- Network Admin
The SME Guide to Network Monitoring and Management
10 Mar, 2026




£49.82 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The NETGEAR EX6120 is one of those “it just works” wall-plug extenders—good value if your main problem is dead spots in a specific room, not whole-house Wi‑Fi redesign. For about £40 ex‑VAT, you’re paying for convenience and reliability over raw performance: plug it in, connect it (usually without messing around too much), and you can noticeably improve coverage where a router’s signal struggles. It suits small offices, warehouses with a couple of choke points, or anyone who needs extra Wi‑Fi in a meeting room/office corner without running cabling.
That said, it’s not a magic fix. If your building has lots of thick walls, multiple floors, or noisy electrical circuits, you may see inconsistent speeds. Also, if you’re already investing in better access points or you need a “proper” business Wi‑Fi experience (managed roaming, unified SSIDs, predictable latency for calls/video), this kind of extender is often a compromise worth avoiding. In short: buy it when you need quick, low-cost coverage in one area—don’t buy it if you expect it to replace a well-placed access point setup.

D-Link
D-Link DWR-960 - Wireless router - WWAN 2-port switch - 1GbE Dual Band - 4G

D-Link
D-Link DWA-X582 - Network adapter - PCIe - Bluetooth 5.0, 802.11ax

TP-Link
TP-Link Omada EAP725-Wall V1 - Radio access point - 1GbE, 2.5GbE, Wi-Fi 7 - Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth - 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz - cloud-managed - wall mountable

TP-Link
TP-Link Omada EAP115 - Radio access point - 1GbE - Wi-Fi - 2.4 GHz