📡 Elevate your connection game—never miss a beat, wherever you roam!
The NETGEAR Omnidirectional MIMO Antenna (6000451) is a sleek, easy-to-install external antenna designed to boost 4G and 5G signal strength for NETGEAR M5 and M6 hotspot routers. Supporting a broad frequency range (600-5925 MHz), it enhances mobile broadband performance indoors, outdoors, and on the move, making it ideal for professionals needing reliable connectivity in low-signal environments across the US and Canada.
Brand | NETGEAR |
Series | 6000451-10000S |
Item model number | 6000451-10000S |
Item Weight | 7.1 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 4.72 x 0.22 x 6.3 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 4.72 x 0.22 x 6.3 inches |
Color | Black |
Computer Memory Type | DIMM |
Flash Memory Size | 1 MB |
Voltage | 5 Volts |
Batteries | Product Specific batteries required. |
Manufacturer | Netgear |
ASIN | B09NRNDNGZ |
Date First Available | November 1, 2022 |
P**O
Large gains in fringe area
Huge improvement in performance in a fringe area, your milage may vary. Galaxy phone on 5g showing 3 -4 bars as a base test @ speedtest 138mbps connected to MR6550 att unlocked 158mbps without antenna at 3 bars, with antenna connected 5 bars at 196mbps a 39mbps increase and a decent latency decrease. Note the connectors ts9 adapters are very tight, but sma allows for a quick disconnect if needed. Cable length is about 3 ft
R**N
Works!
Works with regular M6. Paired with cable extenders is perfect when having your device indoors with outdoor reception. Mine is placed on a window and the differences are notable for my overseas trip as max 4g speeds where I'm at are 25mpbs (non peak hours). So any extra reception is noticeable otherwise i would have to leave my hotspot outside to the elements. Worth the purchase.
G**H
Does increase download speed, but signal strength remains the same
At first I thought that it was not working properly, since this antenna has the same number of bars as the antennas that came with my modem and I was about to return it. However a speedtest showed that the download speed increased from 18mps with external coil wire antennas to 24 mbps with the netgear. I will probably keep using the coil antennas when we are out camping and cellular reception is poor to none exsitent and keep the netgear around the house when I use the 4g as failover solution.
D**.
Either defective or doesn't work by design.
I ordered this antenna in the hope that it would boost my internet connection with Cudy LTE 500D router. However, it offered no improvement to RSRP/RSRP/SINR stats, and consequently no speed gain.
R**Y
A must have Hotspot antenna
Worked great with my netgear Hotspot. Big difference in reception
R**I
Very good product. Thank you.
Very good product. Thank you.
W**V
Works great to help with signals on the MIFI 8800L Hotspot
I got the NETGEAR (600451) Omnidirectional MIMO Antenna to use with my MIFI 8800L Hotspot. You will have to adjust to your surroundings as you use it. In some areas, your internal antennas will work better, whereas in others, the antenna will help boost your signal.I like the small form factor, and it is about the size of a hand with the fingers spread out or a small paperback book, and it is light to carry. It does come with two ways to mount it. It has two suction cups to mount to windows and it has two brackets that will allow you to hang it on your open laptop or a flat surface like a laptop.
F**T
Wifi drops packets, wifi offloading is nice
Pros:• Can connect to existing wifi (i.e.: starlink, campground wifi, starbucks wifi, etc, a.k.a. data offloading), to re-distribute internet to your personally created wifi network or LAN• Has an ethernet port for LAN• Has split 5Ghz/2.4Ghz wifi broadcasts (some devices don't like when they're combined)• Allows VPN tunnelling• Access to text messages sent to SIM card/phone number, which is useful for 2FA, carrier messages, etc.• Allows IP Passthrough (the router acts as a modem solely)• Allows enable/disable of DHCP service from router• Has 2 radio antenna extender portsCons:• Display is nice, but tough to use. Better off using the web page.• DNS settings would NEVER work for me. It has a section where you can set a DNS IP, but no devices would ever get these IPs. I know some routers set themselves as the DNS provider, then forward all requests to the IP you set, but not this router. I could not access my pihole or other LAN devices via FQDN, only IPs. That kind of sucks.• Every single change requires a reboot. EVERY. LITTLE. CHANGE.• Every reboot, the system would NEVER turn back on. Its almost as if "reboot" = "shutdown". Keep the device within reach if you plan on making any changes.• Drops packets every 45 seconds or so. I ran a continuous ping to google.com and it resolved the IP no problem, ran the pings no problem at around 30ms each, but then it'll just jump up to 250ms, then "Request timed out" once, then back to normal. 45secs later, it'll jump to 250ms, then "Request timed out", and so on. Seems like it can't handle a normal workload. For comparison, I connected to my Starlink router in the same location, ran a ping to google.com and never had any dropped packets or "Request timed out" replies.This is a secondary form of internet for me now as it's performance is hardly reliable. I can't set DNS to be my pihole, and I really don't feel like setting DNS individually for all my wifi devices. I can't have consistent internet if the router is underpowered and dropping packets.Too bad I'm outside my return window now, otherwise I would have returned this.
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