1-5 of 5 Answers
It will connect to more than you home should have! 25 seems to be good for us. I would say that you could get to 50 without any trouble, but remember you splitting whatever available speed your internet service provider gives you. And when you do that, some devices (like apple tv) require a certain amount of reserved connection speed to even work at all. The good news is you can dedicate certain amounts of QoS bandwidth to specific devices should the need arise.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.One usb 2.0 and one usb 3.0 The instructions stated that the 3.0 was restricted to 2TB but i have my Western Digital 4TB hooked up with no problem. 4 Ethernet connections.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I am currently connected to 40+ devices on 2.4 and 5 Ghz bands
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Someone more techie can respond, but I don't think there's a limit on the number of devices connected wirelessly. The more devices connected to the router and using bandwidth could cause things to bog down but I don't think there's a maximum number of devices. There's 4 ethernet jacks so you can connect 4 devices that way.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.How many devices? It depends. I has 4 ports out. If an external switch is used, like a 24 port switch, its possible to connect 4 x 24 devices. However in this configuration, the router could run out of IP's. This router has 2 wireless radio frequencies. Again the limit is set to 254 IPs max. This is in theory of course. I would suggest that some investigation be done in to how a router/modem like this is used and for what purpose.
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