Review: 802.11ac Synology RT2600ac router is the best AirPort replacement we've found yet

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2021
At AppleInsider, we've reviewed a number of routers and mesh Wi-Fi systems trying to find the best ones after Apple discontinued the Airport and Airport Express. Right now, the Synology RT2600ac is our favorite for a stand-alone router.

synology rt2600ac
Look at all those antennae


Networking hardware is far, far more than the sum of its parts. For instance, on the box, the Synology RT2600AC looks like nearly every other router. It's got four Gigabit Ethernet ports in addition to the WAN port. It provides 2.4GHz and 5GHz networks with 802.11ac speeds of up to 800Mbps and 1.73Gbps respectively, it has a few USB ports for storage and peripheral sharing. And, as a nicety, it has a SD card reader -- but more on all that in a bit.

These specs look great out-of-the-box, but we've seen similar before, and it hasn't been good.

But, we're just going to stay this straight away -- the $199 Synology RT2600ac router delivers strong Wi-Fi rivaling mesh systems we've installed. The 4x4 MIMO antenna and the router hardware is able to combine the 2.4GHz and 5GHz radios under the same network name and let devices join the radio that delivers the best signal.

Almost every esoteric option you could wish for in regards to network settings is available -- and this turns out to be great, instead of just being a confusing jumble of features.

rt2600ac
and all the LEDs, including WAN1 and WAN2


Synology, historically speaking, isn't a consumer router company. Their history is in making network attached storage, or NAS products. Here, they've modified the operating system they ship on their NAS products, added network interfaces for routing, and made something super-flexible, appropriate as a gateway for home or small business.

Networking
Network Center covers the basic routing functions


Many recent routers attempt to make things easy by providing setup wizards, basic and advanced modes, or they strip out features, or make setup possible from a mobile phone app only -- and Synology hasn't gone that way. Synology's RT2600ac does work with the company's DS Router mobile app which makes initial setup easy.

After setup, this app is more for monitoring connections and making a few small configuration changes, or scheduling hours when devices can have access to the Internet. The greater flexibility in configuration is done via the browser -- a welcome return to "standards."

the main interface
The web app is a desktop and icons metaphor


The interface for the Synology RT2600ac, just like the NAS products, looks like a desktop operating system that just happens to be running in the browser. It has it's own menu bar, desktop icons, and even a light App Store, called Package Center. This can be a little daunting if you've never set up a network connection without the help of a setup wizard, but it's not difficult once you get the hang of it.

Package Center
Package Center is the app store


Network configuration is done in the sensibly named "Network Center." Here, you can configure the wyour Internet connection from your ISP -- your "wide-area network" -- whether that's just DHCP like you'd use with a cable provider, PPPoE like you'd get from some DSL providers, DS-Lite (dual stack, IPv4 packets encapsulated in IPv6), configure your local network, port forwarding, quality of service, security, and operation modes.

AP settings
It's possible to set the router as an access point, too.


An application named "Wi-Fi Connect" controls some of the same settings as in Network Center, but it's here that settings like scheduling a guest network, or setting up a mesh point system can be done. It also allows you to set up a captive portal for a guest network.

Guest network
A Guest Network can have a captive portal page, which is nice

Connectivity

Like we said, the Synology RT2600ac has a USB3.0 port, a USB2.0 port, and an SD card reader compatible with SDXC and SDHC. You can connect storage devices and use them for file sharing in a sort of network-attached-storage-lite way, connect a printer, and even set that printer up as a Google Cloud Printer. When you connect a storage device, you can use it with the DS File mobile app, via the web browser, or FTP/SFTP.

USB
The USB 3.0 port can be set to have slower speeds so as to not impact Wi-Fi.


