+1Hi, is there any estimation of date when the RB751G RouterBoard become available? I need urgently gigabit router with wireless. I have to mix a RB450G with RB411 these days. I will prefer one box.
+1Hi, is there any estimation of date when the RB751G RouterBoard become available? I need urgently gigabit router with wireless. I have to mix a RB450G with RB411 these days. I will prefer one box.
Bad picture but we have been shipping this for about 6 months.Is there any 19" rack case for RB450G with internal power supply?
no, this doesn't fitYes
http://routerboard.com/CA433U
US Distributor - Http://streakwave.com/Itemdesc.asp?ic=CA%2F433U&eq=&Tp=
I asked sales yesterday. They are now saying August.So, no date? When will be RB751G available? Next month? In September? At Christmas? Next year?
Hm, sounds good. Let's see.I asked sales yesterday. They are now saying August.
Tom
difference is that the RB751G has gigabit ports, the RB751U doesn't have gigabit ports.Bump.
Keen on one of these, or the RB751-2n
What is the difference between RB751U and RB751G ?
just like it was always said, RB751G will come a few months after RB751URB751U is out now. Any news on RB751G?
Please do not ignore us. Thank you.
I know that you don't have an exact release date, but do you mean it will be available in 2-3 or 5-8 month???just like it was always said, RB751G will come a few months after RB751U
Yes. It should be renamed RB2012.Tom, do you know anything about the availability for the RB2011? Thanks.
That's funny.Yes. It should be renamed RB2012.Tom, do you know anything about the availability for the RB2011? Thanks.
Tom
these are not the specifications of RB751G, but probably RB751U (you can check on our site).5x LAN 10/100 Base-T Fast Ethernet
Yes, but at the top of the page (headline), they have 5x Gigabit....these are not the specifications of RB751G, but probably RB751U (you can check on our site).5x LAN 10/100 Base-T Fast Ethernet
but the only difference between RB751U and RB751G is the Gigabit ports.
1. RB751G is not yet for sale, it's an announced product, it will be available within a month or soI have been recently actively looking for a gigabit switch 802.11n capable. I came across RT-n66U, which looks very atractive, but today I've also found references to the RB751G.
Can anyone comment on the benefits of the RB751G when comparing it to RT-n66u and dd-wrt compatible boxes in general?
Thanks a million in advance,
Imagine then that I add this functionality... how does it compare with the aforementioned devices?2. RB751G is not a switch, it's a wireless router with optional switch functionality
thanks for that. My clients would be 1 Macbook Air 2011 and 1 Macbook Pro 2011, so I don't expect them to be any kind of bottleneck... I intend to use the device as a home router. I currently have a 802.11 b/g access point and if I ever dare to work with photos from trips and so on, my network chockes... I hope this device will manage to ease that.802.11n realistic speed could be around 200Mbit. Depends on traffic type and capabilities of the client.
Hi, one question. When you say, the 751 series are 802.11n compliant, does that mean that they work on both 2,4Ghz and 5Ghz simultaneously?thanks for that. My clients would be 1 Macbook Air 2011 and 1 Macbook Pro 2011, so I don't expect them to be any kind of bottleneck... I intend to use the device as a home router. I currently have a 802.11 b/g access point and if I ever dare to work with photos from trips and so on, my network chockes... I hope this device will manage to ease that.802.11n realistic speed could be around 200Mbit. Depends on traffic type and capabilities of the client.
Isn't that a huge setback considering how busy the 2,4Ghz band nowadays is in large cities?no. the full name of the product indicates what chip it has
example: "RB751U-2HnD"
2 - 2GHz
H - High powe
n - 802.11n
D - dual chain (two antennas)
I understand that won't happen anytime soon, right? do you plan to simultaneously support both 2,4 and 5G?depends on where you live. yes, we will have 5GHz models also.
Sorry if this is a little offtopic, but isn't the 5Ghz band capable of enabling faster throughput rates?chips that support both usually cost a lot more, currently we only support one or the other.
however, for indoor use, 2GHz is perfectly fine, for small distances like a house or an apartment, any interference from "overcrowded" 2GHz band will be negligible.
Lucky you, I see 17 right now.I do see 8 - 12 SSIDs from other neighbours
I still wonder if choosing 2,4Ghz is the way to go considering how overcrowded that spectrum is...Lucky you, I see 17 right now.I do see 8 - 12 SSIDs from other neighbours
From 5 (not Router related) wireless devices at my house only one had 5Ghz support, others are 2,4Ghz only, so as far as i can see - there is no point for 5Ghz indoor AP especially because 5Ghz have harder time to penetrate walls and go around obstacles than 2,4Ghz.I still wonder if choosing 2,4Ghz is the way to go considering how overcrowded that spectrum is...
hahahahah, you got me!!!kitus, be careful not to drown in the rain with your nose as high as it is man what do you want next, USB 3.0???
ok, and what about throughput then? are faster throughputs expected in 5Ghz, or that does not make any difference?I personally have the same observation as Macgaiver above, most consumer devices still only support 2GHz.
