modem Router $109 + Shipping $15

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TP-Link Archer D5 AC1200 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit ADSL2+ Modem Router $109 (Store pick up price) NOW!!! While stock last~

Feature:

  • Supports 802.11ac standard - the next generation of Wi-Fi
  • Simultaneous 2.4GHz 300Mbps and 5GHz 867Mbps connections provide a premium wireless experience
  • Share a printer locally and files & media with networked devices or remotely via FTP server.
  • Ethernet WAN (EWAN) port accepts connections from cable and fiber modems via Ethernet cable
  • New web UI and Tether APP provide quick & hassle-free installation and easy management

System Requirements:

  • Windows 8/7/Vista/XP or Mac OS or Linux-based operating system
  • Windows 10 Compatible

Package Contents:

  • AC1200 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit ADSL2+ Modem Router
  • External Splitter
  • RJ-11 Telephone Cable
  • RJ-45 Ethernet Cable
  • Quick Installation Guide
  • Power Adapter

Condition: Brand New
Warranty: 3 Years Limited Warranty

  • Limited stock in store and limited 1 per customer.

Related Stores

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OnLine Computer

closed Comments

  • Please add shipping to title. $18.29 to Melbourne.

  • No deal unless this is a D7.

  • Are these worth buying? I have a standard issue TPG one. Will this make internetting faster?

    • Not really.

    • Probably, but it's highly dependent on the distance between the copper wire running from your premises to your telephone exchange and your line's SNR/Attenuation. You should be able to find those figures somewhere in your modem's console.

      The Archer D5 has a Broadcom chipset, which are renowned for extracting every last bit of speed from especially sub-par lines.

      That being said, if you're a very long way from the exchange or on a very poor-quality line, there's not much any high-end modem can do you for.
      You would know if this were the case due a mostly unusable Internet experience; meaning not only incredibly low downstream sync speeds (<3Mbps), but frequent line drop-outs (loss of sync) and an unwatchable media streaming experience.

      The bundled ISP modems, besides being garbage at getting the most speed out of your line and not handling high-loss/poor-quality lines very well, are also notorious for unreliable WiFi signals, not being able to maintain long up-times and having piss-poor configuration options for things like DSL Modulation, NAT, Port Forwarding, QoS, USB File Sharing, etc, so the advantage of a decent modem is not just increasing performance but getting the most optimal setup for your LAN/WLAN and being able to for instance add things like a modem-side VPN in the future.

      For me, being on quite a good line and not too far from the exchange, switching from a bundled iiBelkin to a Billion 7800VDOX was like night and day. I went from averaging 13Mbp/s to averaging 16Mpb/s, downstream attenuation dropped by 10dB and the previously unusable WiFi which used to disappear off the face of the Earth every couple of hours, now has an 80-100% signal strength throughout the house and the modem goes for weeks if not months without a reboot.

  • They have a couple of shops in Sydney CBD. If you can do a pickup for $109 that'd be a good deal.

    I've got one. WiFi is slightly faster than an Asus AC68 (at close range) with my Asus 2x2 WiFi laptop

  • "accepts connections from fibre modems"
    meaning I can bridge this to TPG stock FTTB modem? (Huawei HG630)

    I thought it had to have Gigabit wan port for vdsl. confused

    • +1

      Yes you can. If that Huawei supports bridging, which I believe it does.

      Edit: The D5 does have a Gigabit WAN port. But it isn't necessary anyway as long it has a WAN port

  • Does this modem support VPN? openvpn, etc?

  • D7 from ebgames is a better deal

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