For those of us who miss the Apple Time Capsule, Synology lets you use the connected storage for Time Machine backups by checking a box in the "Control Panel" application under File Services. There's a checkbox for Bonjour Printer Services as well, which will advertise the USB-connected printer to the Mac -- but it lacks AirPrint services.

time machine
Note the Time Machine settings under Mac File Services, and Bonjour Printer Sharing

Adding features to the router

In the "Package Center" application, it's possible to download a few extensions to the router's functionality. Media Center turns the router into a DLNA server, which will let it serve media to a PS3, PS4, Xbox 360, Xbox One or Samsung TV. This is a little less interesting to us as Apple TV fans unless you've invested in a DLNA app, but it's there if you have one of these other devices and want to play files to the TV.

Media Center
If you install Media Center, it makes the storage available for DLNA media sharing


Another application in the Package Center is Download Station. Download Station supports BitTorrent, HTTP, FTP, NZB, QQDL and eMule. If you enter a search term and select a file, it will download it to the connected storage, allowing for a local, and self-hosted cloud setup. There's a search field to search for files from BT trackers, and It's also possible to add an RSS feed containing links and have the router download all the files in the feed.

download station
It's interesting that Synology choose to include this application.


Also in the Package Center are networking applications. Threat Prevention is intended to prevent the router from infection and data compromise, with Safe Access adding parental controls, web filters, and time quotas. The highlight of all this is the VPN Plus Server application allowing use of WebVPN or a client application to access the server through a wide range of protocols, including SSL VPN, Remote Desktop, SSTP, OpenVPN, L2TP/IPsec, PPTP, and site to site.

ports
On the back of the RT2600ac is the WAN1 port, USB 2.0, and the four port gigabit switch.


The router has the ability to turn the first port of the LAN 4 port gigabit switch into a secondary WAN port for multihoming across two ISPs. If you had Internet service from both a cable and a DSL provider, for example, you could connect them both and have the router set to failover gracefully should one of the two connections fail. Or, you could use one of the USB ports with a 3G/4G LTE modem and use that for failover service.

WAN settings
Here, you can configure the second WAN interface, and set VLAN and port priority for it under IPTV settings


The Synology RT2600ac is one of the most flexible routers we've seen. It isn't always the easiest to configure for some strange edge case uses, but nearly every option seems to be present. We used the IPTV settings Synology provides to configure the WAN port on VLAN 2 with medium priority for Quality of Service (QoS), and were able to replace the network box modem our Internet service provider requires. We were able to connect the router directly to the fiber jack, something other routers haven't been able to do without another device in the middle. Admittedly, this is very esoteric and specific to our ISP, but it shows just how adaptable the Synology RT2600ac is to a wide range of situations.

DS router app
The mobile app is pretty flexible, too.

What's not to love?

We have a few wishes and comments. It's great that the Mac printer sharing feature supports Bonjour. We wish it also supported AirPrint for iOS devices.

We wish that it included a version of Video Station, the application Synology includes on their NAS products, which works with their DS Video app on AppleTV and iOS devices. That would be so much better than DLNA.

Lastly, when the device needs a reboot, it can take up to a full 10 minutes to shut down orderly and come back to life. From a cold power on, it takes at least 4 minutes for it to be ready. This is not a fast booting router, but once it's booted, it's excellent.

The Synology RT2600ac has great range and Wi-Fi performance. It has a small number of applications in its Package Center to enhance features, and it covers everything from parental controls and threat prevention to downloading files, acting as a light NAS, and a VPN server. It's relatively easy to set up, and doesn't take away advanced user's options by taking away features.

There's a lot to like here, and it is our favorite AirPort replacement router so far.

Score: 5 out of 5.

Where to buy

The Synology RT2600ac is available for $199.99 at both Amazon and B&H Photo, the latter offering free expedited shipping within the contiguous U.S. for all shoppers.
n2itivguy
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 50
    My question is:   should I just keep using my Airport Extreme tower, or do this alternatives outweigh the remaining life in my current Airport wireless router?

    watto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 50
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,861administrator
    jsh56 said:
    My question is:   should I just keep using my Airport Extreme tower, or do this alternatives outweigh the remaining life in my current Airport wireless router?

