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Introduction
Updated 5/11/2010: Posted results for new Max. Simul. Connection test

| At a Glance | |
|---|---|
| Product | NETGEAR RangeMax Dual Band Wireless-N Gigabit Router (WNDR3700) |
| Summary | Atheros-based dual-radio, dual-band 802.11n router with Gigabit ports and media-enabled USB drive sharing. |
| Pros | • Very high routing performance • Very high aggregate wireless bandwidth • Wireless Guest networks • WDS Repeating / bridging • Good wireless throughput stability • USB drive sharing with UPnP AV / DLNA server |
| Cons | • No innovation in 5 GHz range |
My preview of NETGEAR's first real "simultaneous" (dual-radio), dual-band 802.11n router already covered most of its constuction and feature set. So after a brief feature set update, I'll get right to the performance.
Features
The 3700 comes in a new form factor that can sit horizontally on a desk or vertically on a supplied stand. There are also wall-mounting slots on the bottom. The internal printed circuit "metamaterial" antennas used in previous NETGEAR 11n routers are still used, however. But, contrary to what some may think, they don't negatively affect wireless performance.
Figure 1 summarizes the front panel indicators and controls. The wireless on/off switch (7) is a nice touch. Too bad there isn't one for each radio.
Figure 1: WNDR3700 Front panel
The back panel (Figure 2) has the Gigabit WAN and LAN ports and USB port for the USB drive ReadyShare feature.

Figure 2: WNDR3700 Rear panel
The 3700 implements the standard NETGEAR router feature set with a few new tweaks:
WAN Support - Types handled include Static and Dynamic IP, Other (static and dynamic IP), PPTP (static and dynamic IP) and BigPond. There is no specific PPPoE setting, so you might be better off using the Setup Wizard to set up your WAN connection. WAN MTU is set separately from the connection type (WAN Setup page) and applies to all WAN options. WAN port MAC address spoofing is supported only for Static and Dynamic connection types.
Firewall - The SPI+NAT firewall is pretty basic, although you can disable SPI. Both port forwarding and triggered port forwarding are supported. You get a rather short pick list of services in the Port Forwarding add screen, but you can specify the port numbers and protocols directly for both the outbound trigger port and inbound port range.
Ports can also be opened automatically via UPnP NAT Traversal (enabled by default), but at least you can log into the admin interface and see the automatically opened ports in the UPnP Portmap table. A single DMZ IP is also supported and you can disable the SPI portion of the firewall.
The WAN Setup page holds the SPI Firewall Disable (default unchecked), DMZ, Respond to Ping on Internet Port and MTU settings. There is also a NAT Filtering option (default "Secured") that isn't explained very well in either the online help or user manual.
The Block Services (outbound port filters) can be applied to all, one or a range of IP addresses, but not MAC addresses. They also can be controlled by a single rudimentary schedule (checkboxes for days of the week and one set of start / stop times).
The Block Sites feature is keyword-based and applies to web traffic only. You get an attention-grabbing red and black "Web Site Blocked by NETGEAR Firewall" page when you trigger the block and the ability to have one "trusted" IP address that can bypass any blocking.
Dynamic DNS clients - Only Dyndns.org is supported
Logging and Reporting - Logging seems mainly focused on logging web traffic. Everything goes into one log, with no filtering provided. You can clear or email the log, but there is no syslog or SNMP trap support. Email authentication has been added, but there is still no Test email button or ability to handle SMTP servers using secure connections or to specify an alternate SMTP port.
Other features - The DHCP server can be disabled and allows IP address reservation by MAC address. RIP direction and version (1, 2B, 2M) can be controlled and static routes set.
QoS: Simple four-level priority-based QoS for upload (Internet-bound) traffic has been added. You must specify the uplink bandwidth. QoS priority can be set by Ethernet port, client MAC address or application port. There are 18 pre-built QoS Policies for applications or you can define your own rules.
Note that this is not Automatic Quality of Service, as NETGEAR claimis on the 3700's web product page (Overview tab).
User reviews
View all user reviewsAverage user rating from: 37 user(s)
NOTE! Please post product reviews from actual experience only.
Questions, review comments and opinions about products not based on actual use will not be published.
Disappointed
We purchased our first unit and 3 months later it simply stopped working, no radio, nothing.
We purchased a second unit and it has issues with DHCP where it repetitively drops and reassigns an IP address every 30 seconds or so. I upgraded to the latest firmware (a huge user interface difference), but the problem persisted. I reset the unit to factory settings and once I had set everything up again, nada. It's going back.
Time for another make and model.
decent
can connect from 10m from android with WIFI gets plenty in speed and havent had any problems.
Don;t waste your time
This is simply the worst piece of rubbish I have ever seen. I had one for 2 days before returing it for a full refund and replacing it with a Billion BiPac 7800n.
The wireless signal was so poor I could only connect with a range of less than 1 meter. I flashed and reset the device 3 times with the latest firmware before giving up on it. The interface looks like it hasn't been upgraded since 1998 and when shelling out this kind of dough that is NOT OK.
Seriously, don't bother.
DLNA is Flaky
This router is advertised as DLNA complaint but mine cannot reliably stream media to an LG Smart TV either wired or wirelessly. The DLNA drops out between 1 and 20 minutes after you start watching something on the TV.
In a classic runaround LG insist the router is not fully DLNA compliant.
Forums seem to confirm that v1 especially is a problem. v2 of the same router, which has 16mb flash ram vs 8mb for v1, is not so bad apparently.
At least LG answered my query.
Netgear never even responded.
(not a) best buy
Bought the router because of the exellent press, but brought is back after testing: the range is far less than my old 54GL router and the (wireless) speed also can't compete with the good old 54. Lan speed and features are ok. Allthough Media streaming over the network with an USB (2.0) HD connected to the USB port is not possible.
Does a test team of a computer magazine (i.e. Computer!Totaal) really test a system or just read the advertising on the glossy box?
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