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Amazon eero Pro 6 mesh Wi-Fi 6 system | Fast and reliable gigabit speeds | connect 75+ devices | Coverage up to 6,000 sq. ft. | 3-pack, 2020 release

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Configuration: 3-Pack


Features

  • Premium Wi-Fi 6 performance - eero Pro 6 covers up to 6,000 sq. ft. with support for wifi speeds up to a gigabit.
  • SAY GOODBYE TO DEAD SPOTS AND BUFFERING - eeros mesh wifi technology optimizes for your spaceso you can confidently stream 4K video, game, and video conference across your home.
  • MORE WIFI FOR MORE DEVICES - Wi-Fi 6 supports faster wifi than prior standards and permits 75+ connected devices
  • SET UP IN MINUTES - The eero app walks you through setup and allows you to manage your network from anywhere. Plus, free customer support is available 7 days a week.
  • CONNECT TO ALEXA - eero Pro 6 doubles as a Zigbee smart home hub, making it easy to connect and control compatible devices on your network with Alexa.
  • GETS BETTER OVER TIME -Automatic updates help keep your network safe and secure.
  • EASILY EXPAND YOUR SYSTEM - With cross-compatible hardware, you can easily add eero products as your needs change.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Upgraded from 1st Generation Eero to Eero Pro 6
I originally purchased my Eeros about 5 years ago when the original Eeros were released and before the company was acquired by Amazon. Over that time, I have added a lot more devices to my network as well as the available bandwidth in my home. Over that time, it was becoming increasingly clear my Eeros were not cutting it any more in terms the new standards they supported or the ability to keep up with my growing network. So, it was more a question of what I would replace them with. I looked at all the usual suspects, but ultimately decided to purchase Eeros again knowing it would not be a hassle to return them to Amazon if I was dissatisfied. I decided to go all the way and purchase the Eero Pro 6, although currently most of my home devices do not support WIFI 6. Based on the frequency of updates from Eero and knowing I would continue to add newer devices to my network, I felt comfortable with paying the extra $$$ for the Pro 6 model. I purchased the Eero Pro 6 3 pack. From the time I opened the box until I replaced the existing 3 original Eeros with the 3 new Eero Pro 6s was about 15 minutes. I replaced the gateway Eero first. That required launching the Eero app and indicating that I wanted to replace an existing Eero (it's there so keep looking if you don't see it). You will need to turnoff WIFI on your mobile device to complete the installation via cellular as you will lose your Internet connectivity for about 5 minutes or so. Power down the modem and the gateway Eero, disconnect the old Eero from the modem, connect the new Eero to the modem, and power them both back up. In about 5 minutes you should be back online. Do the same for the other 2 Eeros except you don't need to power down the modem again. My experience was painless and without issue. Once I was back on the air, I checked to see if all of my other configuration settings had been migrated to the new Eeros. All of my port forwards, IP reservations, etc. had been migrated over. All of my assigned device names had been preserved as well. In fact, everything was the same except I was running on new Eeros. Once I was back on the air, I needed to reconfigure my gateway to change my network mask. If you don't know what that is then you probably are good with the automatic configuration which is the default. In my case, the default network mask allowed for way more addresses than I would ever need. I changed it to 255.255.255.0 as it was unlikely I would ever need to support more than 255 devices in my home. I will not go into all of the details here, but it was pretty simple and once the Eeros rebooted, all was good. Now it was the moment of truth. I first tested the gateway Eero. I have 1 GB internet service and the gateway Eero showed my download speed as 950MB. So far, all was good. I next went to a room where my mobile device connected to the Eero in that room. When I reran the speed test I got around 450 MB when seated about 10 feet from the Eero. That was about 5x my previous speed with the original Eeros. My mobile device supports WIFI 6 and WPA3. For