Last year, I bought a really nice ASUS RT-Ax3000. We have AT&T Fiber internet and pay for 1000mb/s download speeds. Our internet has worked really well for a year.

We have everything hooked up to this thing wirelessly: Sonos, HVAC, the garage door, Google Home, Nest, security cameras, etc.

About a month ago, it seemed that everything in our house was spotty. Then, I looked and realized all the lights in our router were out.

The router still works, everything is now running smoothly, and there is no NOTICEABLE issue with our internet. But now we are only getting 150mb/s.

Can I replace my router with the same one, keeping all the network names and password and the same, and avoid having to reset our entire house? Any advice?

  • otp@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Done it before when switching ISPs entirely (meaning new router and even IPs). Wifi is usually just SSID and password, no?

  • cpotteri@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Yes, you can replace your router with the same model (ASUS RT-AX3000) and keep all the network names and passwords the same. This should allow your devices to reconnect to the new router seamlessly, as they’ll recognize the network credentials.

  • Tim-in-CA@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Yup. I did that when I switched from Orbi to Eero. Everything connected back up and I have 100+ devices

  • North-Hope-4286@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Asus includes a facility to back up your settings (export) which you can then restore (import) to your new router. With that said, if your router is acting up due to some bad setting then you’ll just put that on the new router too! I’d also argue that in this case you wasted money on a replacement router for no reason. I would recommend that before spending any more money, that you:

    1. export your settings
    2. factory reset your old router
    3. set up your router manually with the old SSID/password/security settings

    If you still have issues you can buy the new router and import the settings. If not, you just saved on replacing a perfectly good device.

    Good luck🤞

  • jmbre11@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I have everyone’s house wireless the same so I can just go from my parents to grandmas to mine

  • Background-Marzipan8@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Login to the router and have a look for any settings backup option. If you find it download the file. Buy the same router and upload the file.

    Or cut n paste the SSID and PW across to the new router.

  • aaronw22@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I’m really confused about “all the lights were out” but everything still works? That’s not really a usual fault pattern with these kinds of equipment.