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TP-Link N300 WiFi Extender(RE105), WiFi Extenders Signal Booster for Home, Single Band WiFi Range Extender, Internet Booster, Supports Access Point, Wall Plug Design, 2.4Ghz only

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$17.99

$ 7 .99 $7.99

In Stock

About this item

  • Extend WiFi Coverage - Boost Internet WiFi coverage with 2 external antennas for more reliable Wi-Fi, compatible with any WiFi Router, Gateway, Access Point
  • More than a WiFi Repeater - RE105 also supports AP mode which creates a new Wi-Fi Access point for home
  • Fast Ethernet Port - Experience wired speed and reliability anywhere in your home by connecting your favorite device to the fast ethernet port
  • Better Range with External Antennas - Two external antennas with MIMO technology for improved range versus standard range extenders
  • Set Up in Minutes - Easily set up and manage your WiFi in a few quick and easy steps using the TP-Link Tether app (Android, iOS). Find the optimal location for the best WiFi connection with an intelligent signal indicator
  • All WiFi extenders are designed to increase or improve WiFi coverage, not to directly increase speed. In some cases improving signal reliability can affect overall throughput
  • If you experience any trouble during or after set up, please contact us. TP-Link offers a 2 year warranty and 24/7 technical Support


Compact. Strong.
Despite its compact size, it may be hard to ignore the RE105 due to the truly impressive way that it projects Wi-Fi access into the areas of your home that your standard router simply cannot reach. The RE105 supports wireless speeds of up to 300Mbps and keeps all of your favorite devices running as fast as possible.
As Powerful As You Expect
The two external antennas with MIMO technology help set the RE105 apart from the rest. MIMO technology enhances your network by dramatically increasing wireless speeds and the two external antennas ensure that a stable wireless signal reaches you where you need it most.
Effortless Network Expansion
Two Simple Taps and You are Ready to Connect
Just press the WPS button on your router, then press the Range Extender button on RE105 to begin enjoying simple, expanded Wi-Fi.
Connect with Confidence
The Intelligent LED indicator provides a simple, color-coded indication, allowing you to find the perfect location.
Repeater When Router Fails You
The RE105 works as a repeater to save you from poor signal by expanding your router’s network coverage to the primary "dead zones".
Access Point For A New Network
When RE105 works in AP Mode, it turns Ethernet port into your own personal Wi-Fi hotspot to create a new network.Tether is an intuitive app that allows users to conveniently monitor the state of your range extender.
Easy Monitoring
Tether is an intuitive app that allows users to conveniently monitor the state of your range extender.


