Unlocked HUAWEI B535-232 CAT7 USB 300mbps 4G/LTE Home/Office Router (White) with 2 x External Antennas. Will work with any Sim Card Worldwide (Renewed), dual band

£9.9
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Unlocked HUAWEI B535-232 CAT7 USB 300mbps 4G/LTE Home/Office Router (White) with 2 x External Antennas. Will work with any Sim Card Worldwide (Renewed), dual band

Unlocked HUAWEI B535-232 CAT7 USB 300mbps 4G/LTE Home/Office Router (White) with 2 x External Antennas. Will work with any Sim Card Worldwide (Renewed), dual band

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
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In reply to a post by buggerlugs:Just wondering because surely with better connectivity of MIMO wouldn't that automatically increase the availability of bandwidth to users on that mast? Is it really the case that most masts are 64QAM now ? The ee mast I want to connect to is the only one locally with anything other than just band 20 on it . Therefore if I can get even faster speeds with ee from another router that’s not too expensive I would be very interested ! The Three 5G Hub meanwhile has them all massively beat for speed – but again, you need 5G coverage to take advantage of that. It also curiously has fewer ethernet ports (just two), which might be an issue for some.

Still got my magic bandwidth this morning - it's such a relief! If this stays stable I might even ditch my 350MB virgin connection that somehow has latency that reaches seconds at times. It’s a simple, plain white rectangular box with some status indicators on the front and a grey band around the edge. It looks fine, and for better or worse it won’t stand out as much as the aforementioned Huawei AI Cube, or even the likes of the Vodafone GigaCube, which is plain too but has a more noticeable tower-like design. Three has been all over the place - but I think as you say, that is because its such a popular choice for home 4G broadband and its getting overloaded. The issue really arises because it’s a 4G network and depending on what other users are doing, the weather, capacity/demand plus which way the wind is blowing apparently causes speeds to drastically differ. There are a few main alternatives to the Huawei B535 WebBox. Assuming you’re specifically after a 4G router then there’s the Huawei AI Cube, which is also available on Three, the Vodafone GigaCube, and the 4GEE Home Router 2 on EE.Ez a router biztosítja a felhasználók számára a vezeték nélküli hálózati kapcsolatot, így könnyen csatlakoztathatják készülékeiket az internethez. A Huawei B535-232 kiváló minőségű anyagokból készült, ami biztosítja a megbízhatóságot és időtállóságot.

On the B535, I have been using the HUA CTRL app on Android to change bands, and this has been working reliably so far...But there’s more than just speed here, asthe Huawei B535 supports both 2.4GHz and 5GHz Wi-Fi bands. This is another fairly standard thing in routers, but not always found in 4G ones, especially older models. Features and software To sign up for the activity, xxxxx EXP will be taken from your account (current EXP: xxxxxx). Continue? In reply to a post by barker04:n the settings I wondered if you can see if it does the 64QAM mentioned ? I think the mast I might connect to supports this - although have no way to know for sure before I buy this so keen to get a router that supports this if I can . The MIMO technology increases capacity especially at the distance ("cell edge") by helping against the multipath effect of high frequencies. One of the joys of 4G routers is that they’re usually incredibly easy to set up, as is the case with the Huawei B535 / Huawei HomeFi Plus.

QAM seems to have a fairly big difference though 50Mbps for 64 increase vs 16 though so would be a shame not to try it ? No way to know if mast is more than band 6 is there ? And does that even take QAM into account ?Up till now, on EE, 7,7 has given me the best results. I've also now noticed that this was on a tower much further away than others nearby. Cat 7 over 6 only affects uplink, and only if your operator supports it on the mast. In Phone terms both are quite old now. In reply to a post by barker04:Thanks - How does the wifi compare? Seen reports of the MR600 being flaky on wifi. I put my Phone's SIM in the router and experienced the same issues - I had to use a SIM adapter to make the sim up to Micro SIM size. A decent test here would be to use the router's SIM in my phone, but I don't want to cut it down and it's not one of those multi-size cards.

Had a firmware update for my B535 a couple of days ago and i'm now unable to change bands manually with the different software/apps that are available. Just a heads up should you want to turn auto update off if you have a B535 from Three. Anyway, sorry this post isn't particularly well structured. I do feel that even though some of the issues I have with the router are also present on my phone, they are to a much lesser degree and perhaps it's not solely a network issue and that perhaps there is something in this being a router issue too, if even only partially. Perhaps this router exacerbates the network issues

Maximum size for each attachment is 10MB (rar,jpg,zip,pdf,war,txt,docx,doc,png,mp3,mp4,xls,xlsx,gif,jpeg are supported). It’s one of two 4G home broadband devices available from the network at the time of writing, but with the other (the Huawei AI Cube) also being a smart speaker, this will likely be the default device for many buyers.



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