🌍 Connect Beyond Limits!
The TP-Link EAP110-Outdoor V3 is a robust outdoor access point designed for seamless Wi-Fi coverage up to 200 meters. With a weatherproof enclosure, it delivers speeds of up to 300 Mbps using advanced 2x2 MIMO technology. Integrated with the Omada SDN platform, it offers cloud access for centralized management and supports easy installation through Passive PoE.
Number of Ports | 1 |
Control Method | App |
Data Transfer Rate | 300 Megabits Per Second |
LAN Port Bandwidth | 10/100 megabits_per_second |
Controller Type | Switch |
Maximum Upstream Data Transfer Rate | 3E+2 Megabits Per Second |
Number of Antennas | 2 |
Is Electric | Yes |
Recommended Uses For Product | Business |
Connectivity Technology | Wireless |
AntennaType | Internal |
Operating System | Microsoft Windows XP, Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows10 |
Security Protocol | WPA2 |
Additional Features | Weatherproof, Access Point Mode, WPS |
Frequency Band Class | Single-Band |
Wireless Compability | 802.11bgn |
Compatible Devices | Personal Computer |
Frequency | 2.4 GHz |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 3.7"L x 1.7"W x 8.2"H |
Item Weight | 4.16 ounces |
Color | White |
H**Y
Great antenna! 📶
Ran it 300 ft. out and through the woods of my back yard.Works great!I have a tiny camp out in the woods. The cabin is only about 50 ft. from the antenna.So far I have my phone, a tablet, and a Roku hooked up to it! All work great with a strong 2.4 GHz signal! I have full bars on all those devices. Looking forward to hooking up a camera to it as well!Easy plug and play from a TP-Link 8 port switch. The switch is also ran through a 100 ft. CAT6 cable, from the main router in the house!Highly recommended if you want wifi anywhere you need it!
B**N
Extend your Wi-Fi into your backyard with ease.
I have a large backyard and sometimes I like to answer my emails or just surf the web from a reclining yard chair, but previously I had to rely on my phone since it's the only device with cellular internet access. I decided to buy this extender (which comes with a PoE injector, btw) and set it up to increase my wifi range.This was really easy, as it turns out. I just ran an ethernet cable to a window near the back of my home office, plugged in the access point and had internet pretty much immediately. I do think I had to download the TP-Link app to finish the set up, but I have other TP-Link products so it was a very quick, no-fuse affair. Totally worth it!
C**N
Perfect for our 4 acre property to connect cameras
First I tried WiFi extenders to get to WiFi cameras out by our barn, but signal was very iffy. I put this on a high point on one side of our home and now I can access wifi outside with good direct line of sight for about 150-250 feet. I can get spotty signals much further out, but things did improve by playing with the antennas and using a wifi strength app.This is commercial grade, and has many features with the Omada system that I will never use. Basically you have an antenna that you run a ethernet cable to a PPOE plug in adapter and then out with another cable to the antenna. You can wire it pretty far out with cable so it does not have to be close to the powered adapter.I think you can also run it as an unwired access point, but you still need power to it and I did not set up that way.
T**E
Management VLAN
Really good low cost AP that supports VLANs.Haven't done extensive testing of signal strength or speed, but my IP cam on the porch connected with decent signal and speed.I am not using their controller or Omada software - web configuration only.Tried installing the software, and all I get were endless errors about ports being closed - on the same subnet, and temporarily turned off the firewall on my desktop, but didn't help. Still wouldn't connect, so one star off for that and the needless complexity of using a Management VLAN, and possible log in issues.One word of caution: If you enable Management VLAN (I use VLAN 10), then it will *only* connect on the same subnet (e.g. mine is 192.168.10.x), you cannot access from another subnet no matter what rules you have set up in your router, unless you also check "Layer-3 Accessibility" under Web Server, *plus* you also must check "Layer-3 Accessibility" under SSH Server (but not SSH Login, unless you want that), if you want to connect to the web configuration using HTTPS. All seems very obvious once I found those settings, but it took me way too much time to figure out, assumed it was a firewall setting in my router that was allowing me to ping the EAP245 from other subnets, but not allowing me to connect to it over either HTTP or HTTPS. None of my other equipment - Ubiquiti, Engenius, Netgear - had this issue when I moved them to my management VLAN, so one star off for this needless complexity, with settings scattered over three locations, and *zero* documentation either on the web configuration screens or the user guide for setting this up. A simple two sentence caution on the Management VLAN screen would have been sufficient - or, here's a crazy idea: Why not put the settings there? Last time I checked, there's no law that says you can't duplicate the same settings in several places, so you have all the settings that logically go together for the same function grouped together, so you don't have to hunt all over the UI for a setting on a different page that might be affecting what you're trying to enable.Also, when I log in with HTTPS using Firefox, it keeps wanting to know if I want to save my password (it's already saved), but it shows the password as a string of numbers, not the actual password, so I have to wonder if HTTPS is actually implemented correctly on the EAP245, because it sure seems like maybe it's taking my password and using it to generate a key that it then sends in plaintext across the network. Again, none of my other network equipment generate this weird behavior with HTTPS log ins.Overall, a great value home / SOHO AP that supports VLANs, but one star off. Management VLAN works great across subnets once you enable L3 access. HTTPS, I'm not so sure.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
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