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The AX5400 is a marketing term intended to demonstrate the maximum possible speed for all the wireless radios combined. Since these speeds are almost never achieved in real world applications its usefulness is questionable, however the whole wifi market's marketing seems quite attached to it (since it does give an impressive looking number). for 2.4 bands we typically see, in real life situations) speeds from 10 to 200s, 5ghz gives us up to 500 to 600s and we have seen some wireless speeds a bit over 1 Gpbs on the 6ghz band, but 800s is more typical.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It’s a tri band router. It uses the currently (mostly useless) 6ghz band to claim that number. Ultimately it’s probably closer to “3000” 6ghz has high theoretical bandwidth but doesn’t pass through walls and doors, isn’t widely used on a lot of devices, and begins to degrade rapidly farther than about 5-10 feet. This is an overpriced router with a gimmicky band. On average, from 10’ away I would average 200-300MBps. Using my ASUS I average 700
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