DrayTek Vigor V2927LAC Gigabit Ethernet Failover Router, 3G/4GLTE Embedded Sim Slots, AC Wireless, Dual-WAN Load Balancing, 50 VPN Connections, 5…
Last updated on November 3, 2024 6:26 pm Details
DrayTek Vigor V2927LAC Gigabit Ethernet Failover Router, 3G/4GLTE Embedded Sim Slots, AC Wireless, Dual-WAN Load Balancing, 50 VPN Connections, 5…
£482.59
Description
- Dual Gigabit WAN Load Balancer: Make full use of Fibre Broadband with the Vigor 2927โs Gigabit throughput per-WAN – up to 1.8Gbps total combined throughput with Firewall, Content Filtering and Quality of Service
- Ideal VPN Router for SMB: Provide fast and secure VPN access, with up to 50 VPN tunnels, enabling remote workers to access network resources and connecting remote sites – with DrayTek SSL VPN and OpenVPN support
- Dual-SIM 4G+ LTE Modem: Provide ultra-reliable connectivity with an integrated 4G+/LTE modem on โLโ models – get the best out of 4G Broadband with LTE Category 6 and handle Mobile network outages with Dual-SIM Failover
- 5+1 Gigabit LAN Ports: Attach Computers, Servers and Network Attached Storage directly, with up to 6 Gigabit LAN ports – use VLANs to supply Broadband & VPN connectivity to as many as 8 separate networks
- Packed with Features: Take advantage of DrayTekโs rich feature set and useful functionality such as Quality of Service, Route Policy, Hotspot Web Portal, VPN Matcher, DrayDDNS and more
Additional information
Specification: DrayTek Vigor V2927LAC Gigabit Ethernet Failover Router, 3G/4GLTE Embedded Sim Slots, AC Wireless, Dual-WAN Load Balancing, 50 VPN Connections, 5…
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Reviews (6)
6 reviews for DrayTek Vigor V2927LAC Gigabit Ethernet Failover Router, 3G/4GLTE Embedded Sim Slots, AC Wireless, Dual-WAN Load Balancing, 50 VPN Connections, 5…
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Samuli Seppรคlรค –
Pretty ok product but 4G does not work with T-Mobile in US
Robin –
If you have simple needs, this is way over the top. If you’re a full-on network engineer, it’s probably too noddy.
But if you’re like me, understand subnetworking (layer 2 VLANS) and the like but not great at esoteric command-line interfaces used on industrial equipment, then this is the gear for you!
This one in particular is for ethernet connections to cable/DSL/… modems.
Oh and it can be the root node for a Dratek-based mesh WiFi network
D. Patel –
Only setup this morning, so it’s not a well tested review yet.
I used to have a Vigor 2920 that served me well. However due to ever increasing internet speeds the WAN to LAN throughput wouldn’t cope with Virgin’s 352mbps service.
I then used a Cisco RV042g for a number of years. All seemed to be running fine but odd issues with loosing internet connectivity kept re-occuring despite firmware updates. I was also never really that happy with the failover detection – I often had to manually switch over to my other WAN service on occasions where the internet appeared up but web-browsing would stall for example.
I was pleased with the 2927, sufficient WAN to LAN for up to 900mbps speed on each WAN port. But a few features that I didn’t see highlighted in other comments/reviews:
– You can set thresholds for latency/jitter/packetloss as failover conditions! I often get the issue with Virgin that packet loss is high, which doesn’t impact web browsing or downloading at all. But anything like…
Rice –
The Good
– Interface is well laid out and intuitive to new users
– Interface is fast and reboot is also quick
– Highly configurable to satisfy most if not all real world network topologies
– Draytek support is very responsive
The Not So Good
– Wifi range / signal is weaker than expected.
– Firmware is still maturing – I came across a bug yet to be fixed
– TBC: Wifi 2.4G can drop occasionally. I am still in the process of investigating the root cause but as my previous router never had this issue using the same clients, it does point to the Draytek ?
R.B. –
I saw that I’m well within my return window. But this DrayTek router is NOT going back!
My old DrayTek was doing well, but a recent outage by my broadband supplier that lasted from a Friday until Monday morning had me trying to bully my old DrayTek into taking my iPhone with a 5G connection on it. It didn’t really workout that well. The old DrayTek, a Vigor2820, could take two WAN connections but one of them had to be an ADSL and the other an ethernet type connection.
I wasn’t able to do my work during this period of Internet outage and that justified my search for a backup broadband solution. AND a new router that would take two ethernet WAN connections and do an automatic failover so that if the primary broadband should fail, the backup broadband should work.
My primary broadband comes in over the telephone line and is a fibre connection. So I wanted my secondary connection to turn up using a different method, but I didn’t fancy paying the costs of a cable type connection….
ravers –
I brought this to load balance 2 connections into one
This failed to do that not sure if balanced load only works on this router if using the same isp I was using but and virgin and it failed to use both together it was easy to set up and did improve on speeds over but router and virgin improving the ping speed and over all speed but thatโs where the good news ended
The setting are a bit hidden but basic setting are easy to see and easy to set up for both suppliers but for some reason the 2 together would not work I checked it using fail over and load balance but what ever settings I used it would only use one or the other depending on which one was in wan port 1 if this was a true load balance it should be able to combine both together which this failed
In the end I just stuck with speedy software which allows you to use both together combing into one connection this item went straight back for a return