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Belkin N+ Wireless Storage Router review: Belkin N+ Wireless Storage Router

Belkin's N+ Wireless Storage Router leaps ahead of the wireless-N pack, and finally delivers a wireless-N router worth owning.

Alex Kidman
Alex Kidman is a freelance word writing machine masquerading as a person, a disguise he's managed for over fifteen years now, including a three year stint at ZDNet/CNET Australia. He likes cats, retro gaming and terrible puns.
Alex Kidman
4 min read

Design

Belkin's approach to routers has, in the recent past, been less focused on things that look like routers, and more on objects that wouldn't look all that out of place on the set of Star Trek — or at least on the set of a cheap fan-produced Star Trek homage, anyway. We've commented previously that the company's N1 Vision line are amongst the easiest of routers to understand at a visual level, thanks to the inclusion of large and clear front panel displays that do more than just flash incomprehensible lights at you in fit-inducing patterns.

8.8

Belkin N+ Wireless Storage Router

The Good

Wireless-N that delivers — almost. Storage functionality. Simple installation.

The Bad

Intermittent signal drop-outs. 2.4GHz only. Storage functionality is limited.

The Bottom Line

Belkin's N+ Wireless Storage Router leaps ahead of the wireless-N pack, and finally delivers a wireless-N router worth owning.

Which is why the N+ Wireless Storage Router really took us by surprise, because it's a reversion to an older way of thinking about router design. Gone is the spiffy front panel with controls too. Even the large icon symbols are reduced to tiny stature on the side of this vertically oriented router, making them tougher to read from a distance. It's perhaps a less showy design, but at the same time it's also much more utilitarian.

Features

As its name suggests, the two big selling points for the N+ Wireless Storage Router are the inclusion of storage capabilities, and the inclusion of 802.11n networking. On the minus side — and perhaps fitting with this router's rather retro styling — it's supplied with only 2.4GHz Wireless-N, and not the (theoretically) less interference prone 5GHz capability. WPS (Wi-Fi Protected Set-up) is supported, and like most modern routers, actually getting the N+ up and running is quite simple. It's not a modem-router, however, so you will need a modem as well.

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The storage side of the router is handled via a USB port on the rear of the unit. Plug any type of USB storage to the router, run Belkin's Storage Manager software on the PC of your choosing, and you've got access to a very simple shared network drive whenever you need it.

Performance

There's a word to sum up the N+'s storage credentials, and that word is ordinary. In our tests, it worked fine across a number of machines, but the Storage Manager software lacks functionality that you might expect of a network attached storage device. You can't set quotas, protect the drive or even format it from within the router set-up, for example. At a basic level it works, and that's all you get.

We did hit an intermittent problem with signal drop-outs while testing the N+; usually only a second or so, but long enough to be noticeable otherwise. The N+ uses Belkin's standard interface, which is flexible enough for network administrator types without being baffling for novices.

We've got to admit that we weren't expecting much out of the N+ for two basic reasons. Firstly, it's 2.4GHz only — the same frequency as many other wireless devices (including competing wireless networks, baby monitors, many cordless phones and microwave ovens). Secondly, every single 802.11n unit we've tested to date has left us almost entirely underwhelmed given the bold "up to 300Mbps" claims that 802.11n vendors so dearly love.

Signal strength: 2.4GHz

Distance from router
5m
15m (minor walls)
15m (multiple walls)
Belkin N+ Wireless Storage Router 88% 63% 62%
Edimax nMax AR-7265Wn 77% 58% 55%
NetComm NP802n 79% 49% 52%
Linksys WRT610N 79% 50% 53%
Netgear WNDR3300 85% 44% 45%
Netgear WNHDEB111 84% 50% 55%
Linksys WAG160N 70% 53% 48%
Billion BiPAC 7300N 75% 59% 54%
Conceptronic 300Mbps 92% 62% 60%

So far, so ordinary. The N+ held signal well at long distances, which was initially impressive. When we put it through our real-world file copying throughput tests, however, things got really interesting

Throughput: 2.4GHz

Distance between PCs
2m, no barriers
20m, multiple walls
Belkin N+ Wireless Storage Router 31.75Mbps 31.35Mbps
Edimax nMax AR-7265Wn 2.95Mbps 3.09Mbps
NetComm NP802n 18.2Mbps 16.4Mbps
Linksys WRT610N 22.3Mbps 7.91Mbps
Netgear WNDR3300 11.8Mbps 9.81Mbps
Netgear WNHDEB111 18.4Mbps 16.7Mbps
Linksys WAG160N 19.8Mbps 15.2Mbps
Billion BiPAC 7300N 21Mbps 13.3Mbps
Conceptronic 300Mbps 15Mbps 7.7Mbps

Not content with setting a new watermark for close signal reception copying a 31.75Mbps, the N+ then astounded us by keeping essentially the same speed when it was a solid distance away and with walls in-between. It's still well short of the inflated 802.11n claims we've grown to hate, but it's edging towards respectability for functions such as HD video streaming.

As always, our test environment isn't your home or office environment, and it's one of the toughest things about wireless testing, because sources of interference, and even the interplay between different chipsets, can make a large difference. In an environment that seems to suck the life out of wireless routers — a comment we've heard from multiple router vendors — the Belkin N+ really rose to the challenge.