    If it's working for you, then there isn't a compelling reason to replace it. However, it is nearly always easier to migrate to something while the old unit is functional, rather than waiting for the old one to crash and burn.
  • Reply 3 of 50
    Looks so ugly. Disgusting even.
    lwioMplsPdavgreg
  • Reply 4 of 50
    Very cool router but not having AirPrint is a let down. But is AirPrint feature really necessary if the printer is already has AirPrint built-in?
    edited December 2018
  • Reply 5 of 50
    lewklewk Posts: 25member
    Are there any wireless access units other than the Apple that have the audio port? I use my Airport units to connect various stereos in different rooms so that I can play the same feed throughout the house. The fact that it also helps even out my wireless is definitely nice, but I'm using them mostly for the wireless audio.
    davgregwatto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 50
    Dr. MidnightDr. Midnight Posts: 2unconfirmed, member
    I use this router in our office and it is excellent.  Recently added the mesh router component (MR2200ac) to take care of some areas that were not getting a great wifi signal and it worked well.  I use Synology NAS products so the router OS was familiar.  I agree with AppleInsider this router is a good Airport replacement.
    watto_cobraargonaut
  • Reply 7 of 50
    wood1208wood1208 Posts: 2,913member
    For last 2 years, I am using Netgear Nighthawk(R) X4S R7800 AC2600 4x4 Dual Band Smart WiFi Router, Gigabit Ethernet, MU-MIMO, and that is awesome router.

  • Reply 8 of 50
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,861administrator
    Very cool router but not having AirPrint is a let down. But is AirPrint feature really necessary if the printer is already has AirPrint built-in?
    It is not.
    ravnorodomhodarchristopher126DAalsethcaladanianwatto_cobraGeorgeBMacn2itivguyargonaut
  • Reply 9 of 50
    Reviewing routers in a meaningful way that measures throughput performance in various networking scenarios is not for the casual reviewer. You can't approach it the same way you would for the newest iOS game-of-the-minute. Yet that is the approach taken here. In the super competitive field of routers, how do you "review" a newcomer to the market--and award it a perfect score no less--without a single measurement of performance and how that stacks up against the competition? All you've provided is an overview of the software package that accompanies a hardware product, with a generic summary of hardware performance ("rivals mesh systems") that's based on who knows what because you appear to have done none of the throughput performance measurement work that goes into a comprehensive and useful router review. This is one of the most disappointing and useless reviews I've read on AI.

    In response to the question from Jsh56 above: if the WfFi performance you're getting out of your AE Extreme is not causing you any issues--i.e., sluggish performance and/or weak signal areas--then sticking with your AE Extreme may be fine. Some of that answer will depend on how many devices are on your network and the distance your WfFi signal has to cover. I switched from an AE Extreme Tower w/Time Capsule to a new router back in June and I noticed an immediate and significant difference in throughput speed and the elimination of weak signal areas in my apartment. And I'm continuing to use my Extreme Tower as the storage device for Time Machine backups--I simply shut off the radios on the AE Extreme and connected it via Ethernet to the new router. My iMac and MacBook still back up to it automatically with no problems. 
    edited December 2018 neilmednlgatorguyn2itivguyargonaut
  • Reply 10 of 50
    MplsPMplsP Posts: 3,921member
    Looks so ugly. Disgusting even.
    Yeah - the Airport and a lot of the other newer routers had a much nicer design so you didn't mind leaving it out on a shelf somewhere. This thing looks more like a Romulan ship that you need to hide away. Maybe you could disguise it as a piece of modern art?
    dewmeracerhomie3davgregwatto_cobraargonaut
  • Reply 11 of 50
    hodarhodar Posts: 357member
    How I wish that Tim Cook had not killed the Apple router business unit.

    I have had several routers (Linksys, Linksys, Asus, Netgear, etc) that work great out of the box; then about a year later, they start exhibiting what I call "Router Rot".  They work, then slow down and require a reset to restore full functionality.  This continues to degrade where the router needs to be reset weekly, then every other day, and finally daily.  Not sure if this is a sign of thermal, as in the thermal paste has dried out - or degradation of capacitors, or a combination of both.

