🚀 Elevate Your Home Network Experience!
The GL.iNet GL-B1300 (Convexa-B) is a high-performance home AC gigabit VPN router that offers dual-band wireless speeds of 400Mbps on 2.4GHz and 867Mbps on 5GHz. With 256MB RAM and 32MB Flash ROM, it supports OpenWrt for customizable networking and comes pre-installed with OpenVPN and WireGuard for enhanced security. The package includes the router, power adapter, Ethernet cable, and a user manual, ensuring you have everything you need for a powerful home network.
N**K
The only GL.iNet that works with Azulle Quantum PC-Stick but has minor ocasional 5G hickups
I wanted an OpenWrt (LuCi) router as an upgrade to my Motorola Smart AC1900 because I need to configure a more sophisticated Guest LAN. I didn't need a mesh router because I only needed to reach a maximum 60ft. radius. I started with the lower-end GL.iNet routers but they all were at least 15% slower than my old Motorola Smart AC1900 and none of them worked properly with my Azulle Quantum PC-Stick (Win10) attached to my TV. Only the GL.iNet GL-B1300 (Convexa-B) worked properly with the PC-Stick and matched the Motorola Smart AC1900 download speed. It seems the GL-B1300's Qualcomm Atheros IPQ4028 SoC WiFi chipset works very well with the Azulle Quantum PC-Stick.Details:I have tried the following four additional GL.iNet routers and only the GL.iNet GL-B1300 (Convexa-B) was able to provide general 2.4G and 5G WiFi bandwidth comparable to my old Motorola Smart AC1900 router within a radius of 50ft (even after the latest GL.iNet firmware updates).GL.iNet GL-SF1200 (4 antennas)GL.iNet GL-MT1300 (Beryl)GL.iNet GL-A1300 (Slate Plus)GL.iNet GL-SFT1200 (Opal)A particular showstopper problem was that the above four routers could not connect with the Azulle Quantum PC-Stick (HDMI Win10) with more than 2.5Mb download data rate and yet they all supported 6Mb upload (my maximum cable upload speed). Only the GL-B1300 (Convexa-B) was able to connect to the PC-Stick at 30Mb download (same as my old Motorola Smart AC1900)Cons:1) The GL.iNet GL-B1300 does not transmit a large radius WiFi signal below the horizontal plane (i.e. you will have problems connecting on the lower floor unless you are directly underneath). However the 2.4G signal strength might improve by up to 20% (RSSI dBm) on the lower floor if the router is appropriately rotated 90-degrees on the vertical axis. Slightly inclining the router will also improve the 5G signal strength on the lower floor. This may provide just enough signal strength on lower floors to connect to the SSID using a reduced data bandwidth. This also means you may have issues pairing with a subordinate mesh router on a lower floor unless it is positioned below the master router. (Note mesh subordinates will not support the GUEST LAN if subordinate is custom configured via LuCi to connect to the master via Ethernet back-haul rather than the router's default "mesh" pairing button which uses WiFi. See GL.iNet Support Forum for details.)2) The 5G WiFi occasionally drops out and all 5G clients need to reconnect to 5G or fail-over to 2.4G. I have not seen this random dropout on 2.4G. The router brings 5G WiFi back up automatically. This happens about 4 time a day. So far this problem has not become a showstopper and I only experience a momentary jitter of my streaming video or "WiFi Calling" phone call. The LuCi System Log error message is:wlan: [25093:E:ANY] [soc1] FWLOG: [107759081] WAL_DBGID_TX_BA_SETUPThere already is a GL.iNet Support entry for this problem since 8/2022 but as of 2/2023 there is no posted solution.Pros:1) Of the five GL.iNet routers I have tried to use, this is the only one that has 5G and 2.4G bandwidth comparable to Motorola Smart AC1900 router within a 50ft radius. All of the other ones were at least 15% slower.2) If I really need to improve signal strength on a lower floor, I can easily get additional GL.iNet GL-B1300 WiFi connected mesh routers as subordinates and have a truly seamless and user friendly network.3) Unlike the four other GL.iNet routers, the GL-B1300 hardware platform is still directly supported by OpenWrt.org (as of 2/2023) and so the latest opensource updates can be installed if you don't trust, or don't want to wait for, GL.iNet OEM builds. (I have not tried this. See posts by other reviewers who have.)
R**K
Works great!
I love this device but I must say that this router may not be an easy setup for the non-technical folk. Follow the instructions and remember that Google is your friend. I never trust any wifi that's not my own; so when I visited a particular hotel I made sure I had this router with me. For me, the initial setup was a breeze. Once you get around the hotel's captive portal (Welcome Screen) to connect to the wifi you're basically done. The great thing is that once you connect once and create your personal network all other devices can connect without having to go through the captive portal process.I take it a step further to enable the VPN feature so that I know my data is kept confidential. I've tested it and so far it's been steady with no speed degradation. My advice to anyone who has connected this router but later is having trouble reconnecting it to public or captive portal wifi; make sure the VPN is turned off and try again. So far the router is working great for me and I'm happy I invested in my privacy, security, and peace of mind.
A**A
The best value and performance in an OpenWRT Router
I have bought at least 6 of those routers so far. Whenever a new router is needed, I get another one.They sit at my home, my parents', my office, and a couple more places that are connected to the internet. They perform for months on end without a hitch, and the only times they go offline is when my ISP is having trouble or when the power is out.Why this and not another router?- It supports OpenWRT. It's a good idea to update to the latest stock OpenWRT if you know how to (not the one customized by GL.iNet, the stock OpenWRT)- It makes mesh mode easy, albeit I have never used this. You will probably need this if you have a big home because the wireless signal is not as strong as routers with more powerful transmitters/larger antennae.- The processor inside will give you serious bandwidth if you use WireGuard/OpenVPN. 192Mbps is what GL.iNet advertises, but I have not been able to verify that as my downlink is below that.
J**Z
Flashed Latest OpenWrt 21.x version no problem. Can't use the Gl.INET stock firmware
The Stock firmware is an old version of OpenWRT and very limited.I needed multi-wan (mwan) and wifi client. Neither work well on the stock. You can't setup a wpa wifi client.The device is supported by OpenWrt, so I flashed the latest version. No problem: tethering; wifi client; wireguard; custom ttl; and multi ethernet wan. The wifi is fast. The ethernet wan ports are fast. You can set the firewall ttl. Wireguard is fast. The device is a quad core. So all is good.Some abnormalities:o The hardware has the stock wan port really mapped to switch port 2. So set it off on all ports and use 3 for the wan2.o On all OpenWrt routers I've tried, I could not get a stable config of multi wifi clients. I could get one working but not two at the same time.My use case is seasonal residence (no broadband); wifi; fire tv youtube tv, netflix ′ security cameras; alarm system; raspberry pi linux server. I monitor the property from home.For Internet: I have T-Mobile home internet(WAN with unlimited data) and also a cheap grandfathered Sprint mifi hotspot plan with a public IP address as a backup. Plus I'm experimenting with load balancing another mifi hotspot WAN.I can use the public ip or wireguard to get remote lan access. Also use remote desktop to raspberry server for things I can't do from home.So I use OpenWRT for mwan, load balancing, tethering, wireguard, & custom TTL. The device handles it great.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
1 month ago