TP-Link AC1900 Smart WiFi Router (Archer A8) -High Speed MU-MIMO Wireless Router, Dual Band Router for Wireless Internet, Gigabit, Supports Guest WiFi

Original price was: $79.99.Current price is: $44.99.

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Description



TP-Link AC1900 Smart WiFi Router – High Speed MU-MIMO Wireless Router, Dual Band Router for wireless internet, Gigabit, Supports Guest WiFi, Beamforming, Smart Connect(Archer A8).Archer A8 doesn’t have USB port which is different from the Archer A9 AC1900 router. And the Archer A8 doesn’t support VPN.
OneMesh Compatible Router- Form a seamless WiFi when work with TP-Link OneMesh WiFi Extenders.
Wave 2 Wireless Internet Router, 600 Mbps on the 2.4GHz band and 1300 Mbps on the 5GHz band
MU-MIMO Gigabit Router, 3 simultaneous data streams help your devices achieve optimal performance by making communication more efficient
Boosted WiFi Coverage, Beamforming technology delivers a highly efficient wireless connection, long range WiFi
Full Gigabit Ports: Create fast, reliable wired connections for your PCs, Smart TVs and gaming console with 4 x Gigabit LAN and 1 x Gigabit WAN. No USB Port
Parental Controls: Block inappropriate content and set daily limits for how much time your children spend online with parental controls
Works with all internet service providers, such as AT&T, Verizon, Xfinity, Spectrum, RCN, Cox, CenturyLink, Frontier, etc.( a modem is required for most internet service providers)

Reviews (8)

8 reviews for TP-Link AC1900 Smart WiFi Router (Archer A8) -High Speed MU-MIMO Wireless Router, Dual Band Router for Wireless Internet, Gigabit, Supports Guest WiFi

  1. AGP

    Beats the competition. BE24000
    They need to break up reviews based on models… BE24000A month in and I’m very happy so far. Long time netgear nighthawk user and while some worked better then others the newer versions have been spotty. I purchased the latest and greatest (RS700s) at about the same price as this 24000. Tested great and 5min later slowed, rebooted or plain disconnected. Done with Netgear for good.I can’t find the number of devices “supported”. Other brands list up to 20,40,200 etc. I have between 35 and 45 devices connected at a time, while many use limited bandwidth my worry was the sheer number of devices were causing some of my issues. No problems with this.User interface, app, ip site and even led screen on the device itself are easy to interpret and user friendly. Preferred over the netgear option.I consistently run at 25% ram on the router (2gb, highest I’ve seen on a router). Download speeds heavily rely on distance to router and band you’re on. I get close to 1g down and up on a fiber network through wireless on my phone in both the 5G and now 6G. You’re able to split up channels with 1x 2.4G 2x 5G and 1x 6G or merg them, they can be named the same or seprate with passwords. I tried MLO network feature, worth reading up on (multi link operation) but it seemed to throw off my smart devices, many of which only function on a 2.4 channel.Pretty customizable by end user with limited tech savy. The IoT network is a nice idea but I don’t use it. Qos is also nice and available on most routers now but unnecessary if your IP maintains 400mbps speeds. I do use it on 3 devices but doubt it affects much.Reception is also a win.. on my furthest devices I was getting 40-70% signal with older routers and this is above 75 at all times. This includes the RS700s returned router at this price point which was abysmal even a room away. The Mesh networks which this 24k claims to support may be good but 1 single router simplifies the process and should be pretty stable and strong depending on building for up to the stated 2500sqft. At 2k my house is fully supported and the hassle I had with range extenders (netgear) in the past is something I wanted to avoid.Looks good, screens cool.. So far it functions flawlessly and thats how I choose a router.

  2. Jeff B

    Not amazing, but does the job.
    A power outage knocked out my Nighthawk (which was amazing) right before I went on a business trip. I needed something that would get my family up and running immediately, and this does the job. Range is decent, covering the whole house. Speed and connection stability is great. Well worth the money, though I do plan to get another Nighthawk eventually because of the crazy range (it covered most of my large yard).

  3. noesis

    Insanely fast router
    This router is insanely fast. I don’t know how, but it actually doubles my internet speed when I test it wirelessly. It’s still the same speed when I test the wired connection.