    But, when I finally was sick of it, that I listened to my buddy, and paid the extra for an Apple - this annual trip to the electronics store ended.  My old 802.11n router works just fantastic, never needs to be reset- it's a frickin' rock.  I now use this as an extension to my Air Port Extreme tower, which is 802.11ac.  I am lucky enough to be connected to fiber, so my home has 150-250 mbps (I could boost this to 1 Gbps for another $15/month - but at the present speeds - seriously, why bother).

    If Apple made a router, that supported whatever is beyond 802.11ac - I would be among the first to say "take my money".
    caladanianwatto_cobra
  • Reply 12 of 50
    Thanks for doing the work! And the write-up. It's good to know which device is reccomended. 

    I'll miss Apple's elegant, white design and easy to use software. I guess it's back to the blue/black plastic-y devices found at Best Buy. Ugh!

    This would definitely be going in the closet! :)
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 13 of 50
    vmarksvmarks Posts: 762editor
    charlesn said:
    Reviewing routers in a meaningful way that measures throughput performance in various networking scenarios is not for the casual reviewer. You can't approach it the same way you would for the newest iOS game-of-the-minute. Yet that is the approach taken here. In the super competitive field of routers, how do you "review" a newcomer to the market--and award it a perfect score no less--without a single measurement of performance and how that stacks up against the competition? All you've provided is an overview of the software package that accompanies a hardware product, with a generic summary of hardware performance ("rivals mesh systems") that's based on who knows what because you appear to have done none of the throughput performance measurement work that goes into a comprehensive and useful router review. This is one of the most disappointing and useless reviews I've read on AI.

    In response to the question from Jsh56 above: if the WfFi performance you're getting out of your AE Extreme is not causing you any issues--i.e., sluggish performance and/or weak signal areas--then sticking with your AE Extreme may be fine. Some of that answer will depend on how many devices are on your network and the distance your WfFi signal has to cover. I switched from an AE Extreme Tower w/Time Capsule to a new router back in June and I noticed an immediate and significant difference is throughput speed and the elimination of weak signal areas in my apartment. And I'm continuing to use my Extreme Tower as the storage device for Time Machine backups--I simply shut off the radios on the AE Extreme and connected it via Ethernet to the new router. My iMac and MacBook still back up to it automatically with no problems. 
    Hi Charles, 

    We have a test setup that has a computer on the WAN side and a computer on the LAN side, and we WGET files across them to see how well the router routes. It's mildly annoying to set up and tear down, but we do it. This test setup eliminates variability in ISP or links after the ISP. I apologize for not including a table showing the results of copying files across at speed.

    We have also done signal strength and dispersion tests in a number of different homes with this router, and have the heatmaps to show for it. As a standalone router, it really does match or outperform some of the mesh systems we have tested in the past. The Amplifi systems, for example, are very directional: the main units tend to have the strongest signal coming off their front faces with the touchscreen LCDs. 

    We do not compare routers to each other in the same review - that is, we name the one unit we're reviewing and don't name others we have reviewed in the past. The short summary of those comparisons is, in terms of routing and wifi signal strength and dispersion, Synology is on par with the Zyxel 3000 we reviewed not long ago, and better than either of Amplifi's products we reviewed in the past. Synology comes out far ahead because they don't cripple the configuration in all the ways that all the others do - performance and options = top score.
    caladanianwatto_cobran2itivguyargonaut
  • Reply 14 of 50
    vmarksvmarks Posts: 762editor
    MplsP said:
    Looks so ugly. Disgusting even.
    Yeah - the Airport and a lot of the other newer routers had a much nicer design so you didn't mind leaving it out on a shelf somewhere. This thing looks more like a Romulan ship that you need to hide away. Maybe you could disguise it as a piece of modern art?
    Airport was lovely.

    Amplifi HD and Amplifi Instant Router try to mimic that - but they don't perform as well at speed or wifi signal, and don't do Time Machine.

    What are you to do, pick something functional, or something that looks nice, when you can't have both?
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 15 of 50
    vmarksvmarks Posts: 762editor
    hodar said:
    How I wish that Tim Cook had not killed the Apple router business unit.

