D-Link DSL-2740B review
in Wireless routers
Verdict
Good value, but without the decent performance or the feature set of our award winners this month.
Review Date: 15 Jul 2008
Reviewed By: Jonathan Bray
Price when reviewed: £59 (£68 inc VAT)
Features & Design
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Value for Money
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Performance
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The days when you could stick a premium price tag on any old 802.11n router and hope it sold are over, as the bargain prices of the SMC and Linksys routers demonstrate this month.
This D-Link is nearly as cheap at a reasonable £59, but it can't live with the award-winning Linksys, which costs even less. Its design is bland and not nearly as slick as the Linksys' futuristic profile. And its performance isn't as good either.
A CD in the box covers installation, and does a reasonably good job of setting up your internet connection, encryption and a device password. You're better off using the web interface, however, as this contains predefined settings for a host of ADSL service providers, including some of the smaller companies such as Eclipse, Nildram and Zen Internet.
We also liked the fact that it randomly generates a security key in the wireless security settings wizard for you. We were less impressed that the wizard covers only WEP and WPA protocols, however - if you want to use the router in WPA2 or enterprise modes, you have to adjust those features manually.
A parental controls section lets you restrict access to certain URLs based on the time of day, but a bug prevents you from adding URLs with more than two dots (so www.bbc.co.uk, for example, doesn't work). There's also no facility to block keywords, which restricts its usefulness. More worrying, however, is the fact that even after running the setup wizards, the firewall remained switched off by default.
Performance was in keeping with the mixed feature set. It was only fractionally faster than the sluggish Netgear, with an average adjusted throughput of 24.7Mb/sec, and that performance wasn't consistent in all the in-house locations either - in the kitchen it was 4.5Mb/sec slower than in the same room. Long-distance speed was a little more impressive, at an adjusted 15.8Mb/sec, but again nothing special.
But it's not quite enough to make up ground over the competition. It seems well specified, but there are niggling annoyances around every corner. Performance is fine, but not up there with the best. And though it's cheap, the award winner costs less.
Author: Jonathan Bray
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