5G routers with sim card - why so expensive?

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I've ordered a 5g sim card from amazon during the prime sale. 30gb a month (data renews monthly) with THREE for a total one off price of £29.99 and it expires in Feb 2027.

Can anyone pls recommend a 5G router which works with a 5G sim card? I cant seem to find anything that is less a few hundred pounds, rediciously expensive.
 
not sure, I use a mobile device and its internet connection via usb when the main connection is down, but that requires a mobile and that option on the router. That said that router wasn’t so cheap either.

having a mobile with 5g capability wouldn’t be cheap either.
 
I've ordered a 5g sim card from amazon during the prime sale. 30gb a month (data renews monthly) with THREE for a total one off price of £29.99 and it expires in Feb 2027.

Can anyone pls recommend a 5G router which works with a 5G sim card? I cant seem to find anything that is less a few hundred pounds, rediciously expensive.
Do you own a 5G mobile?
 
Yes I have a 5g mobile but the point is I want a backup router/device that has an ethernet port so that if my main BT fibre line goes down, I can quickly unplug my BT router and stick the cable from the 5G sim router into my network switch to continue without much interruption.

We do have a BT-EE 4G unbreakable wifi device (that comes part of the fibre package) but it takes up to 5 min to kick in when the fire line goes down and the 4G is too slow.

I figured even if I have a 5G sim router that I use only once in a year for a few hours til the fibre line comes back up, that is sufficient but finding a 5g sim router is not an east task.
 
I was wondering, if I purchased one of these USB-C adpaters and connected it to a 5G phone and the other end to an ethernet switch, will this achieve what I want i.e. powering a network hub switch with 5G data from a mobile phone as a short term stop gap, circumventing the need for a 5G router?
 
MC801a from CEX.

This, with a £15 a month unlimited smarty SIM is now our home broadband.

They sell "3" and unlocked routers - the 3 is cheaper. I've had a 3 one (worked with Smarty) but I expensively knocked it off a cupboard after a week, a second 3 one that didn't like Smarty (returned free - CEX very good) and a more expensive unlocked.

Interested in the SIM card you have as we've just bought another MC801a for my mum and 30GB a month would probably do her.
 
Cdbe,

I already have a sim with sufficient data from THREE. The thread is about a 5G router with Ethernet output so that I can connect it to my network switch which distributes to about 40 points around a commercial office.

Most of the routers are 4G and not 5G (with Ethernet port output).
 
Have you thought about how you will handle the IP addressing issues that will result when you change the routers over?
 
I’m not sure I follow?

I’ve replaced the BT router twice before, the Ethernet cable running from the BT fibre router to the switching cabinet in the office and haven’t experienced any issues before.
 
If you are using DHCP on the BT router to allocate your device addresses, rather than static configuration, the BT router will have a record of the IP addresses that it has allocated to your devices using DHCP. When you remove the BT router, if the physical links to your devices stay up then the devices will retain those IP addresses. When half the DHCP lease time expires, the devices issues a DHCP refresh request which allows it to retain the same address.

When you then install the backup router, it has no knowledge of what IP addresses are in use by those devices, until it receives a refresh request from the device. At that point the new router will become aware of them and record the allocations in its DCHP table, if the address is available or refuse it, at which point the device will request a new allocation. There is a window within which if a brand new device comes online it could be allocated the same IP address as an existing device of which the new router has yet to become aware.

If you are using a a separate device as the DHCP server, or using static addresses, then there is no problem.
 
Cdbe,

I already have a sim with sufficient data from THREE. The thread is about a 5G router with Ethernet output so that I can connect it to my network switch which distributes to about 40 points around a commercial office.

Most of the routers are 4G and not 5G (with Ethernet port output).


This is what I have, I think the things on the back are ethernet.
 

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Draytek make a number of commercial routers with 5G sim ports


Granted that is £666 but isn't the price worth it for an office. That said, I have no idea how long it takes to switch from ADSL to 5G.
 
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