    I have had several routers (Linksys, Linksys, Asus, Netgear, etc) that work great out of the box; then about a year later, they start exhibiting what I call "Router Rot".  They work, then slow down and require a reset to restore full functionality.  This continues to degrade where the router needs to be reset weekly, then every other day, and finally daily.  Not sure if this is a sign of thermal, as in the thermal paste has dried out - or degradation of capacitors, or a combination of both.

    But, when I finally was sick of it, that I listened to my buddy, and paid the extra for an Apple - this annual trip to the electronics store ended.  My old 802.11n router works just fantastic, never needs to be reset- it's a frickin' rock.  I now use this as an extension to my Air Port Extreme tower, which is 802.11ac.  I am lucky enough to be connected to fiber, so my home has 150-250 mbps (I could boost this to 1 Gbps for another $15/month - but at the present speeds - seriously, why bother).

    If Apple made a router, that supported whatever is beyond 802.11ac - I would be among the first to say "take my money".
    802.11ad in the 60GHz band is coming. But no iPhone or Mac supports it at this time. You could only use it with a USB adapter at this time. Give it six months to a year, and that should change. But my experience with it so far is limited. What I have heard is that it works very well for line of sight, but walls are problematic. We'll be looking at it in the new year.

    The Synology is one we've had for a year and change. It's relevant because they're introducing their MR mesh router nodes for it. It hasn't suffered router rot (something I saw with a lot of Linksys and SMC I've had over the years. Synology has been a rock, like you say, and this is using it on AT&T 1gbps fiber and Google 1gbps fiber.

    Bad capacitors were a thing of the early 2000s, mostly. It was a cost-cutting measure to use Chinese capacitors instead of Japanese ones, and manufacturing processes weren't up to snuff for the part substitutions. You'd see them leak out the bottom, or balloon the top up, or both. Your 802.11n AirPort is probably from around 2006, by which time most of the bad caps were gone. 
    caladanianwatto_cobran2itivguyargonaut
  • Reply 16 of 50
    vmarksvmarks Posts: 762editor
    lewk said:
    Are there any wireless access units other than the Apple that have the audio port? I use my Airport units to connect various stereos in different rooms so that I can play the same feed throughout the house. The fact that it also helps even out my wireless is definitely nice, but I'm using them mostly for the wireless audio.

    Not so much.

    Chromecast Audio is one way of doing it, but it's not a first class citizen on iOS - you define speaker groups in Google Home app, and then push all the audio across. Or you could use AppleTV and extract the audio from HDMI with an adapter (or optical on older AppleTV).

    Other things people are doing is running shairport on raspberry pi. You could do it on any linux computer with a sound card, but Pi is small, which makes it attractive for the purpose. this article explains more.

    I have looked for a travel router with audio that I could run shairport on, but have yet to find one I can recommend.

    watto_cobra
  • Reply 17 of 50
    As SJ once said: "Even our butts look better than their faces!"
    neilmdewmecaladanianwatto_cobraargonaut
  • Reply 18 of 50
    vmarksvmarks Posts: 762editor
    ElCapitan said:
    As SJ once said: "Even our butts look better than their faces!"
    Yeah, everyone's routers are either alien spiders of antennae, or things that attempt to look nice but don't perform as well. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 19 of 50
    MplsP said:
    Looks so ugly. Disgusting even.
    Yeah - the Airport and a lot of the other newer routers had a much nicer design so you didn't mind leaving it out on a shelf somewhere. This thing looks more like a Romulan ship that you need to hide away. Maybe you could disguise it as a piece of modern art?
    Download CLOAK from the Package Center.
    LordeHawkwatto_cobra
  • Reply 20 of 50
    zimmiezimmie Posts: 651member
    Very cool router but not having AirPrint is a let down. But is AirPrint feature really necessary if the printer is already has AirPrint built-in?
    It's not, but this print server is for USB printers, not network printers. If your printer already has a network connection (either through WiFi or wired Ethernet), the print server in this router shouldn't matter.
    ravnorodomwatto_cobrabackstabn2itivguy
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