Huh. All my laptops and tablets support 5Ghz.I personally have the same observation as Macgaiver above, most consumer devices still only support 2GHz.
what about this then? here, almost everyone use smartphones now.given that smart phones can only do 2.4
yeah, that's what I wanted to point out here...Huh. All my laptops and tablets support 5Ghz.I personally have the same observation as Macgaiver above, most consumer devices still only support 2GHz.
At my workplace 55% of all connections are on 5Ghz, which is huge given that smart phones can only do 2.4.
I hear you... prior to discovering mikrotik products, I had my eyes on the Asus RT-n66u which is also supposed to come out very soon and does feature both radios simultaneously (its predecessor, the RT-n16u only had one)... I can't comment though on how powerful mikrotik routers can be when comparing them with SOHO devices running ddwrt.And I'm certainly not alone in wanting both.
What about RB433 + two network cards? I'm using it. But it is not so cheap, indeed.I want to offer both.
why is that?But the subject in this post is : Availability of the RB751G ?
I don't think so ....
just like it was always said, RB751G will come a few months after RB751URB751U is out now. Any news on RB751G?
Please do not ignore us. Thank you.
Like it was stated before, RB751G will be available after the RB751U. We only just released the RB751U a few weeks back. Please try to be understanding, we are doing what we can.
few months after RB751U
This is still true. RB751U was released a few weeks back. This means a few months from that moment, RB751G should become available.RB751G will be available after the RB751U
when did mikrotik advertise such things?I see on the site the CPU as being 400 mhz? Is this correct mikrotik? You advertised this product with a 680Mhz CPU. Well..first disappointment about this product.
RB750GL also doesn't have such CPU, it has 400MHz.
The CPU frequency is not the only measurement of speed, for any type of computer.
yes, it was possible to clock the CPU this way, but the RB750 is not manufactured anymore. You have RB450G with similar possibility1.
In 750g - for AR7161 in datasheet we see
AR7161 WNPU
– 600 MHz (850+ Dhrystone MIPS) (its mean what chip developer specifies upper limit recommended by the frequency of 850MHz)
of course, this is RouterOS, configure as you like2.
Next question
Its posible to set 1 port - in Routing Mode
and all other port in Bridging Mode ?
why? this is a home router. I have not managed to bring my device to it's limits even though I have 100Mbit fiber line to my apartment. I personally have no need for more CPU clock just so it looks bigger. The device is already plenty powerful for SOHO installs. For outdoors or ISP level installs, use RB4xx series or better.Why not put on the market RB751G POWER EDITION - based on a more powerful chip Atheros.
Yes i know it, i already have RB750G.yes, it was possible to clock the CPU this way, but the RB750 is not manufactured anymore. You have RB450G with similar possibility
2.
Next question
Its posible to set 1 port - in Routing Mode
and all other port in Bridging Mode ?
Normis I posed this question(2) incorrectly (sorry) - I had in mind the following:of course, this is RouterOS, configure as you like
Why not put on the market RB751G POWER EDITION - based on a more powerful chip Atheros.
I understand that you want to say and I know that 75xG is positioned as a home router for SOHO, but there are nuances:why? this is a home router. I have not managed to bring my device to it's limits even though I have 100Mbit fiber line to my apartment. I personally have no need for more CPU clock just so it looks bigger. The device is already plenty powerful for SOHO installs. For outdoors or ISP level installs, use RB4xx series or better.
maybe in your country, but I see ~40Eur as the normal market price in Europe.I mean the final price for the buyer
no, it has a 400MHz CPU which can't be overclocked at allI'll give this information for example, but my question was about such a possibility for RB751G (see my post earlier) - but you did not answer it, please could you give this information?
yes, Atheros8327. any port can be master port to any other port.In RB751G - have this "Switch Chip Features"
like I said, there is no more such product. compare it to current lineup. for low cost choose RB7xx, for high performance choose RB4xx.downgrade compared to the 750G
~40Eur ? - ~ 52$ ? for RB/751G-2HnD ? but recommended price on routerboard.com 79.95$maybe in your country, but I see ~40Eur as the normal market price in Europe.
Normis, I need a device (and I think that not only me) with the following functionality:downgrade compared to the 750G
like I said, there is no more such product. compare it to current lineup. for low cost choose RB7xx, for high performance choose RB4xx.