I understand not wanting to touch the router but I want to control
everything up until I hand off to the customer's equipment which means I
provide the router.  I hear from too many people that blame their ISP like
Charter or the phone company for bad internet when much of the time it is
their own wireless router.  That same bad mouthing will happen for my
company if the customer continues to use crappy routers so I thought I
would provide one to them, configure it, lock it, and replace it if it ever
fails.  That way, I am handing out something reliable that works and if
they need help, I'm there to fix it for them.  In my opinion, that should
cut down on tech support calls if the router is stable.

I am currently testing the Ubiquiti Airrouters and the TP-Link TL-WR841N

On Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 5:34 PM, Josh Luthman
<[email protected]>wrote:

> I would avoid the 751 for now based on my hell of an experience.  That's
> just me.
>
> Josh Luthman
> Office: 937-552-2340
> Direct: 937-552-2343
> 1100 Wayne St
> Suite 1337
> Troy, OH 45373
> On Apr 26, 2012 6:27 PM, "Justin Wilson" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>  My Take on routers.
>>
>> Off the shelf routers are the #1 trouble issue on the Zig network.
>>  Anything from gaming issues, to speed issues, to reliability issues. They
>> account for roughly 92% of all calls.  The first thing we have the customer
>> do after reboots of everything is bypass the router. Most of the time this
>> shows the customer it's their router, or something behind it.
>>
>> In our past life we started out selling routers. We looked for the
>> cheapest ones we could find, which at the time were dlink. What we found
>> was customers then considered that our equipment. "Well the router you sold
>> me went out." was something we heard a lot. Or "I reset the router now you
>> have to come out and configure it"
>>
>> What we are doing this time around is we have only one officially
>> approved router. The Mikrotik 751. We have a local computer shop which
>> stocks them and sets them up.  What he does as far as support is between
>> him and the customer. I am pretty sure he tells them he is just a retailer
>> for the product and if they want his help he will gladly charge them his
>> hourly rate. All about expectations up front.
>>
>> By doing all of this we are not in the router business, but the customer
>> gets a solid product and cuts down on our calls. In turn we have a happier
>> customer base. And if need be, we can actually login to their router and do
>> torch, etc.
>>
>> Justin
>>
>> From: Darin Steffl <[email protected]>
>> Reply-To: WISPA General List <[email protected]>
>> Date: Thursday, April 26, 2012 2:31 PM
>> To: <[email protected]>
>> Subject: [WISPA] Customer Routers
>>
>> Hey guys,
>>
>> What are some of you providing for customer wireless routers if you
>> include them in the install as I do?  I currently have a batch of 10
>> Ubiquiti Air Routers and the first two I pulled out are giving me some
>> problems.  Could be a bad batch.
>>
>> I am also looking at TP-Link as they are about $30 on Amazon with
>> external antennas and pretty good reviews.
>>
>> TP-Link TL-WR841N
>>
>> What are you guys using?
>>
>> --
>> Darin Steffl
>> _______________________________________________ Wireless mailing list
>> [email protected] http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless
>>
>>
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-- 
Darin Steffl
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