At MobileMustHave.com, we are all about getting you connected! Our channel supports the products we sell. We only sell quality products that work. We have the lowest prices, fast shipping, and great customer support helping you get everything you need. Here on RU-vid, we want to help spread the word about mobile internet solutions and show how to set them up.
So, with the Speedmount, you do have to remove the full frame from the Starlink dish to move it, so we recommend installing it with either the Magnet Mounts or Suction Cups. That way you can easily just move the full Speedmount if you do need to relocate the dish for access to the sky! If you have any other questions, reach out to us via email at info@mobilemusthave.com and we'll be happy to help!
Yes, you can! On the Basecamp listing, we offer an additional adapter that can help with the Wifi-as-WAN function! This will allow you to connect to one external wifi source, like your home's internet, and rebroadcast it through your Peplink's wifi network! If you have any other questions, reach out to us via email at info@mobilemusthave.com and we'll be happy to help!
Hello! So, we don't have an exact unboxing video for the x62 routers, but we do have pictures of all of the contents included on our page listings! For example, here is a link to the BR1 Pro 5G(x62): mobilemusthave.com/products/peplink-max-br1-pro-5g-mobile-router-new-x62-chipset?_pos=1&_psq=br1+pro&_ss=e&_v=1.0 Also, yes, Peplink routers will work with all hotspot data plans, as long as they are supported by the carrier themselves for the specific plan. If you have any other questions, reach out to us via email at info@mobilemusthave.com and we'll be happy to help!
I would say that the same is true during any network outage, but especially important if that happens during or soon after a natural disaster, like a hurricane.
Thanks for the great video! I had you guys remotely install with esim your 100 gig service last week and I'm about to give it a test on my month-long trip in Colorado. I was using two different SIM cards with AT&T and T-Mobile and my personal phone being Android and Verizon I could plug that into the pep link router for a third source along with starlink. So far the I'm getting from roam link is a lot faster than the other services and star link so I'm going to see how this works and if everything goes as well as I think it will the other two SIM cards will be disconnected and starlink will be paused until I go off grid where there is no cell service from anyone. Great job by the way, the speeds I'm getting are impressive.
Last weekend I traveled from southeastern to northwestern Wisconsin with a Peplink Balance 20x with RoamLink plugged in the car. I saw the cellular modem switch from T-Mobile, to Verizon, to UScellular during the trip. The purpose of the trip was to do a site survey at a customer site to validate that a cellular data connection was available at their location. Between the live demonstration and the data captured with InControl2 my trip proved that the Peplink and RoamLink makes site surveys easier.
RoamLink is not a network plan and they dont see any info on the plan or even device type that is using the traffic. This prevents the carrier from performing any type of speed restrictions. The only time the speeds will be reduced is if the tower is at capacity is limited on bandwidth overall. But distance from the tower, antennas, and distance from wifi can all play into how speed is realized.
i ordered the peplink 22g slim for my tmobile home internet model G4SE and it seems not to work in which order i have to plug the antenna ? they are labeled wifi 1 wifi 2 lte1 lte2 and gps and my tmo device only is labeled ant1,2,3,4 can you help me?
We dont have direct expereince with TMobile Home units as they are lots of different modles and TMobile keeps changing them. However, the TM Home unit would be a 5G device and have 4 cellular antennas The 22g only has 2 cellular, 2 wifi, 1 gps. I would reach out to our CS team as that is not the right antenna for a 5G device. Email us at info@mobilemusthave.com
Yes we have RoamLink plans for all Peplink hardware. If you want to use your own hardware you just need the plan, not the hardware rental part. Feel free to reach out to CS and they can give you a more direct answer based on what you have on hand. Email us at info@mobilemusthave.com
Absolutely! Especially in areas where there are lots of RVers trying to get online. Using different bands, can help but also this why being on a prioritized plan really helps too.
as a Roamlink customer its also important to note that you can request to be steered to another carrier and also you can use the embedded tools in the Peplink devices to choose the network you connect to in most cases. RoamLink gets you all the providers but there is still some work to do to troubleshoot a poor connection in some cases which was always the case, now you just can do it without paying for more than one provider, that's the beauty of Roamlink. Thanks for the comment.
the "how does speedfusion work" section is unclear. The benefitis are not clearly stated. The whole idea of "bonding" or "aggregation" or whatever terminology is being used is to COMBINE BANDWIDTH. Now i'm getting information from an official peplink retailer that there is absolutely no option to do that and speedfusion connect is only "failover" and "reliability".
