
AVM FRITZ! repeater 2400 WLAN Mesh CH
1733 Mbit/s, 600 Mbit/s
AVM FRITZ! repeater 2400 WLAN Mesh CH
1733 Mbit/s, 600 Mbit/s
Type C plug - Euro plug is also OK for Switzerland. - Product works excellently - easy installation.
If you prefer German-language menus or want to buy a device specifically for CH, take the CH version, otherwise the International version is technically identical.
We work with different suppliers and daily prices. For this reason, the price of an item may be adjusted upwards or downwards over time.
Yes, I can confirm that
Ohme CH has a Schuko plug. Then it needs an adapter for the ch sockets.
Yes, of course. (Use it together with Swisscom router) It basically doesn't care where the signal comes from.
Yes it would, but not as a mesh. Buy the Swisscom WLAn Box 2, which is Swisscom mesh-compatible. The AVM products are too, but only with AVM Mesh. If it has to be an AVM, buy the AVM FRITZ!Repeater 1200 AX International.
No the LAN port is not PoE capable
Unless you have a cable between the flat and the basement, a repeater will be of no use here, as you will not have a signal in the basement. The repeater must be within the range of the WLAN, otherwise it cannot receive and transmit signals. The repeater also has an RJ45 interface, so if you have a network cable from the flat to the basement, you can use the WLAN in the basement.
If this repeater was purchased as a supplement to an existing Fritzbox router, then the WLAN can be improved by activating the mesh WLAN function in the router and repeater. In general, WLAN systems are not ideal for virtual meetings with Zoom, Skype, Teams etc., as interruptions can occur very quickly even if there is interference from neighbouring WLANs. It may also help to change the WLAN channel, especially if there are several WLANs in the neighbourhood that use the same channel.
A WLAN repeater is not suitable for achieving better WLAN coverage. I recommend buying a WLAN mesh system. These consist of 2 or 3 devices that build up a network among themselves and can thus bring WLAN to the furthest corners of a flat. WLAN repeaters let the data throughput drop and the connected devices starve at the WLAN repeater until the signal breaks off completely. Then you have to wait until you can connect to another WLAN repeater. Incredibly tedious. With a WLAN mesh system, on the other hand, every WLAN-capable device grabs the strongest mesh node and there are no more WLAN signal interruptions when you move around within the area. One of the cheapest but still very good WLAN mesh repeater systems is the TP-Link M4, which is available with 3 WLAN mesh repeaters from 130 Swiss francs (also available as a set of 2 for just over 80): TP-Link Deco M4 AC1200 Dualband WLAN Mesh 3-pack
Both are possible. It can be used as a repeater or as an access point.
I think the only difference is the plug (CH vs EU)
Hello I found the following text from the AVM knowledge base: "The FRITZ!Repeater supports the WLAN encryption standard WPA3 with the WPA3 transition mode "WPA2 + WPA3". This mode allows the FRITZ!Repeater to connect simultaneously with WPA3 and WPA2 under the same radio network name and with the same network key. Since many devices do not yet support WPA3 and many older devices will not receive an update for WPA3, the WPA3 transition mode simplifies the transition from WPA2 to WPA3. The full text can be found at the following link: https://avm.de/service/fritzwlan/fritzrepeater-1200/wissensdatenbank/publication/show/3481_Unterstutzt-der-FRITZ-Repeater-WPA3/
Yes the Fritz works perfectly with the wingo router 1
Unfortunately not, it's a Wi-Fi repeater not 4G. This is the wrong product category.
As far as I know, there is no difference in the repeater between the Swiss (CH) and EU models. The encryption is related to the firmware. 7.21 supports WPA3. Since the CH model is cheaper, I would recommend this one.
These are maximum values and it also depends on the notebook or tablet how fast they can send or receive. This Fritz Repeater achieves a comparatively high transmission rate in the corresponding environments.
The cheaper model is the model for the Swiss market, the other is EU market. For the repeater, I don't think there is a difference between the models.
I haven't tested this, but I don't see any reason why it shouldn't work. You may have to change the country in the software, but this should actually be set in the router.
Yes, it works perfectly. The Sunrise router is also a FRITZ!
The repeater alone is sufficient to amplify the signal.
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