Computer Active (UK)

Tp-link Archer VR2800

Fast Wi-fi for any type of broadband adband

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No shortcuts on this fast router

We’ve come to expect Tp-link’s Archer routers to offer decent performanc­e and features in an easy-to-use package. The VR2800 is no exception. Its shiny black case looks familiar, but a grille at the back hints at more power inside. For a bit more money than the average router, you’re getting a high specificat­ion that should make the most of very fast broadband connection­s.

An ADSL2+/VDSL modem is built in, so you can connect this box to any telephone-line-based internet service or fibre broadband, and one of the four Ethernet ports also serves as a WAN connection if you have cable internet, such as Virgin Media, that requires its own modem. The VR2800 also supports Sky routers, but Sky makes it difficult to use an alternativ­e router by hiding the required username andd password. Finding them is fiddly – see the instructio­ns at www.snipca.com/24960.60.

The two USB 3.0 portsts can be used to connect a printer or storage drive to share over your network or to plug in a 3G or 4G dongle from a mobile phone network provider, letting you go online if your broadband connection goes down. Setup is through a web browser, or you can use Tp-link’s Tether app on an Apple or Android phone or tablet. Plenty of features are provided, including parental controls, guest networks and other essentials.

In our Wi-fi tests, with our laptop close to the router, we hit download speeds of 109MB/S (megabytes per second) – which isn’t far off the theoretica­l limit of Gigabit Ethernet, so no complaints there. Moving to the other end of the house, this dropped to just under 11 MB/S, which is slower than the fastest wireless routers we’ve seen, but still good. You’d need a mesh router setup such as BT’S Whole Home Wi-fi to do significan­tly better.

Since Whole Home Wi-fi is selling for almost the same price, for a set of three dishes to distribute the network around your home, it’s strong competitio­n. But BT’S system is designed for simplicity; it’s not as configurab­le. Each dish only has one Ethernet port for wired devices, and there’s no USB sharing. Other mesh systems are a bit pricier, so single routers like the VR2800 aren’t obsolete just yet.

A router to make the most of very fast broadband

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