Ubiquiti UniFi U6-LR

Ubiquiti sent me two of their newly released Unifi Access Point WiFi 6 Long-Range (U6-LR) units – long range access points that support the Wi-Fi 6 standard. I’ve been using the setup Ubiquit sent me about a year ago which included a Unifi Access Point nanoHD (UAP-nanoHD). I was going to start by changing that over to one of these newer units to see how it went.

First, the unboxing. I don’t bother about this too much usually when reviewing hardware, but there’s a fair bit of attention to detail here. A mounting guide for the screw holes that includes a tiny spirit level, the detailed hole explanations on the plate, and the hardware kit – an assortment of screws and brackets that come in a nice sleeved foam holder, so you don’t inevitably drop something when you would normally find these in a plastic bag to rip open.

The size difference of the Access Point nanoHD vs Access Point WiFi 6 Long-Range is substantial (and is a bit over 3x as heavy):

Comparing the specs between the two:

NanoHD:

  • Four-Stream 802.11ac Wave 2 Technology
  • Simultaneous Dual-Band Radios
  • Supports 200+ Concurrent Users
  • 5 GHz Band 4×4 Multi-User MIMO with Radio Rate of 1.733 Gbps
  • 2.4 GHz Band 2×2 MIMO with Radio Rate of 300 Mbps
  • Powered by Gigabit 802.3af PoE

U6-LR:

  • 1.3 GHz dual-core processor (now upgraded to support full-duplex 1 Gbps TCP/IP performance)
  • Four-stream high-efficiency Wi-Fi 6 technology
  • 5 GHz band 4×4 MU-MIMO and OFDMA with radio rate of 2.4 Gbps
  • 2.4 GHz band 4×4 MIMO with radio rate of 600 Mbps
  • Powered with 802.3at PoE (PoE injector not included)

Both units at the time of writing are the same price of $179US. Beyond the Wi-Fi 6 functionality on the U6-LR, the radio rates are higher and denser on it too. It’s worth noting the U6-LR has a the updated PoE requirement (also known as PoE+) and does not come with a PoE injector; if you’re already using a PoE+ switch like I am, this isn’t an issue. Otherwise, order a US$12 PoE Injector with the 802.3at standard

Swapping over the units was incredibly easy – I hadn’t mounted the NanoHD since moving, and may end up mounting this one once I’ve been using it for a bit and know I’m happy with it.

When I say it was easy; after swapping the network cable over, I logged onto the UniFi Dream Machine (UDM) web interface, went to the network devices page, and clicked ‘Adopt device’ that popped up. About a minute passed, and the device was now under control:

There was an update available, which upgraded the device from 5.43.15.12477 to 5.60.9.12980. I decided to add the second U6-LR on, but this time it would take over the Wi-Fi duties of the UDM; I adopted it into the UDM, then went into the WiFi settings for both the 2.4ghz and 5ghz networks, created a new AP Group, and ticked all but the UDM and applied (I have separate WiFi network names for the different bands due to an issue with a 2.4ghz only device that wouldn’t work when both bands were used on the same name).

Once I had done all this and let the connections settle down, the experience across each wireless AP was 92% or better. My Samsung Galaxy S21 shows a little ‘6’ next to the WiFi symbol.

I’ll take a few days living with this to see if there’s any issues that pop up, or if I notice any improvements (one sore point was a Chromecast that would dip in video quality now and then).

See the source image

It’s been going very well. No dropouts or hiccups of any sort, and I’m noticing on my mobile that I stay on 4 bars around the house rather than dropping to 3 in some areas – which makes sense now being on a long range access point.

Also I found this video also looking at the UniFi 6 LR which has some extra info and visuals:

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