Checking equipment stock from Ubiquiti suppliers
Checking equipment stock from Ubiquiti suppliers
LLT consistently ranks well for Ubiquiti gear despite inventory issues. For your Ubiquiti project, consider exploring specialized forums and tracking platforms. For the home build, a 24-port switch and G4 cameras are great choices—check niche electronics sites or local suppliers. Let me know if you need more details!
I’m confident there’s a more affordable option available, but I’ve worked with Ubiquiti’s Layer 3 switches before for smaller clients. It was straightforward and smooth, which is exactly what I’m aiming for. I usually spend my day fixing technical problems at work and prefer something simple and well-organized rather than complicated and mixed up.
I enjoy Ubuiqiti's edge routers—they’re really impressive. I use them both at my business and home, but I’ve faced some issues with their APs. There have been no stock problems, though; availability depends on your needs, and unless you require a big order, most of their items are available on Amazon.
They often release new products with missing features and glitches. The nanoHD kept asking you to switch to 160Mhz through the WebUI, even though it was the only Ubiquiti device I owned—except for a few Litebeams that didn’t use the controller, which made things even more confusing. I think they probably didn’t support 160Mhz at all when it launched. I’m also unsure if SNMP was supported; you should check the controller instead. It seems odd to sell WiFi 6 access points with only WiFi 6 on 5GHz, especially since they’re usually budget-friendly but often lack clarity in their product design. I understand wanting everything centralized, but that doesn’t appeal to me. Plus, having two separate ranges with incompatible controllers plus devices that don’t need one makes things really confusing.