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Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)
Vendor
D-Link

D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)

3.8
Regular price
€88,00
Sale price
€88,00
Regular price
€144,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€56,00)
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  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • AC1750 WiFi range extender: Ultra fast AC1750 wireless speeds (1, 300 Mbps on the 5 gigahertz + 450Mbps on the 2.4 gigahertz) for all your 4K/HD media streaming and gaming needs
  • Simultaneous dual band WiFi: extend both 2.4 gigahertz and 5 gigahertz WiFi at the same time for a more reliable WiFi network
  • High speed Gigabit port: connect wired devices such as gaming consoles, blue Ray players, smart TVs, or streaming players directly to the Gigabit Ethernet port
  • Smart Signal Indicator: indicator will help you find the best location to place the device for optimal WiFi coverage throughout your home
  • One push setup: easily sync up with your router by clicking on WiFi protected Setup (WPS) button
  • Intuitive user interface: built in setup Wizard and qrs mobile app for simple setup and configuration
  • Flexibility: work with any standard router or gateway

Shipping and Returns

  • We offer tracked shipping on all orders. Tracking information will be shared as soon as the order is dispatched.
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  • All customers are entitled to a return window of 14 days, starting from the date of delivery of the product(s).
  • Customers are advised to read our return policy for details of the return process, eligibility, refunds as well as cancellations or exchanges.
  • In case of any issues or concerns about Shipping or Returns, please contact us and we will be happy to help.

