PC Pro

Tenda Nova MW3

By far the cheapest mesh wireless kit we’ve tested – what it loses in speed, it makes up for in convenienc­e

- DARIEN GRAHAM-SMITH

PRICE £68 (£81 inc VAT) from pcpro.link/288tenda

Mesh networking kits aren’t cheap – or at least, that’s the received wisdom. Tenda’s Nova MW3 system turns that on its head: for less than the cost of a regular mid-range router, you get a full set of three Wi-Fi nodes, ready to distribute wireless connectivi­ty to the far reaches of your home. At such a low price, can it possibly be any good?

First signs are excellent. The MW3 units are inconspicu­ous white cubes, with bumpy tops to add a hint of visual interest. They’re small too, measuring only 90mm on each side, so they won’t dominate a shelf. Getting set up is astonishin­gly easy. Once you’ve powered up your first node, and hooked it up to your modem, the Tenda smartphone app sets up your internet connection and invites you to specify a name and password for your new wireless network.

Then it’s a simple matter of carting the other two nodes into different rooms, plugging each one in and waiting a few minutes while they boot up and receive their settings from the primary unit. A coloured LED on each unit will warn you if it’s too far away from its brethren to get a good signal.

There’s nothing more to configure unless you want to apply custom network settings. You can optionally enable an isolated guest network, configure port forwarding and set up simple parental controls, which let you block internet access for specific clients during defined times.

A few key features are missing, though. For one, you can’t bind IP addresses to specific devices, which might annoy those who want to precisely replicate their old network. There’s also no proper access point mode. If you connect the Tenda system to your existing router, it will operate as a separate subnet, which means that some clients might not be able to communicat­e with each other. Hopefully, that will be resolved in a future firmware update.

As well as 802.11ac wireless, each node offers two Ethernet connectors. That’s par for the course for compact mesh systems, but it always feels rather constraini­ng – especially since one port on the primary node is taken up by the connection to your broadband modem.

For several reasons, I wasn’t expecting the Nova MW3 to deliver exceptiona­l performanc­e. For one, its 5GHz radios claim a modest maximum data rate of 867Mbits/sec, which is half that of the units in BT’s Whole Home Wi-Fi ( see issue 282, p81).

What’s more, since there’s only one radio per unit, your devices have to share that bandwidth with “backhaul” traffic as it’s forwarded from node to node. The small size of the nodes meanwhile limits the size and, therefore, the range of the internal antennae: the three-node Tenda kit promises coverage up to 300m2, while the BT system offers a much more generous 420m2.

In use, though, I found the Tenda MW3 delivered a solid, if not exactly speedy, connection. Having distribute­d the units along the length of my home, I could download files from my NAS drive to an 802.11ac-enabled laptop at average rates of 9MB/sec in the living room, 8MB/sec in the bedroom, and 7MB/sec in the bathroom.

That’s low compared to the best new standalone routers ( see p93) and falls behind other mesh networks, too. The BT Whole Home Wi-Fi system was more than twice as fast in the living room and never slower than 12MB/sec. The discrepanc­y was larger than I had expected.

“The MW3 system cleared up the notspots in my home, with practicall­y zero configurat­ion required on my part”

A skim of the Tenda’s technical specificat­ions revealed the explanatio­n. Alongside lightweigh­t Wi-Fi hardware, the MW3 nodes also use 100Mbits/sec Ethernet ports, rather than the Gigabit type we’re accustomed to. That puts a hard speed limit of around 10MB/sec on all wired resources – including your NAS drive and your internet connection. This doesn’t have to be a deal-breaker, though. The system was still nippy enough to give me the full speed of a 50Mbits/sec (around 6MB/sec) fibre connection all through my home. If you’re looking for superfast downloads or if you regularly access big files from a home NAS drive, then the Tenda Nova MW3 clearly isn’t the right product for you. That doesn’t mean it’s a write-off, though. The MW3 system cleared up the notspots in my home, with practicall­y zero configurat­ion required on my part. And the connection was still perfectly fast enough to browse the web, ping sensibly-sized files back and forth over my home network and even stream 4K video. At this price, I suspect it will make a lot of people very

happy.

SPECIFICAT­IONS

3 x 802.11ac Wi-Fi units 300Mbits/sec on 2.4GHz 867Mbits/sec on 5GHz 2 x 10/100 ports per unit iOS and Android apps 90 x 90 x 90mm (WDH) 1yr warranty

 ??  ?? ABOVE The subtle, sugar cube-style design means the MW3 nodes won’t dominate a room
ABOVE The subtle, sugar cube-style design means the MW3 nodes won’t dominate a room
 ??  ?? BELOW Each of the MW3’s nodes comes equipped with two Ethernet ports
BELOW Each of the MW3’s nodes comes equipped with two Ethernet ports
 ??  ??

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