AVM FRITZ!repeater 3000 WLAN Mesh International / CH (1733 Mbit/s, 400 Mbit/s)

AVM FRITZ!repeater 3000 WLAN Mesh International / CH

1733 Mbit/s, 400 Mbit/s


Questions about AVM FRITZ!repeater 3000 WLAN Mesh International / CH

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Anonymous

5 years ago

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CDisler32

5 years ago

Good day Mr XY, Thank you for your enquiry. You can use the LAN ports of the FRITZ!Repeater 3000 as you require, i.e. use one as an input and the other as an output. Kind regards from Berlin Jörg Reuß AVM GmbH Sales

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fmac

5 years ago

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gloorpatterson

5 years ago

Helpful answer

The repeater only works optimally if both frequency bands have the same SSID and the device can decide which is currently the faster one. At least that's how it works for me and that's how I understood the AVM manual. My 5 GHz band is always active (you can also see this in the interface of the FB under Home Network/Mesh). Kind regards, Gerhard

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Anonymous

9 months ago

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anschluss

9 months ago

The linked version of the Fritz! repeater 3000 is far too expensive for some reason. Just look for it in the range, because the "normal" version costs only half as much: AVM FRITZ!Repeater 3000 AX International (3600 Mbit/s, 600 Mbit/s) Compared to this offer, the 6000 model costs about Fr. 50.- If you don't need the 2.5Gbit port, the 3000 model would be a little cheaper.

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wyss_samuel1

2 years ago

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Stardustone

2 years ago

Yes, it is possible, but I would generally only recommend a mesh WiFi system to improve the WLAN, which achieves much better coverage. The Xiaomi AX3000 mesh system, for example, consists of two identical mesh WiFi routers, switch off the WiFi on the Wingo router, connect a Xiaomi mesh router to the Wingo router with the LAN cable and then set up the WiFi mesh on the smartphone. This gives you very good coverage, as two mesh routers create the WLAN at the same time. Both are very powerful and can manage up to 256 devices and each has a built-in 3 port Gbit Ethernet switch, where you can then use a server or printer with it. Xiaomi AX3000 Operating a separate router together with the Wingo WLAN is a technical mess.

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digidoc1

2 years ago

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leibundguturs

2 years ago

E.g. with the FRITZ!DECT Repeater 100, which is hardly sold in Switzerland and is currently sold with Schuko connections. If it is only about the DECT signal, Repeters from other manufacturers can also be coupled with the Fritzbox. I have a Gigaset Repeter in use like this. What cannot work, however, are the AVM special functions on the Fritzphone.

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digidoc1

2 years ago

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Anonymous

2 years ago

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I have solved it exactly like this and it has worked perfectly for three years. Fritzbox in the multimedia cabinet (W-Lan deactivated) and repeater (W-Lan activated) centrally in the flat. The two devices are connected with a LAN cable.

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Anonymous

3 years ago

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gschwinds

3 years ago

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Yes via power supply unit. No Not via network cable and PoE (Power over Ethernet). But maybe you are just looking in the wrong product category if you want a device with PoE. A repeater is not a device that is connected via a network cable. That would be an access point (AP), where you will find some devices that can be supplied with power via PoE. https://www.digitec.ch/de/s1/producttype/access-point-9?pdo=22-11221%3A160957%7C22-11221%3A160958%7C22-11221%3A502722&tagIds=7-1377

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samuelmadella

3 years ago

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schaepper

3 years ago

Hello This is possible in principle, but from the text you describe, the use case is not entirely clear. You write that you cannot pull a LAN cable but want to switch off the WLAN. Then the repeater would theoretically do nothing. If that was simply a typo and you want to use the repeater as a "switch", that would not really be advisable. It only has two ports and there are certainly better and cheaper options than using this repeater as a switch. Sincerely Alex

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djpadril

4 years ago

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SatoReisu

4 years ago

Is it better than the 2400?

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avodatasud

4 years ago

The 3000 has 3 radio units and can therefore transmit better in parallel in the 5GHz band. With the 2400, the speed is reduced because both the end device and the router have to communicate on the same band. In addition, it can be placed better, also in terms of radio technology, and does not cover switches or the other sockets of a triple socket. I always use the 3000 for customers myself.

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frank.schuetrumpf

4 years ago

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!Maestro!

4 years ago

Helpful answer

Hello, I have connected the repeater to the Swisscom Internet Box 3. This works perfectly. I have connected the printer to the repeater and can also print via WLAN when I am connected to the Swisscom Box. I can only recommend the product.

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playworld25

4 years ago

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Anonymous

4 years ago

This is exactly the configuration I have: - Connect the PC/laptop directly to the repeater with the cable, the repeater assigns an IP address from 192.168.178.x, then access the repeater in the browser (192.168.178.1), log in, answer questions, wait for a reboot and then set the repeater to LAN bridge. - Now the repeater can be connected to the normal ConnectBox home network. - The repeater should now provide the WLAN and you should come online. - In order to adjust the configuration, update, change the WLAN password etc., simply click on Network in the Explorer, the repeater should appear there after a while. Double-click on it and you are on the repeater's web interface.

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kikboon

5 years ago

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juwelix07

5 years ago

No, that's not possible and makes little sense. For example, I would look at the FRITZ!Box 6890 LTE for a stationary solution; there are also better mobile solutions, but that makes little sense in most cases because the hotspot of the mobile phone is sufficient. What does make sense, of course, is a second SIM card, which is now available very cheaply.

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doudouch

5 years ago

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ricoshop

5 years ago

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brunokohler

5 years ago

Hello I will try to answer some questions, even if I don't fully understand them. How is the wifi received? What do you mean by that? Not very technically: You can 'capture' the Fritzbox's WLAN and then spread it further, or you can connect the repeater to the Fritzbox with a LAN cable and then spread WLAN further. While you can be 'as far away' from the Fritzbox as you like with the LAN cable, you must of course still be within good range of the Fritzbox WLAN with the WLAN variant. Where nothing more arrives, nothing more can be transmitted. So, if the WLAN of the Fritzbox on the 3rd floor is no longer receivable, then the repeater won't work either. What do you mean by 'socket'? If it is a LAN socket, then the answer is 'yes'. If it is a normal 230V socket, then this is a question that does not lead anywhere, see above for the answer. It is clear that this repeater does not support WLAN propagation via the mains. You would need a different product for that. If your mobile phone still has reception on the 3rd floor at a good speed, then the repeater will have the same. Possibly connect the repeater halfway. 5GHz is supported. If you can connect your mobile phone to the Fritzbox and then receive Internet via WLAN, then of course this also works with the repeater. It does the same thing as the Fritzbox, spreading WLAN. Thanks to Mesh, it's even very easy. Is it fast? I don't know. I don't have any devices that support high speeds yet. I connected the repeater via LAN cable and my cheap mobile phone (Moto G7) shows (at 5GHz) download 280Mbit, upload 48Mbit (UPC 500/50). If I had a better phone, the download would probably be even better.

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claudiahongkong

5 years ago

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crossdata

5 years ago

Yes, the repeater works in a mesh network with a FritzBox or completely autonomously and can always be configured via its own web interface. You can find its IP address on the user interface of the Sunrise Box (network).

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nicogrubert

5 years ago

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Anonymous

5 years ago

The repeater works with any router. The advantage with Fritzbox is the automatic configuration of the repeater. Without it, you have to do this manually in the web interface, but it works without problems. I use one as a LAN bridge to turn the LAN into a WLAN. And one as a client to bring remote computers without a WLAN adapter back into the LAN.

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