Abhishek
Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2025
Needed to split my wifi to a 2.4GHz band since my Orbi router wouldn’t allow me to. This works like a charm. Used it to connect an older device that wouldn’t connect to the newer 5Ghz band.
J. Aust
Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2024
It was initially easy to setup and use. However, for some reason, a few days later it decided it wanted my primary router address as its own. Needless to say you can't have the same IP address assigned to two different devices on your network. I finally discovered the cause in Windows Event Viewer. It showed the MAC address of the the Wi-Fi extender was the culprit. After reading some posts on their support website I saw suggestions to disable it's DHCP service. Once I reset the extender and reconfigured its settings I've had no issues. I haven't yet moved the devices back to it yet (such a pain) but I did test the signal out on my back porch (opposite side of house where my Wi-Fi router is). The signal was good and strong but the speeds were not great. I know extenders will do that and I expected that. But the devices I plan to use on it do not need great speeds to be useful. That includes a robot vacuum, 3 security cameras, and 1 garage door position monitor.The short story is, for the price, its a great deal! Be prepared to possibly have to troubleshoot.
BigRedAbraham
Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2024
I have a mesh wifi network in my house that mostly works, but there are dead spots in garage and the front corner of the yard. I now have two of these, one that makes a bridge to the electrical panel in the garage, where my solar system needs a wifi connection, and the other to a Moen smart water meter (leak detector). They are quick to set up and work reliably and they are cheap.I'm not using mine for anything else but occasionally I've used the one in the garage for my phone and it works fine.The only thing to know, and this is true for all range extenders, is that they create a new wifi network named (YourWifiNetowk_EXT by default). So you need to actively switch networks, which is less convenient than a mesh system where it happens seamlessly. But for to bring wifi to a stationary item, this is a perfect, easy and cheap solution!
Gabriela lopez rocha
Reviewed in Mexico on January 28, 2024
Buen producto
Carlos Mateos
Reviewed in Mexico on September 26, 2023
Excelente el producto, cumple con las expectativas de extender la red de wifi, fácil de instalar, el único problema es que viene todo en ingles. Hasta ahora todo bien
K. P. Keber
Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2023
So everyone: I just read an online article about WiFi. It was from a very popular gadget blog. It listed several things that people with WiFi problems should NOT do. High up on the list of things not to do is try to solve a WiFi problem with a WiFi extender. A WiFi extender is a device that accepts a weak WiFi signal and amplifies it, thus extending the signal further than the router originating the WiFi signal does.The article instead recommended that you replace your old router with a shiny, brand-new one. Maybe one of those new mesh systems, or one with WiFi 6! I've been noticing a lot of articles like this recently and sometimes that advice is good. It depends a lot on your situation… which is different for everyone.What I am here to tell you about is, when it is time to call bullshit on this. Practically all of these blogs have an interest in you buying equipment through a link they provide. In exchange, they get a small cut of whatever you buy. It's not a big deal— it usually doesn't affect the objective information they provide— but sometimes it is obvious that it increases the pressure to sell devices or equipment that you really don't need.In my 1000-square-foot condo, I am using Apple's Airport Extreme router. It's 5th generation, introduced in 2011. I bought it used from a UW student in Seattle. It was fine until we moved into this condo and got a bunch of voice-activated, "smart" devices like lightbulbs and cameras, all connected to the router's WiFi signal. Many of the devices were installed through multiple walls or otherwise distant so they got weak WiFi signals from the Airport Extreme router.I wound up running an Ethernet cable under baseboards and over doors from the router at the back of the condo to the front. At the farthest end, I installed a switch and a very cheap hardwired access point (AP). At the time it cost about $60 total and about 1 afternoon. It was fine until I installed WiFi cameras in and outside the garage. The garage cameras and Google speaker were at the edge of the Airport Extreme's WiFi range, even with the access point at the front of the building. I decided to get another WiFi extender to daisy-chain the AP's WiFi signal to the garage.Then, last weekend, I came across the article I mentioned. Right at the top of the list it said, Don't Use WiFi Extenders. Instead, it urged buying (admittedly good) new routers or mesh systems to replace your old router. That sent me soul-searching about whether to replace my old, used Airport Extreme with a Google Nest mesh 3-component system (on sale for $140) or to go with my original idea: an $18 WiFi extender from Amazon, plugged into an outlet in the garage and using my existing AP's signal.I finally went with the $18 approach. I installed it in the garage yesterday, then did a status check afterward with a WiFi app on my phone. The results knocked me out. The WiFi signal-to-noise ratio on my network was suddenly the best I could receive in the garage. The network congestion is terrible in my neighborhood. Previously, my next-door neighbor's WiFi came through clearer in my garage than my own network. But installing that extender meant that my network's signal sliced through nearby foreign networks loud and clear. The link speed on the farthest device (mounted just outside the garage door) is 130 MB/s. That is a lot less throughput than a new router would provide, but it is more than fast enough for my streaming cameras and that Google speaker.The signal analysis picture I uploaded shows the extender using the AP's wireless signal through two interior walls, but only about 3-4 yards (2.4-3.7 meters) apart.Now, I admit: I would like to buy a new router with all the bells and whistles. But man. It's hard to turn my nose up at such an inexpensive solution that works so well. The garage camera video streams now pop up instantly on my network feed, and all's right with the WiFi world.
Rodrigo Corona
Reviewed in Mexico on February 13, 2023
Por el precio que pague siento que si cumple con sus funcionalidades, sin embargo, notó la red extendida un poco inestable por lo que, aveces se llega a alentar.
L. D. Morris
Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2022
This is a review of my second TP-Link N300. The first one not only behaved erratically, but had an interfering effect on my home network, causing low transfer speeds and signal dropouts. It was returned the next day. Setup of the second device seemed to work OK using the WPS feature.Initially, at any of the various distances from my wireless router that I tried from 10' to 18' (and through an interior wall), the download speed on the extended network ranged from about 0.1 Mbps to about 6 Mbps, with a typical reported speed of less than 3 Mbps. Upload speed was on the same order, and tended to be slightly higher. (This matches the first device's completely unsatisfactory performance.)After about an hour, the signal strength from the device suddenly jumped about 15 dB, and download speeds also jumped about an order of magnitude. The attachment shows an iMac speed test result after this happened. The download speed is reported as 12.6 Mbps, but it reached as high as 25-30 Mbps. (For my purposes, this is entirely adequate, except for the other demonstrated problems.) Three hours later, this result could not be duplicated due to failure to make a server connection for the upload test.Even at this higher signal level, the device is still unreliable, as the attached WiFi Analyzer plot shows. The time span of that plot is roughly 20-30 seconds. A different WiFi analyzer on my phone shows download speeds ranging from 0.1 Mbps to an unsustainable maximum of 16 Mbps or more, but fails to complete the speed test because a connection to the server cannot be maintained.The extender was intended to provide a network connection to a home automation device at some distance from my router. It does not reliably serve that purpose. The second device, too, will be returned as defective out of the box.
Schaille
Reviewed in the United Arab Emirates on May 4, 2022
Don't buy that, this a scam item. At same area I check without 50MPS, with item 25MPS.
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