Netgear has been building up a portfolio of software-defined networking (SDN) products over the last few years. The introduction of the cloud-based Insight management feature to their lineup of SMB products has made their lineup of routers, switches, and access points appeal to a wider customer base. SMB-focused versions of leading technologies often lag their consumer counterparts by a year or so, and updates to flagship offerings are often spaced apart. However, Netgear's Wi-Fi 6 WAX630 (introduced in June 2021) is receiving a Wi-Fi 6E upgrade / companion today in the form of the WAX630E.

The Qualcomm-based WAX630E is one of the first reasonably-priced SMB Wi-Fi 6E APs for SMBs and micro-businesses. Many announced and leaked offerings in the Wi-Fi 6E space have been delayed (with FCC certification being a stumbling block), allowing Netgear's offering to become available for purchase ahead of the competition. The advantages of Wi-Fi 6E have been covered in multiple articles previously - including the original Wi-Fi Alliance announcement coverage, and Netgear's first Wi-Fi 6E product in the consumer space last year. The availability of a much wider interference-free spectrum in 6 GHz - up to seven usable 160 MHz - means that consumer experience is bound to be much better. The downside is the reduced range due to power limitations (APs at 30 dBm max., and clients at 24 dBm max.).

On the technical front, the WAX630E replaces the third 4x4 5GHz band of the WAX630 with a 2x2 6GHz radio. The 2.4 GHz radio configuration has also been reduced to 2x2 in the WAX630E from the 4x4 in the WAX630. These updates have allowed Netgear to price the WAX630E very competitively at $350 - a reasonable premium of $20 over the WAX630's $330. The reduced number of radios also allows the WAX630E to sport lower maximum power consumption compared to the WAX630 (27.6W vs. 30.1W). However, the availability of 160MHz channels enables the AP to be marketed as an AX7800 device (600 Mbps for the 2x2 2.4 GHz, 4800 Mbps for the 4x4 5 GHz, and 2400 Mbps for the 2x2 6 GHz radios). The AP has a 3000 sq. ft. coverage area. The WAX630E retains the same physical footprint as the WAX630, though it is slight heavier.

The AP supports PoE++ over the 2.5GbE LAN port (an extra 1Gbps LAN port is also available). Netgear recommends the Insight-managed MS510TXUP NBASE-T PoE++ switch for use with the WAX630E. The introduction of the new AP provides a wider range of options for Netgear's customers, whose needs with respect to required number of clients and client types to support, speeds, and pricing may vary.

Netgear believes that cloud-based management of Wi-Fi 6E APs will be a must in the long-run. Outdoor APs will eventually need to figure out a solution for ensuring that they do not interfere with other licensed 6 GHz band users. FCC mandates that real-time geolocation database cross-checks need to be performed by APs, which might be a challenge without regular updates to the database. While the WAX630E is not affected by this (due to its indoor nature), cloud-based management / real-time connection to a database maintained by the vendor might become essential moving forward. Netgear's Insight provides IT administrators with a centralized dashboard for multi-location installations, allowing for both local and remote management. Netgear is touting scalability and easy-to-use multi-location support as advantages over solutions requiring local controllers.

The WAX630E is available for pre-order today - $350 for the PoE variant, and $370 for the one with a power adapter included. The units are expected to ship early next month.

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  • James5mith - Tuesday, February 22, 2022 - link

    I'm very much enjoying my WAX620's. I have 2 of them locally managed. I hate the idea of paying for a cloud subscription to manage two AP's in my house.
  • kyuu - Tuesday, February 22, 2022 - link

    You have to pay a subscription to use Netgear's cloud management? Damn glad I went with TP-Link then for my centrally-managed (with cloud access) home network setup.
  • MightyGadget - Wednesday, February 23, 2022 - link

    It is off-putting for home users, but it is also only $9.99 per device/per year, and you get a year free when you buy (I think). There is no local cloud key or software to manage, which I think makes it appealing for some users, such as local IT companies managing small businesses
  • StevoLincolnite - Wednesday, February 23, 2022 - link

    I would rather just use a different company than deal with yet another subscription...
  • damianrobertjones - Monday, March 14, 2022 - link

    100%. The more we 'allow' this to happen and pay the price, the more they'll do it.
  • PeachNCream - Wednesday, February 23, 2022 - link

    Its a good business model to squeeze a little more blood out of the proverbial pear through subscription services just to manage a device that simply needs a web front end. Good for Netgear to pump people for more moolah when they don't decide to use their brains instead!
  • HardwareDufus - Monday, February 28, 2022 - link

    These devices are expensive, shame on Netgear for requiring a paid subscription, extracting even more money from customers.

    Personally, I like to purchase something and not be beholding to the vendor.. I've selected your product, I bought your product... my financial obligation to you ends there.

    cell phone contracts, internet contracts, contracts for warranties, streaming channel subscriptions, <insert other thing that folks lived without decades ago>, etc.. Now subscriptions for administering your owned (not leased) devices? Just make the pain stop. My god. Leaches!!
  • damianrobertjones - Monday, March 14, 2022 - link

    I will never, ever, absolutely EVER, buy any Netgear product. years back, PC Pro (the magazine) reviewed an expensive home broadband router. They gave it 5 stars etc. It was trash. Many, MANY people called them out of their review as the damn thing simply did not work.

    Although it's been years since then... I'll never forget.
  • Interu wa shinde iru - Friday, March 18, 2022 - link

    Not worth it. Ubiquiti UnifiAP are dirt cheap + cloud management is free. Netgear should just stick to soho/home networking.

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