Airport extreme me918ll a8/8/2023 ![]() The results show a moderate improvement vs. The router comes defaulted to the same SSID for both bands, but you can set a different one for 5 GHz. For advanced features, you won’t find anything in the way of parental controls, web filtering or bandwidth management / QoS. The key omissions are the lack of support for 40 MHz bandwidth in the 2.4 GHz band, guest network in 2.4 GHz only, no UPnP support and no WiFi Protected Setup (WPS) support. I didn’t copy over the missing feature list from the Gen 5 review, but it remains the same. Tranmit power control (100, 50, 25, 10%) – one setting for both radios.Wireless Modes: Automatic, A/N and B/G, A and B/G.WEP and Personal / Enterprise WPA / WPA2 wireless security.Single port and port range forwarding w/ separate public / private ports.Log, wireless client and DHCP client viewing via AirPort Utility.USB printer and drive sharing (HFS, FAT32 formats only).IPv6 modes: Link-local only, Host, Tunnel, Router modes.Static and Dynamic IP, PPPoE WAN connections (no MTU adjust).I didn’t notice any new features and here’s the summary of Apple’s standard router feature set copied from the Gen 5 review. But it could leave some buyers in the lurch due to what it doesn’t support. If your routing needs are simple, the AExAC will probably do you just fine. I’ve stated in previous reviews that I’m neither a fan of Apple’s approach nor the utility itself, so I won’t belabor the point. I used Apple’s AirPort Uility for Windows (version 5.6.1) with a Win 7 SP1 system to configure the AExAC. Taking this approach will let Apple keep its options open to moving the AExAC up to an AC1900 class router like ASUS’ upcoming RT-AC68U. ![]() But since it also handles 3×3 802.11n, it’s perfectly suited to use as the 2.4 GHz radio. This 3×3 802.11ac transceiver has been the standard 5 GHz radio in all Broadcom-based AC1750 and AC1600 class routers to date. The AExAC is the first AC1750 router I’ve seen to use two BCM4360s. dual Cortex-A9 CPU 1 GHz, 256 KB L2 cache, Gigabit switch and PHYs and USB 3.0. The specs for the BCM4708 are similar, but a bit less beefy, i.e. So it’s a safe assumption that the 019 has at least that much. ![]() The BCM53017 and BCM53018 are described as dual Cortex-A9 CPU up to 1.1 GHz, 512 KB L2 cache (including ECC), 16-bit DDR2 interface, USB3, integrated switch, GPHYs and packet accelerator. But the numbering would indicate that it is a member of Broadcom’s StrataGX communication processor line. There is no specific information on the BCM53019 CPU to be found. Table 1: Router component summary and comparison – Unidentified external power amplifier (x3) – SiGe (Skyworks) SE2623L 2.4 GHz power amp (x3) Since the AExAC uses a second-generation Broadcom SoC, I’ve included the only other AC1750 router with a second-gen Broadcom CPU that I’ve tested so far- D-Link’s DIR-868L-for comparison.īroadcom BCM53019 (equivalent of BCM4708) I’ve compiled the key components into the table below. ![]()
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