I wanted/needed to replace my home network router because of diminishing radio signal strength. I was contemplating it, but not really all that enthusiastic about replacing it since that can be a mess.
Long story short: I was forced in to a replacement by user error. Me.
FIRST THINGS FIRST: @BoredSysAdmin was willing to offer me advice and counsel as I began the journey. If you don't know it now, BSA is a genuine router authority. Nobody knows everything. BSA is pretty danged close on routers. Helpful. Knowledgeable and quick with a reply. Routers are something I've lived with and managed since the first home boxes came out. But, somewhere along the way they got super complicated and I had no idea what I was unaware of until this last week. I didn't know what I didn't know.
Thankfully, I knew enough to ask BSA for some help and advice before jumping off the pier.
A SIDE NOTE: This is something I see a lot of on the forum. An OP comes in needing some answers and needing some advice. He asks and pokes around. Many get defensive. Many just take the answers and run. Most don't actually implement the advice even if its spot on. Adult males are remarkably resistant to taking advice. Its a marvel that they are able to ask for it.
MY OBSERVATION: if you're going to ask someone for advice and counsel you're burning somebody elses time. For heaven's sake: take a moment to either take the advice and implement the changes, or, at least say thanks for the time.
MY ROUTER REPLACEMENT: I won't chronicle the entire journey because unless you need to do it, it aint that interesting. Here are the deficiencies that BSA said I needed to address: (you may have similar issues)
1. I had a s-h-i-t-t-y router (Netgear)
2. It was mounted in a s-h-i-t-t-y location (under my desk)
3. My channel selection needed changing (14 neighborhood networks)
4. My channel bandwidth needed trimming (40mhz to 20mhz) (not allowed by Netgear)
5. Other admin settings and such needed changing
6. I needed to use wifi analyzer to provide hard data to measure success/failure
Rather than just bitch about it, BSA said I actually needed to recable and relocate my router in a more central location in my home and figure out where that was by measurements. He was correct. That's a pain in the a-s-s. Taking the advice however solved all my problems: every single problem I had is now solved because I implemented BSA's advice rather than just nod my head at it and complain that it was a messy thing to do.
Here's a picture of the new router sitting 10 feet in the air above a doorway. It looks like a B2 Stealth Bomber chasing a B52 that's flying next to it. The next pic is my new CISCO switch. I had to recable my entire office so I put in a new CISCO switch and all new cabling too.
Again: big thanks to
@BoredSysAdmin for the help. I would have had a tough time without his advice