OpenWRT compatible Router for 2024 in India

Why jump through so much hassle? a pi zero can run Pi-Hole for you and would only need USB from your router to be powered up. Setting it up is very streamlined as well

I have flashed openwrt to my ax23 v1.28. There is free 8mb storage left.

I recently switched to using FreshTomato on my R7000 and I can’t believe how easy it was. It’s so stupid that I was using Netgear’s slow and restrictive firmware for the last few years. Definitely get a router that has support for custom firmwares.

I use a NanoPI R5C with their own fork of openwrt called Friendlywrt. Works like a charm. It also has a massive 8 GB ram, so I also use it to run docker containers.

it’s also tiny, basically fits in your palm!!

From where did you buy the Nano Pi R5C, and how much did it cost?

FreshTomato is not available for the Netgear R6850.
Do share some screenshots of the OS. It could help compare with OpenWrt.

i bought it from [Robu](’

https://robu.in/?s=NANOPI&post_type=product&dgwt_wcas=1

)

TPLINK c6 v3.20 openwrt Wireguard Throughput to cloudflare warp (WGCF) 135mbps up/down, this is my internet max speed

I have mi 4a router, TPLINK c6 and c6u, they are from 2023, how to identify if we can install openwrt on it or not? will wifi keep working with them? @@CasualGamer91 @@anmolbhard004

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check the list shared just before this reply, im currently setting up on my tplink c6u v1.0

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Firmware Version:
1.13.6 Build 240430 Rel.54880n(5553)
Hardware Version:
Archer C6 4.0

Openwrt seems to support v2 and v3 only in C6. do we need to look at hardware version or firmware version?

Yes support is specific to hardware version if that is noted

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v4 is not supported i have a v4 as well, tplink actually changed the hardware on v4 which is not supported, upto v3 openwrt works well.

If you don’t have specific need, I would recommend not to install openwrt as everything performs worse compared to stock firmware (especially with low-power devices). It is a big chore to upgrade firmware (openwrt to openwrt) and it might not be trivial or even possible to install stock firmware back.

tomato or dd-wrt are much more user-friendly than openwrt if your router supports them. But, usually the best performance comes by using the stock factory firmware.

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bro its not true, i guess you get unlucky. But my mi 2.4g only router which is very low spec its working better than ever with openwrt, currently using it as a dummy access point. Archer c6 v3.20 as main also with openwrt 5Ghz is superior than stock. No random connection drops which was an issue with stock when more than 4-5 device connected at same time

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I agree about stability, but performance is usually worse because everything is done in software for most devices instead of hardware level implementation in stock firmware.
Many devices don’t have good wireless drivers which is not very clear by just looking at TOH. One of my routers is stuck on openwrt with no wireless (which was not very obvious by looking at TOH) and there is no way back to stock firmware.

Performance is good for me as well.. you must check the model of your router at openwrt forum if it’s some obscure SoC then it might not have hardware offloading, my archer c6 v3.2 support hardware offloading, wireless performance is nice too

Hi does the TP-link model or the netgear model you suggested work with the le-vpn provider?

maybe check the processor for netgear. if you’re into gaming and want 0 ping spikes, then you’ll probably use sqm (a type of qos). sqm is processing heavy. from user comments ax23 can do 100mbps using sqm.

As per one online comment from an Indian user, openwrt install on ax23 v3.2 1.28 (the model sold in India currently, officially openwrt page for ax23 list support for v1.0/v1.2) sees only 8mb flash storage out of 16mb available. That is too low for latest openwrt versions.