my non-WIFI 6 devices I still got roughly 2.5 - 3.0 x speed improvement. Generally, I am finding a stronger WIFI connection than previously between the Eeros and connected devices. While you get a visual indication of the strength of the WIFI signal, there is no way that I know of to get an actual measure of the WIFI signal. There are other apps you can use that will provide this information. If you are a gear head you might look at installing the Eero Labs beta features for band steering (encourages your capable devices to connect at 5 GHz), local DNS caching, and WPA3 support. I have been running them for several months without incident. There also are the Connected Home features that can be enabled, especially if you have Zigbee compatible smart devices and use Alexa. They don't improve performance, but may make it easier when adding new devices to your network. Otherwise, you can safely ignore them. Although it does not happen in all cases, in most cases my devices connect to the nearest Eero. Currently, there is no way I know of to force a device to connect to a specific Eero. However, sometimes powering down the device and powering it back up will result in it connecting to the closest Eero. However, if you have power outage, each device may connect to the Eero that is back on the air first once power is restored. Within the app, you can see which devices are connected to which Eero. Note that some Apple and Windows devices may show up twice as devices in your network. The complicated reason is these devices use something called MAC address randomization that may result in the device appearing to be a different device than the last time it was connected to the network. This is not an Eero problem and presently there is no easy workaround. You also can see whether your device is connected to the 2.4 or 5 GHz band, what type of security it is using (WPA2, WPA3, etc.), and some other useful information. You can add a user friendly nicknames for devices as well. If you chose to, you can specify the type of device (tablet, mobile, etc.). There are a bunch of other features that most owners may never use such as the ability to pause the Internet for specific users (e.g., kids), set schedules for Internet access, etc. Most owners, probably don't need to create port forwarding rules or reserve IP addresses, but the capability is there if you need it. You can disable DHCP if you are using another device to provide DHCP services. There is UPnP support which you probably should disable if you don't plan to use it or don't know what it is. Eero supports IPv6 as well. Eero provides a separate guest network that can be enabled or not depending on your needs. It can have its own separate SSID (name) and network key separate from your main home network. If you don't want guests accessing other devices (NAS, etc.) on your home network, but want to provide them WIFI, then you should have them use the guest network. Finally, you can access your Eero network remotely via the Eero app, so you can manage your network even when you are not home. There also is built-in Zigbee hub support, but I do not use it. I did not use customer support when I upgraded my Eeros, but based on past experience I found them to be helpful and generally knowledgeable. In one case, I was disconnected from the agent and she promptly called me back (from Bulgaria) to complete the call. I am a fairly knowledgeable about networking, but found them to be helpful and willing to work through an especially difficult problem until it was fully resolved. Because of the way Eero works, they can access your network remotely to help troubleshoot or reconfigure your Eero(s) which may be helpful for network newbies. This is my 2nd Eero purchase and I recommend the Eero Pro 6 if you are looking for a full featured option that is easy to use. It is a major improvement over the original Eero in terms of performance, but will be very familiar if you already own an Eero device. I have not compared it to the less expensive Eero options which may suit your needs if you don't need/want WIFI 6 capabilities. If you are a very advanced network user, Eero may frustrate you because a lot of the more technical features/capabilities are not accessible from the app in keeping with streamlining the app and ease of use goals. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2020 by EMW

  • Less than 15 minutes out of the box to WiFi 6 broadcasting internet at home!
I replaced my network of 2019 3 pack of eero pro to a network of 2020 3 pack of eero pro WiFi 6. One by one I removed the 2019 eero nodes except the 2019 gateway eero node. — Setup — To add the new gateway eero node to my network and remove the old gateway eero node from my network, I tapped on the plus icon. Then I tapped on the “add or replace eero device” button. After that, I tapped on the “replace eero” button on that activity. From there, the eero app showed me how to replace my gateway eero node. The app told me to plug in the new eero pro WiFi 6. However, in the next page the app told me to unplug the old gateway eero node (before it could have been factory reset / etc.) When I followed the instruction to unplug the old eero pro, the replace failed. The instruction to unplug did not make sense to me so I tried again with the old eero pro plugged in and the new eero pro WiFi 6 plugged in. After that, the eero cloud was able to migrate my 2019 eero pro network (all settings) to my new 2020 eero pro WiFi 6 gateway-designated node. In the future, I would like to use something similar to the following app flow. 1. Show the user a multi-selectable list of eeros they own, let the user select all the eeros they want to remove from the network in one page, remove them from the network before the replace procedure begins 2. Disable all not-removed older model nodes (if there were any) 3. After that, to keep it simple automatically replace the gateway node first (red light old, solid blue light new) 4. Automatically loop for each remaining eero node the user wanted to replace 5. Enable all nodes attached to the new gateway Overall, the setup experience via the eero app impressed me by its simple and straight-forward pages with visually pleasing animations. The one issue I encountered during the replace procedure was not a problem for me due to my problem-solving mindset. — First week — I immediately saw the WiFi 6 icon on my S10+ with a 1.2Gbps link with WPA2 (WiFi is half duplex, so speed test showed half that top speed and fully saturated it with my ISP fiber gigabit link down and up) WPA2/WPA3-Personal in transition mode is supported by eero pro and eero WiFi 6 pro, so I toggled it on in the app “eero labs” settings. That is great news to me because I can use better WiFi security and this is one of the few routers on the market that currently support WPA3. It is an experimental setting as described by eero on their website. Although the eero website says some Chamberlain models do not work, my Chamberlain model B1381 MyQ garage door opener with Amazon Key enabled connected and worked well with the WPA3 toggle enabled in the eero app. I have about 50 WiFi devices on my network and all of them were able to connect immediately to the new eero pro WiFi 6 nodes. In my mind, the gateway eero node should be the most processor-powerful node in a mesh network because all down-stream nodes’ packets going to or from the internet flow through a single gigabit port on the gateway-designated node to a modem, or ONT in this case. — Thoughts — In the past, I used eero secure but found that it occasionally over-protectively blocked websites that I did not want blocked. In the future, I would like to see the eero app have allow and deny lists to override the eero secure DNS blocker. I would rather have NextDNS over TLS instead of eero secure DNS, however that is not an option in the app. Like eero pro, eero pro WiFi 6 still does not have an admin configuration website that would be served at the gateway IP. All configuration is done via the eero mobile app. To me, this is a non-issue. I tested the included cat.6 Ethernet cable with my Ethernet cable wiring tester. As expected, it passed because it is wired correctly. Overall, this is an excellent mesh network system for work from home. My ping is 0ms and jitter is 0ms over fiber to the speedtest site hosted by my ISP connected directly to my PC via another cat.6 Ethernet cable. My PC speedtest shows over 900 Mbps down and up when wired through the new eero. The old eero consistently only gave my PC less than 750 Mbps down and up using the same cable and configuration. With all of the secondary nodes hardwired to the gateway node, my network gives me over 600 Mbps download speed and 600 Mbps upload speed on my S10+ phone. This new 3 pack of eero pro WiFi 6 gave us great improvements over the old eero pro. My family and I are grateful and we appreciate the experience of the fastest and most secure WiFi available on the market today; we will use this to the fullest. — Update: Week Two — Today Tuesday at 3am, my eero network automatically updated while in bridge mode and the gateway eero blinked blue for 3 minutes then solid red on all 3 eero nodes. This may be caused by a difference in firmware, where the eero WiFi 6 pro did not figure out my network topology path from the gateway-designated node to the other nodes. In my case, my network topology for the three eero nodes is the following: 1. ONT ↔ OpenWRT Router ↔ first eero (gateway designated, bridge mode) ↔ non-managed switch ↔ second eero (hardwired) 2. ONT ↔ OpenWRT Router ↔ first eero (gateway designated, bridge mode) ↔ third eero (WiFi) The eero pro had no issues in this same network topology configuration yet the eero WiFi 6 pro had an issue and red lights all nodes after 3 minutes and until manual intervention. Other users have reported the same issue on Reddit, so it seems this configuration is not supported well now. When all nodes are WiFi not hardwired to the gateway-designated node, it works. Also, if all nodes are hardwired to the gateway-designated node, it works. The problem now might be caused by a mixture of WiFi and hardwired eero nodes in the network. For me, I will find a way to hard wire the third eero node. — Update: Week Three — After a week with 6.0.3 firmware installed on all three nodes, the WiFi connected node to the gateway node path had a latency issue that became worse over the week. So, I removed the WiFi connected node (not hardwired to the gateway node) in my bedroom via the eero app. After that, my devices that were connected to that node (which experienced the bad latency) were fixed. Meanwhile, the latency of devices (WiFi and Ethernet) connected via hardwired nodes to the gateway node remained minimal (great) since installation. — Update: Month One — I don't know why albeit, when my eeros updated to 6.1.0-877 the gateway was no longer gigabit (only 100Mbps max download and upload speeds) Previously, my gateway was showing 940+ Mbps in the eero app speed test for weeks. WiFi connected devices also only speed test at up to 100Mbps through speedtest.net and fast.com apps to the same server that was showing >600Mbps up and down speeds prior to the 6.1.0 update. No hardware in my network environment changed between 6.0.3 and 6.1.0. Only the update happened. Rebooting the network via the app did not fix this issue. Update: I unplugged the Gateway Ethernet cable and plugged it back in. That fixed my issue and my WiFi 6 network is back to 940+ Mbps download and upload speeds. — ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2020 by Mark Mark

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