Thursday, March 3rd 2016

Tenda Announces the F3 Mainstream Router

Tenda Technology Inc. a subsidiary of Shenzhen Tenda, announces the F3, a slim, low-profile 300Mbps router that sets up easily for a perfect, economical home wireless solution. The F3 uses a high-end Broadcom networking chip for outstanding, consistent networking performance. This advanced chip makes for a more reliable connection while streaming HD videos, uploading large files, video conferencing, or any of the myriad high-bandwidth demands on today's routers.

Sick of WiFi dead zones? Three external high-gain omnidirectional antennas give the F3 network coverage up to 200 square meters, keeping the many mobile devices, computers, and home media players connected in every corner of the house. The F3 employs IP-based control settings allowing users to allot specific bandwidth allowances for different computers and tasks. These settings can prevent non-critical applications from diluting precious bandwidth when under high demand, ensuring the best use of networking resources in a home network.
Easy Setup and Configuration
Tenda's user interface is clean, minimal, and intuitive - tech-savvy enthusiasts and first-time router user's alike will appreciate the F3's streamlined 30-second setup time. Once installed, adjusting settings in the control panel is simple and straightforward.

Available now, the F3 is priced at US $24.99.
Add your own comment

3 Comments on Tenda Announces the F3 Mainstream Router

#1
baobrain
Broadcom chip? Count me out, Broadcom is one company that has given me the most trouble ovwe the years with shoddy drivers and hardware.
Posted on Reply
#2
Kursah
baobrainBroadcom chip? Count me out, Broadcom is one company that has given me the most trouble ovwe the years with shoddy drivers and hardware.
What do you expect for $24.99 MSRP?

This device is crap and probably is mediocre at best for a gateway device...folks would probably be better off renting the ISP combo modem/router instead...
Posted on Reply
#3
remixedcat
baobrainBroadcom chip? Count me out, Broadcom is one company that has given me the most trouble ovwe the years with shoddy drivers and hardware.
Thier router SoCs and radios have actually been more stable then Realtek, and QCA in my tests

Roku uses Broadcom as well.. My Rokus are very stable network wise.
Posted on Reply
Nov 21st, 2024 13:23 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts