- Network Admin
The Guide to Network Cabling Standards for Business
5 Oct, 2025







£24.34 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £20-ish ex-VAT, the TP-Link TL‑WR802N is one of those “might as well try it” little routers. It’s best thought of as a travel/backup device for basic connectivity—think setting up a simple 2.4 GHz Wi‑Fi spot in a small office, home workshop, or meeting room where you don’t want to rely on a flaky existing access point. The Fast Ethernet bit is the key limitation: you’ll cap your speed on wired connections, so it’s not something I’d choose for heavy downloads, streaming lots of users, or any scenario where you actually care about throughput.
I’d recommend it for: short-term installs, overflow/backup Wi‑Fi, extending a single link where range is more important than speed, or environments with light usage (a few laptops/phones, basic web apps, printer/scanning that doesn’t need much bandwidth). I wouldn’t buy it as a primary router for a real office—2.4 GHz only means congestion in busy areas, and the overall “small box” class of hardware tends to be less stable under sustained load. If you need reliable business-grade coverage, better performance per user, or proper wired switching capacity, spend a bit more on something bigger and more capable.

D-Link
D-Link DWM-313 - Wireless router - WWAN 2-port switch 2.4 GHz - 3G, 4G - wall-mountable

TP-Link
TP-Link Omada ER706WP-4G V1 - Wireless router - WWAN 4-port switch - 1GbE - WAN ports: 6 - Wi-Fi 6 - Dual Band - 4G, 3G

Philips
Philips 27E1N1600AE - LED monitor - 27" - 2560 x 1440 QHD @ 100 Hz - IPS - 1500:1 - 1 ms - HDMI, USB-C - speakers - black

TP-Link
TP-Link Omada ER706W V1 - Wireless router 4-port switch - 1GbE - WAN ports: 6 - Wi-Fi 6 - Dual Band - wall-mountable
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