![]() ![]() With the test notebook set up 20-feet and a wall away from the router, it yielded an even 1.000Gbps, less than the 1.137Gbps that the RAXE500 delivered but impressive, nonetheless. The Hydra Pro 6E made up much of the difference when it came to pushing a Wi-Fi signal through walls and floors in my 100-year old home. It clearly worked better at short range than over long distances. The Hydra Pro 6E had a range of 80-feet, 30 percent lower than the Netgear RAXE500’s 105-feet. That’s behind the Netgear RAXE500 (215.8Mbps) as well as several older routers, like TP-Link Archer AX6000’s 396.4Mbps and the Netgear Nighthawk AX8’s 277.1Mbps.Īt 75-feet, the Hydra Pro 6E’s available bandwidth dropped to 37.0Mbps, less than a quarter of the Netgear RAXE500 (148.6Mbps). With the three bands consolidated into a single network name and 50-feet separating the Hydra Pro 6E from the test system, the router moved 120.4Mbps. Still, it tops the best Wi-Fi 6 routers, like the Netgear Nighthawk AX8 (1.389Gbps), Asus AX-RT86U (929.7Mbps) and the TP-Link Archer AX6000 (884.4Mbps). That adds up to a total potential throughput of 1.958Gbps, 20 percent off the RAXE500 (2.390Gbps), which was tested using a Samsung Galaxy S21 phone. The setup included a Samsung Galaxy Book Pro test computer running Windows 11 to gauge its performance potential.Īt a distance of 15-feet, it yielded 1.064Gbps over the 6GHz band as well as 772.0Mbps and 122.7Mbps over the 5GHz and 2.4GHz bands. To test the router's performance I used Ixia’s ixChariot’s network simulation software to create a busy network that simulated 10 data-hungry users. ![]() The key to the Hydra Pro 6E’s performance is its addition of the 6GHz band to the expected 2.4- and 5GHz ones. Unlike other recent routers, the Hydra Pro 6E has a restrained appearance with a single LED bar that glows Blue (when it’s online), Purple (during setup) and Red (when offline). The Hydra 6E’s USB 3.0 connector can make the contents of an external hard drive available on the network.Īlong the back is an on/off switch, the router’s power port and a recessed reset button while the router’s side has a WPS button for tapping into the Wi-Fi Protected Setup to quickly add devices. There are four downstream 1Gbps wired Ethernet ports, although none of them can be aggregated for extra performance. The router can also be used as part of a Velop mesh system using Linksys' Intelligent Mesh software. Its 5Gbps WAN input port can help gamers seeking to rule the universe and can run circles around the Nighthawk RAXE500’s 2.5Gbps input – that is, if your broadband provider and hardware can support it. The Hydra Pro 6E may be a mainstream router, but it has several high-performance tricks up its sleeve. The router’s eight individual data streams can service up to 55 devices and Linksys rates its coverage area as 2,700 square feet. It checks all the boxes for an up-to-date router, including MU-MIMO, beamforming and 1024QAM operations. Under the skin, the Hydro Pro 6E has a quad-core processor that runs at 1.8GHz and is stocked with 512MB of RAM as well as 512MB of flash to hold its firmware and settings. By contrast, the RAXE500 can handle a maximum of 10.8Gbps. With a rated peak throughput of 6.6Gbps, the 2.4-, 5- and 6-GHz bands are rated to move 600, 1,201, and 4,804 Mbps, respectively. This was done for economy and shows up with lower overall performance. Linksys engineers based the Hydra Pro 6E’s design on Qualcomm’s Networking Pro 810 chipset, not the more capable and expensive 1210 chipset. ![]()
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