Thanks for reaching out! I'm sorry for the confusion on this. SpeedFusion does allow for multiple connections to be active at the same time, which allows them to load balance the connection, but the most important feature is that it allows for immediate failover in case one of your internet sources loses its connection the internet. I'm sorry for any confusion about SpeedFusion. If you'd like to discuss SpeedFusion in more depth, reach out to us via email at info@mobilemusthave.com and we'll be happy to help!
@@MobileMustHave so it really doesn't add for example, two 50 mbps connections to have (100 - some overhead) mbps connections then. This seems a lot less appealing if you're paying for two different ISP to only get the lower or higher speed of the two.
@@thedeadbaby yes it will stack or combine two connections. Two identical 50mbps connections will give you 100mbps minus about 15-25% of overhead used for processing the duplicate packets etc and this is based on your settings you choose (for example wan smoothing options that create redundant packets for more reliable connections will cause less overall bandwidth available since some is used to create that redundancy). The tricky part is when you have two connections that are not identical. For example one 100mbps connection and one 50mbps connection. Because the connections need to be balanced to create self-healing and redundancy, that redundancy and added reliability means a trade off where you cannot make up the missing 50mbps on your second connection magically while retaining added connection reliabilty. As a result your more likely with a 50mbps and 100mbps connection combined to get more like 75-100mbps of total capacity because without enough bandwidth on the smaller tunnel its not physically possible for the two connections to match and provide double the bandwidth. Thats not a Peplink thing, thats a limitation of WAN bonding as a whole. That said your connection is now much more stable and any single connection and drop and you will not loose your Zoom call or internet connection. That is the benefit, not just stacking speed which is a plus but not what this really brings to the table. Peplink has done a lot especially in firmware 8.3 and 8.4 to maximize the performance of mismatched connections though and its better than ever. I currently am traveling with 5+ combined connections and getting about 600mbps down and 300 up with multiple cellular + starlink.
There are lots of great places to see what is available across market. You can defiantly get plans directly from the carriers, but then you are locked on one network. By the time you pay for a second plan, in most cases you are now more expensive than the RoamLink plans. And most data plans from carriers are much lower priority. A great 3rd party resource for this is rvmobileinternet.com
We have T-Mobile 55 Magenta, and a total of 80 g between two phones. $90 ish a month. We travel winters, coverage varies tremendously. I've been with folks who had other carriers with better service. I can probably reduce my T-Mobile bill and easily justify. this plan.
Everyone should be aware that MMH's plan has been unstable for me with it unable to reconnect twice after a power loss (despite havng StarLink connected and my cell phone WiFi connected) requiring MMHs to take action. Then they tell me I have to have a current warranty for them to troubleshoot... here is their response, "Good morning! My name is Nicole and I am from the technical support team. I am sorry to hear you are experiencing some issues. It appears that the warranty on your router has lapsed. Without a warranty on your Peplink router, it is not possible to perform many of the troubleshooting steps - particularly any that involve remote access to your device. However, Peplink is extremely generous with their warranty policy, and as long as you can still connect your router to an internet source or pull a diagnostics report, you will be able to renew your warranty for your device! You can find Primecare renewal packages for all of the different Peplink models here on our website: mobilemusthave.com/collections/warranty-licenses" For the Max Transit Duo the cost for this warranty is $200. Rather than this approach a technical company such as MMH should have the ability to start a video call where the user can share their screen and be walked through config and troubleshooting if needed. The user could even give MMHs control and watch as they troubleshoot the system. Relying on a remote connection that requires an ongoing warranty (which they will happily sell to you) is poor customer service when so many other options exist today.
This plan contineus to be problematic as I have lost connection for a third time and now it will not reconnect at all despite having a strong cell signal on both my Verizon (phone) and ATT (car) plans.
Unfortunately, Roamlink is currently restricted to use within the United States only. However, we are constantly trying to improve our plans, so if you are signed up for our email updates, you'll be one of the first to know if we are able to offer data plans for Mexico in the future! If you have any other questions, reach out to us via email at info@mobilemusthave.com and we'll be happy to help!
