Protect against internet downtime and potentially lost productivity by adding the UniFi U-LTE Redundant WAN over LTE to your network. Featuring an external 2 x 2 MIMO antenna, this category 4 LTE device connects to the AT&T LTE network as a backup if your main internet connection fails. Simply connect it to a UniFi Dream Machine or UniFi Security Gateway (available separately) to integrate it into your network. You can check its status and signal strength, in addition to tracking data usage, with the built-in 1.54″ status display. The U-LTE is powered through its PoE-compliant Gigabit Ethernet port, and it has a secondary port for bridging and passive PoE passthrough. Multiple coverage plans are available and you can configure the U-LTE through UniFi Network Controller.
Ubiquiti Networks UniFi U-LTE Redundant WAN over LTE
$129.35
In stock
Description
Additional information
Weight | 1.42 lbs |
---|---|
Dimensions | 10 × 4.3 × 3.2 in |
Hardware Requirements | A UniFi Dream Machine or UniFi Security Gateway is Required for Operation. |
Connectivity | 2 x RJ45 Gigabit Ethernet Ports with PoE<br> |
Antenna | Cat 4 LTE Antenna<br> |
Display | 1.54" / 3.91 cm |
Max Power Consumption | 8.5 W<br> |
Power Method | 802.3at PoE |
PoE Output | 48 V Passthrough |
Environment | Operating Temperature: 14 to 122°F<br> |
Reviews (8)
8 reviews for Ubiquiti Networks UniFi U-LTE Redundant WAN over LTE
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Lula Halvorson (verified owner) –
This is a great fail over solution for anyone with ubiquiti equipment. It is as simple as plugging into ANY POE port and activating it.
Adan Kuvalis (verified owner) –
In theory this product is a great idea. My Unifi network switches right over to it when my wired line drops. The problem is that Ubiquiti has a 20 Gig cap per month. I reached out to Ubiquiti Support, followed their instructions to reset it and get another 20 Gigs of data, but all it did was tack my used 20 Gigs onto my next month’s plan, which has made this useless for the next 30 days, and it’s been useless for 2 weeks already. The solution is to drop another $199 for a second Unifi LTE unit. No thanks, I’ll just tether to my iPhone. It’s a novel toy right now. Until they allow for more data to be added each month, save your money or spend it on something without a data cap from the 1990’s. That I can’t add more data past 20 Gigs, and that I have to wait until the next billing cycle to use it is insane. Who’s the rocket scientist that thought this was a good idea?
Christopher Ritchie (verified owner) –
These ship with some funky firmware that people in the UI forums make lots of complaints about (unit has a hard time being adopted). Once firmware is manually updated, it seems to work well. Transition is quick and easy.
Lukas Fay (verified owner) –
i love the idea … but this limitation is CRIPPLING! a 20gb cap is ridiculous. LISTEN UP, UBIQUITI! you’re going to lose your customers this way! ALSO … only works with AT&T! why not have a SIM card like the PRO version in europe?
Bryon Kerluke (verified owner) –
The speed in which the Unifi OS fails-over to this little guy is amazing. It’s obviously not for your primary link, but for $10 a month, you have great piece of mind that you’ll always be connected. B&H had great fast shipping and their are an authorized seller, so no shady Amzn sellers here!
Osvaldo Reilly (verified owner) –
Needed to stay on line during the many Zoom meetings… When you spend so much time on Zoom us see how often the cable networks drops and the switch over works every time
Tina McKenzie (verified owner) –
This thing is pretty impressive how you can plug it up anywhere in your network and it will create a tunnel to your router (UDMP-SE for me). I currently have it plugged up via my Enterprise 24 PoE switch with 100 feet of CAT6a cable that goes to my office upstairs. The signal in my area isn’t that great, but even with only 1-2 bars I get around 10 Mbps downstream. The external antenna isn’t MIMO. I found that with an external antenna, my throughput is less than with the built-in antenna. I’ve tried a few of them. I finally gave up. Sometimes I’ve had problems adopting it (I’ve had to reset it several times for various reasons with configuring my network; mainly my fault in things that triggered a need to reprovision it). In some cases I’ve had to SSH into it and manually set the inform address to my router. I have had an issue where with the current beta Network controller I’m using, it sometimes reports as being active in the Dashboard but not on the device itself. Despite all the difficulties I’ve had with it needing to factory reset it (because I assigned it a fixed IP address that made it non-communicable), it’s been up for over a month now. The other night I was finishing some work late at night while streaming a movie. I noticed the progress circle come on for about a second, and then the video kept streaming. I kept finishing my work. It was later that I noticed my Xfinity cable modem went down and I had transitioned to LTE backup. That was my only indication. (You can set an option to notify you of when it goes to backup, but I have it disabled.) The service is expensive compared to some other offerings. $15/month isn’t expensive, but if you eat through 20GB of data, you’re looking at $200 for that month. There are other plans that offer unlimited data. Unfortunately, you can’t swap out a SIM currently (I think it may have an eSIM?) and you are forced to use UI’s offering, which is based on AT&T.
Aniyah Kirlin (verified owner) –
Tested it beforehand and worked perfect when we installed it.