Customer Reviews

Works great as a media bridge despite lack of instructionsI wanted to connect several computers and an Xbox together by ethernet and then have them all connect to the existing WiFi network in our house, which is old (1907) construction with plaster walls, etc., and about 3600 sf. The WiFi router is downstairs and the units to be connected are upstairs. I didn't want to generate a new extended WiFi signal upstairs because I had previously tried using an extender and it seemed to interfere with our TV system, which uses WiFi to send programming throughout the house. So I wanted a bridge, not an extender.This unit was easy to install, received strong 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz signals from our downstairs router, and now provides 40 Mbps download and 11 Mbps upload speeds, which is the maximum promised by our ISP (CenturyLink in Seattle). The devices connected together by ethernet can now communicate with one another at a much higher speed, which was the point of the exercise.My only complaint is that the instructions that came with the Dlink unit were totally focused on its use as an extender. To configure it as a bridge or wireless access point (the other two possibilities), you first need to connect to it by WiFi and run their installation wizard in your browser.. Instructions on how to run the wizard are pretty clear but I think they should have said explicitly how to configure a bridge or WAP.5Don't waste your money. Don't buy this brandDon't waste your money on this, I got it because it was affordable compared to what's out there & I highly regret it. Watch a video on how long it takes to set up & it never works with the app till you reset it. Then expect it to stop working sometimes 3 times a month & then it needs to be programmed again & again. I have a top of the line router so I know it's not that. If you buy this after what I've told you, you will be doomed to be retarded without a WiFi signal the end.1Loses connection every day for an hour or two.The bandwidth is very good. The look is great. The inclusion of an Ethernet port is great for smart TVs. But, it just keeps losing connectivity. About 1-2 times a day it just loses connectivity. It will correct itself in a couple hours. It can be very frustrating if you have something set to default to it such as a smart TV as you have to change your connection until it gets its act together.When it works... great. Otherwise, very disappointing.2One of the few simple Bridges available to consumersA Bridge is NOT an extender. It can do that, but it is actually a converter of wireless signal to a wired signal. The back has four Cat-6 cable ports, so it is also a Switch. You put it up high where you get a good signal from your Wi-Fi transmitter and it provides a strong signal to you via the Ethernet wires. It uses its larger antennas to make a strong connection with your transmitter, and sends back a strong signal to the transmitter.This model works with AC Wi-Fi transmitters, but also is back compatible with previous versions. For maximal throughput you need to have all your devices set the fastest protocol or it slows down the entire system. That seven-year-old laptop still using protocol G will reduce everybody's speed since the Wi-Fi transmitter needs to pace it self to the slowest receiver.This device actually solves that. You turn off the slow Wi-Fi in the older device, run a wire to this unit and it communicates with your main Wi-Fi transmitter using the fastest (current) protocol. It then sends down the wire a very fast signal to the ancient computer that is plugged into it.I use mine to send and receive Wi-Fi across the house and the D-Link Wireless AC1200 switch has wires that go to my TV, Blu-Ray, Roku and a small computer at that end of the house. They all talk to the Internet at about 50 Meg. They all think they are hard-wired to the Internet. I do not tell them otherwise.Like all computer devices it comes with a default password for the screen that sets them up. Please change this so that you are not a target for bad guys. I advise writing your unit's and Wi-Fi transmitter's passwords on a piece of paper that you tape to the bottom of each unit. Years later you will be thankful, and it is not a security risk. If a stranger is in your house looking at the passwords at the bottom of your Bridge, your problem is not the password.5AC2600 (DAP-1860) ReviewFor some reason Amazon has allowed the ratings for three completely different products to merge. This is for the AC2600. If you read the reviews for this model, the people that are happy with it are using it as a range extender. I am using it as a wired access point, and my experience has been much different. It is terrible. I have purchased two of these, and have been trying to figure out what is wrong with them for a couple years. Sometimes it decides to send the internet, other times not. No other access point I have had before has behaved like this. There are virtually no settings to configure, so no hope of fixing it. This thing has major problems.1AP mode does not function, will not route from AP to existing network.I ordered two of these to use as wireless access points (which the product description clearly states is an operating mode, i.e. AP mode). I spent at least 8 hours trying to get these units configured for use as an access point, both units were installed directly into my wired network and connected to my gigabit switch. I set up the wireless access for both 2.4 and 5.0 frequencies, no problems there. I was able to connect to both units wirelessly and was also able to access the configuration web apps via my existing network, no problems there.The problem? Neither unit would route traffic from the wireless AP to my existing network. There was not a single packet that made it from the units to my switch or to any other machine on my network. I think there is a serious flaw in the routing software on these units and the AP mode is broken and will not function. Beware if buying for use as an AP for your existing network.1It takes a very long time to connect to the ...Update 10/5/2017I found the issue. It turns out the problem was that my router was dropping the connection and blacklistingthe bridge so it was unable to connect afterward. What I did to fix this was to put the router on anelectrical timer so it reboots every night and its cache is cleared. The bridge connection issue has sincegone away.ORIGINAL REVIEWIt takes a very long time to connect to the internet. After I re-boot it, it's hit or miss. I use it as a WiFi bridge.After the DHCP lease expiration (the