  4. John M. Sully

    Big and Fast…
    I recently upgraded to a 1Gbps connection and my old router was proving to be a bottleneck, so it was time to upgrade. Granted this router is probably overkill for most people’s home networks, it is certainly so for mine, but this router is about as futureproof as you can get right now, so splurge it was — it should be able to handle any updates to my network over the next few years that I can think of, and WiFi 8 isn’t due until at least 2028…When the router arrived I was amazed at the size of the box it came in, the box was BIG! The router itself is about the size of a full-sized hardcover Webster’s dictionary and is designed to sit vertically on the shelf or other surface it is sitting on. One thing: it runs pretty warm, so I would suggest that you provide plenty of ventilation around it. I would not stack it on a bookshelf surrounded by books as you might be tempted to do. Mine sits on the top shelf of a record cabinet surrounded by free air space. Since it is only about 4 inches wide it did free up quite a bit of space over the older, festooned with antennas, style of router I had. A quick note about the fancy displays. Initially I set up the LED dot matrix to display the current temperature, but it was clear that the display was just going to be distracting so I quickly turned it off. The touchscreen display on the other hand is useful. You can swipe through four different displays CPU and memory usage, network throughput and number of clients, time, and weather forecast. When you tap on the WiFi icon you are presented with virtual buttons that allow you to turn the Guest Network on or off, activate WPS if you are using WPA2 or lower network encryption, or turn WiFi on or off. When you turn the Guest Network on a QR code is displayed, which allows guests to connect to the network easily by scanning it with their phone camera — pretty cool.Set up was as simpler than the last TP-Link router I set up. I turned the radios off, plugged it in via ethernet to my laptop and set the SSID and password and configured a few other parameters. I then unplugged the old router and replaced it with the BE900. Once I had it plugged in, I needed to set up a few address reservations which proved to be much easier as the new UI has a button which, when pressed, pops up a dialog box which contains the MAC address of the selected device — all you have to do is enter the IP address you want to assign to it. Nice touch. Although while setting up the SSID it appeared as though band steering, “Smart Connect” in TP-Link lingo, does not appear to be supported, setting the 6Ghz radio SSID to the same as that for the other 3 radios worked great, my phone connects to the 6Ghz radio w/o problems and my other devices all connect to the 5Ghz or 2.4Ghz bands as required. Setting up link aggregation for my NAS was straightforward and TP-Link now supports LACP so the router and NAS play nice together in the link aggregation scenario.Once set up, it was time to have some fun. Since my phone is the only device to support the 6Ghz radio, I gave that a try first. The old WiFi 6 router I had the phone would max out at about 750Mbps, now it ran around 950Mps, the same as the all wired connection from the NAS. Impressive. The laptop in the same room now ran at about 850Mbps down and 950Mbps up, with the old router it was around 650Mbps both ways. Desktop in the office about 30 feet away and through a couple of walls runs around 700Mbps down and 625Mbps up. Overall, the BE900 provides a nice bump in performance from both a WiFi 7 device (my phone) and WiFi 6 devices (the two computers). I have about 20 clients all told in my apartment which consist of a bunch of A/V equipment (mostly wired, all of which only support 100Mps link speeds), a TV and streaming audio player in my bedroom, a printer and a bunch of smart home devices. All perform well, and even Alexa seems to respond more quickly with the faster uplink.Overall, this is a great, I would say little, but it’s not, router. It is easier to set up than past TP-Link routers, has more useful features in the management UI and has a nice UI associated with the touchscreen display. The performance is blazing fast and it is barely even stressed by the workload that I put on it, although I plan to move backup tasks to the cloud as soon as I get my act together. The BE900 is expensive, but being at the bleeding edge can be costly. You can get performance which is almost as good, although some features are missing, from the BE550, but for the baddest router in town this is a real contender.

  5. Alex K.

    Fundamental improvement over Wi Fi 6
    I had Tp-link AX6000 Wi Fi 6, which I thought was good with its 8 antennas and 8 ports. This be900 however fundamentally (this is an understatement) improved video and sound quality of my HT system with lg 83 oled tv over Ethernet, and of my stereo system in the basement of 100 year old house over Wi Fi. I am really amazed.It is not like just a speed increase: I had about 250-300 Mbs in the basement with Wi Fi 6 too, seems more than enough, but it appears speed is not critical here at all. It appears that BE900 with its 4 bands, 12 antennas and/or whatever provides a crucial stability of a signal…iMac on the 2nd floor about 10m away responds now instantaneously. Again, with Wi-Fi 6 it was over 200 Mbs formally… but what a difference now!I have 1 Gig Spectrum, not fiber. Only planning to switch to fiber… in progress. And Supra Ethernet cables.

  6. jeremy bailey

    Works great
    Can’t beat the price for what it provides. I am noticing no bad difference in this router compared to the one that Xfinity provided. Seems to be well worth the price.

  7. Adam Hayward

    Great router, way more powerful wifi signal than my replaced Asus ROG BE98. Only issue was the IoT network is flakey, but just setting up a guest network with the same SSID and credentials, then deactivated the IoT broadcast, fixed all issues and I’m never seeing a single drop out any more.

  8. Edwin G

    Increíble producto a un precio muy accesible, vale la pena para bajar el PING subir la velocidad y aumentar la cobertura del Wifi.

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