Table of Contents
Pros
- Strong and stable performance
- Wired and wireless networking
- Setup is a breeze
Cons
- Apps are occasionally clunky
- Not the best-looking system out there
- Your existing setup might be enough
Mesh networking kits are having a moment instead of having one router stuck in a corner of your home, you have a router plus a satellite device or two, all of them working together to make sure all corners of your home are blanketed in precious Wi-Fi.
The Deco P9 is the latest mesh networking kit from the networking experts at TP-Link.
Considering TP-Link has years of experience in making just about every other type of networking device, we were expecting this to work as advertised during our testing.
And indeed the Deco P9 does impress see below for more. Besides the mesh capabilities and the removal of Wi-Fi dead spots, the system also gives you more control over your network: how long the kids can stay online, which devices have priority, and so on.
Check the widgets on this page for the latest prices on the TP-Link Deco 9 mesh networking kit, but at the time of writing you can pick it up for around $229.99 direct from Amazon not bad if it’s going to permanently solve your Wi-Fi internet woes for you.
TP-Link Deco P9 review: design and setup
As is normal practice nowadays, to get the Deco P9 set up, you first download the TP-Link Deco app, and then just follow the instructions.
It’s a case of just plugging each of the devices in, then connecting to them from your phone, and that’s about all there is to it.
The Deco app is available for both Android and iOS, so all you need is a smartphone.
You can leave the router that your internet service provider has given you in place, and just plug in the Deco P9 on top of it, if you like (you’ll then have two Wi-Fi networks floating around your home).
We plugged our first Deco P9 unit into the back of a router supplied for a Sky Q system, and it worked seamlessly.
Setup takes a minute or two for each device that you want to connect up, but it’s just a question of waiting for the indicator light to cycle through various colors.
The app will make suggestions about where each of the units should be placed, based on how many floors you’ve got in your house.
We managed to get everything up and running in average-sized two-story semi-detached without any problems.
As for the look of these white cylinders maybe design isn’t the most important thing in mesh networking, but these are chunkier and less aesthetically appealing than some others we can think of.
Still, they’re not too much of an eyesore two drinks cans stacked on top of each other.
The look doesn’t matter as long as the Wi-Fi is good, which brings us on to the next section…
Features and functionality
At the outset we should say that the Sky Q mesh network at our place of residence was working perfectly well before the TP-Link Deco P9 tubes turned up, so it’s not as if we’re living in a place that’s particularly bad in terms of Wi-Fi dead zones. Still, the Deco P9 devices have been doing a fine job so far.
At all ends and corners of the house even out in the conservatory we’ve been able to get speedy and stable connections about on a par with what we were getting from our old router (and in some cases, the connection seems to have improved).
If you’ve got several floors or a peculiarly shaped house, then you might really feel the benefit.
Besides the Wi-Fi meshing going on, the Deco P9 utilizes powerline technology too, making use of the electrical wiring in your home, where necessary, to increase the range of your network even further.
For those of you with cellars or garages where Wi-Fi struggles to reach, it’s an even more appealing system you could replace whatever combination of extenders and sockets you’ve got in one.
The controls in the app are basic but effective: parental controls, which let you limit time on specific websites or the internet as a whole for specific devices (like your kid’s laptop), and priority management, which lets you specify which devices should be prioritized in terms of bandwidth (like your 4K Netflix-enabled TV).
These tools aren’t the most polished or intuitive of their type that we’ve ever seen, but they do the job.
Price and verdict
The TP-Link Deco P9 impressed during our testing: from the ease with which it could be set up, to the strength and speed of the Wi-Fi it broadcast around the house, to the extras you get in the app… it’s an all-round fantastic package. Don’t forget the option Powerline and Ethernet connectivity from each device too.
We didn’t see massively better coverage or hugely faster speeds than the Sky Q mesh network we’ve already got set up at home, so it’s maybe not the system for you if you’ve already got some kind of mesh setup in place.
The extras you get with the Deco P9 are helpful but perhaps not worth spending a couple of hundred pounds to get.
If you are in a place where Wi-Fi struggles to get into every corner of every room, then we’d say the TP-Link Deco P9 should definitely be on your shortlist.
There are a lot of impressive kits around at the moment though, not least the recently updated Google Nest Wi-Fi solution and the Orbi suite of products from Netgear.
As strong as the competition is tough, the Deco P9 system holds its own. We’d maybe like to see a bit more style in the design and a little more slickness in the apps, but you have to balance all this against the overall price of the system, which is very competitive.
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