Motorola router is the DHCP server), it does not always connect back tothe router. The 3 devices I have connected to it via ethernet are left without a connection. I'm not surewhy it takes so long for it to boot and find the internet and also why it's so hit-and-miss after a DHCP leaseexpiration. It seems that assigning a static IP on the router side by using the MAC address of the D-Linkmay hold some promise of reliability. When it works, it works. When it doesn't, it takes a lot of troubleshootingto get it to work.5Would buy again, would recommend.Delighted with the performance on this.Setup is simple.How I used it:it's in an Ethernet wired household that also has wifi. I'm plugging this into Ethernet and using 3 of these as APs to extend wifi everywhere.Because it also has 5 gigabit (others products have 100mbit, beware) ports it serves as a good hub near the entertainment system, near the pc/office, etc.Net result: I have gigabit eithernet everywhere and wifi that runs full speed all the way to the edges of my property outside.How I set it up:Didn't use WAP but that's an option. Plugged an Ethernet cable in, browsed to the dlink.local website (it's printed along with MAC address and such on a sticker on the bottom as well as a convenient "business card' that comes with it).I flipped it to AP mode, set the wifi SSID and password to match the wireless router I was already using. I set each to a separate channel (see complaint below)I went ahead and hard set the local IPs and renamed the APs - only done because I have 3 of them and it makes it easier to open a browser to just one.Only complaint:This may not apply to you: It has automatic channel selection. It will find and empty 2.4 and 5ghz wifi band and choose that. Per a wifi scanning/metering app I use it appears to do this well. However: I have 3 of these plus the main router and a few "leaks" from neighbor's wifi. At the end of the day all 4 of them couldn't sort out clear channels and it took some human intervention to hard set the channels on clear bands.Would buy again. Would recommend.5Great product when used as a wired Access Point. I attached two DAP-1650's to my D-Link DIR-825. 5Ghz everywhere!!!I just purchased and installed a second one; I now have 5 bar signal strength on three 2.4Ghz channels and three 5Ghz channels on all three floors of my house.My D-Link DIR-825 Dual Band router (installed in the basement) could barely transmit the 5Ghz signal to the second floor; so I rarely had any of my mobile devices using the wide open 5Ghz channels. In addition, the 2.4Ghz signal strength was not that impressive (largely due to the metal heating ducts and tile kitchen floor the signal had to pass through); so I only had a few areas in my house where I could enjoy streaming videos and fast web browsing.Last year I installed a Securifi Almond range extender (ran an Ethernet wire to the family room and configured it as a wired Access Point with the same SSID and password as the DIR-825 router in the basement). While that gave me full 2.4Ghz coverage on all three floors of the house, it did not have 5Ghz capability. Using the WiFi Analyzer Android app, I could see there were up to 12 other routers (from the nearby neighbors) transmitting on the 3 main 2.4Ghz channels (1, 6, 11). So at times, my internet speed slowed down because of the same-channel 2.4Ghz traffic. However, there were none detected on any of the 5Ghz channels.So when I found the DAP-1650 range extender was released (I believe the only simultaneous dual-band, access-point configurable, range extender available), I quickly ordered one. It worked so well, I purchased a second one.I now have the DIR-825 router in the basement configured with channel 11 (2.4Ghz) and channel 40 (5Ghz).The first DAP-1650 installed in the family room configured with channel 1 (2.4Ghz) and channel 161 (5Ghz).The second DAP-1650 is installed in a second floor bedroom configured with channel 6 (2.4Ghz) and channel 153 (5Ghz).The three 2.4Ghz channels are under one SSID/password and the three 5Ghz channels are on a different SSID/password (The two SSIDs have 2G or 5G in the name to tell them apart). All mobile devices automatically switch channels to lock on the strongest one at any given time; I only have to manually select between the 2.4 or 5 Ghz SSIDs.I changed the second DAP-1650's device ID to dlinkap2 (vs the default of the first one: dlinkap), so I can monitor/configure each DAP-1650 separately.I now have 5 bars of 2.4Ghz coverage anywhere in the house, driveway, and yard (usually at my Comcast maximum 30MB/sec download speed). The 5Ghz signal is 4-5 bars anywhere inside the house (consistent 30MB/sec speed); outside the signal drops considerably, so the mobile devices jump over to the 2.4Ghz channels. Inside the house, I primarily stay attached to the 5Ghz channels because they have no competing traffic from the neighbors. Speed is faster and does not drop off at any time.I will probably disable two of the 2.4Ghz channels and just use the one DAP-1650 in the family room to support the three older tablets/laptops that only have 2.4Ghz channels.BTW - On the DAP-1650 in the family room, I have a PlayStation, TV, and Blu Ray player attached to the three available Ethernet ports (Ethernet port 1 is attached to the DIR-825 in the basement); so I was able to remove the small D-Link 4-port switch (DGS-1005G) I was using with the Almond.5Full WIFI Coverage Everywhere I need itConnected the D-Link AC1200 to my Asus AC68U router through a switch. The purpose was to use the D-Link as a hard wired access point in the lower level of my house to provide high performance WIFI coverage throughout. I have the NETGEAR GS108E 8-Port switch that I use to run hard wire to each bedroom, living room and basement. I essentially have it set up: Internet to Modem to Router to Switch to D-Link Access Point. I set up both 2.5G and 5G SSIDs with the exact name and pw as my Asus router. This enable my devices to switch between the Asus and D-Link automatically. The setup took a solid 15-30 minutes and now I have full bar wireless coverage in every area of my house and yard. I've included a quick diagram of how I set it up. Note that the D-Link also has 4 ports that can be used for additional hardwire access if needed.5
D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)

D-Link AC1750 WiFi Range Extender with Dual Band Gigabit WiFi Booster Wireless Repeater and Smart Signal Indicator (DAP-1720)

3.8
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€88,00
Sale price
€88,00
Regular price
€144,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€56,00)