AP will reboot and will become available to the controller. You will just have to re-assign it to your site and let it provision itself. Alternatively you can reset the AP to defaults via SSH or the button on the unit then it will search for unifi by default and show up on the controller.
![How To Crack Unifi Wifi Controller How To Crack Unifi Wifi Controller](http://www.lowefamily.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/UniFi-5.4.15-Setup-Wizard-Page-4-Controller-Access-300x169.png)
Back in July, Ars ran a syndicated piece from The Wirecutter on, with the winner being the $100 Netgear EX6200. The result didn’t particularly move me—I’d been using an 802.11ac-capable Apple Airport Extreme since late 2013 and Wi-Fi in House Hutchinson seemed pretty much a solved problem. The Apple access point had been more expensive than just about any other consumer wireless gear when I’d picked it up, but it was solidly reliable, quite quick, and covered all 2,600 square feet (about 241 square meters) of the house without any noticeable dead spots. But a few of the comments in the syndicated piece echoed a general dissatisfaction with the consumer wireless access point landscape and recommended we check out some entry-level 'enterprise' wireless gear instead. This tickled my urge to tinker—if there’s one thing the latent sysadmin in me loves, it’s tearing out a perfectly functional existing production system and implementing something new from scratch!
So shortly after that piece ran, I reached out to, an enterprise networking gear manufacturer that makes, among other things, the types of mesh-capable Wi-Fi systems that often get installed in hotels and airports. I wanted to see what it was like to leave the kiddie pool of home Wi-Fi equipment and jump into the big pool—the shallow end, at least (the deep end would probably be bolting Cisco Aironet access points all over my house). My contact with Ubiquiti happened at a fortuitous time, too, since the company was in the process of products. I wound up with four different Ubiquiti UniFi wireless access points to test. Ubiquiti first sent two preproduction models, a UniFi AP-AC-Lite and a UniFi AP-AC-LR, and then followed them up a couple of weeks later with a production model UniFi AP-AC-LR and a production model UniFi AP-AC-Pro when they were ready. Lee Hutchinson It is extremely important to state that these devices are not NAT routers. They are wireless access points, and that is all they are.
They do not replace your existing router and you can not use them to connect your home LAN to the Internet. If you have an all-in-one wireless router, you’d add Ubiquiti’s WAPs to your network by disabling the Wi-Fi on your existing wireless router and leaving it otherwise intact and functional, with the router portion of the router still doing its job (the standalone UniFi Controller management application can do DHCP if that’s desired). Or if you want to keep everything within the Ubiquiti ecosystem and manage your router and WAPs with the same application, you could also purchase one of Ubiquiti’s.
I’ve been using for my router and firewall for probably 10 years, and I do DNS and DHCP off-box with (although Smoothwall can handle those roles as well). Smoothwall is an excellent and easy-to-manage Linux firewall distro with fully configurable rules and stateful packet inspection, and I have it running on a in my closet. That means that the Airport Extreme I’ve been using for Wi-Fi has been strictly for Wi-Fi, and disconnecting it and plugging in the Ubiquiti gear to test with was straightforward.
Again—and I know I’ve said this more than once, but it’s worth repeating—if you’re thinking of replacing your existing Wi-Fi setup with something like Ubiquiti’s gear, you need keep your existing router or account for the cost of buying a router to work with the new gear.