I got the Duo in August but I have the M300 for $159 which I don't see as an option now for the Duo. Why is that? I'm also not sure if I have Speed Fusion, should that be included as mentioned in the video?
I have the M100 plan and, like you, I don't have Speed Fusion either. After relisting to the video you only get Speed Fusion with the Duo plans. Unfortunately I struggle to keep the plan connected and working. I have had two power outages, and in both cases I had to contact MMH and have them reset my plan on their end. Sounds like no big deal, but it takes their support up to 24 hours to reply... this has made it a bit unrealible for us and we have StarLink as our primary.
So, we did change our plan listing offerings for the Roamlnk Connect Duo, which are now available in the 500GB and Unlimited options. SpeedFusion is included with Roamlink Connect Duo automatically, but if you wanted to make sure it was setup with your device or had any other questions, reach out to us at info@mobilemusthave.com and we'll be happy to help!
Ya there are some remote places out there. The key is a good roof antenna. My crew loves the New Mexico, Utah, Arizona. I even have signal at Capitol Reef with a roof antenna, but never on my phone.
Yes, that is correct. the $698 price includes $499 for the Roamlink Duo rental and $199 for the 500GB data plan. It just combines the prices to include the rental cost and the monthly fee! If you have any other questions, reach out to us via email at info@mobilemusthave.com and we'll be happy to help!
So, if you have a Winegard 360+ system, it can be integrated with the Roamlink Solo or Roamlink Duo device using our Basecamp enclosure, which allows you to mount the router on your RV's ceiling! I will note the Basecamp is not compatible with the Roamlink Connect Solo 5G, due to its size. Here's a link to Basecamp: mobilemusthave.com/products/basecamp-router-enclosure-for-winegard-360?_pos=1&_psq=basecamp&_ss=e&_v=1.0 If you have any other questions, reach out to us via email at info@mobilemusthave.com and we'll be happy to help!
The solo has lower GB options and still runs with multi-carrier. If you are going with the duo, and truly need dual connection, your GB usage is higher. What is the use case for a lower gb, dual modem connection? There might be an option if the use case is there.
@@MobileMustHave As a hot failover for an unlimited connection. The bulk of data consumption would be on the primary unlimited connection, but mission critical applications could hot failover to dual cellular instead of single cellular for a highly resilient connection.
Got it! For this setup it would be best to purchase a router and not go through RoamLink Connect. You wont have access to the routers backend with Connect. However, you can get the same RoamLink plans for your own peplink hardware. We already have 100gb or 300gb options if you are just looking at plans.
Can you hand off bridged internet to our customer's DHCP set router? Not asking for a full-time business application, but rather an emergency solution. Customer has dead internet and needs something ASAP, didn't invest in disaster recover, dual wans, etc. Can this be put into temporary duty? Probably the dual-sim hi-cap plan. Lots of companies like ours would be interested + your services would get some more exposure. Assuming your rental router would be fine as long as it would be ok with a large number of customer DHCP addresses + WIFI could be via our own AP ... oh well blathering now.................
Would this work well for mounting the gen 3 to a semi truck? Occasionally driving through wind gusts up to 70mph which has me concerned about losing the starlink
Do you know if that mount or what mount can handle 100mph without fly away, i don't want to use the dish at that speed but i want that dish don't fly away on those moments
Nice video just stumbled across your site. We have a vacation place with really crappy 3Mb DSL. I can get 350+ down with my phone so I’m looking to get a cellular modem/router. Would this be a good fit? Is there any licensing I have to pay to use this device or do I just have to supply the sim with data plan? Already have an entire network stack was just gonna use this as the WAN
if you just need a cellular WAN, the Mini 5G could be a great option. Its has the 5G modem with nothing extra, no wifi, no wifi-as-wan, etc. It will come with basic antennas, and then just plug in your wifi router to the LAN port. For Data plans, you can go to your carrier for an option, or look at the plans we offer. We have special high GB plans that allow more usage that what is normally offered by the carriers directly. Feel free to reach out if you need help selecting a plan. info@mobilemusthave.com
With Starlink out now for unlimited data at $60.00+ less why go LTE? Just makes no since. After switching between LTE's for the past years, can never see going back. Also have been in the mountains under trees and can still watch netflix with no issues. have antenna set up on RV, but can pull a pin and move around up to 60' from RV.
For sure, Starlink does work well in a lot of areas, but in our experience, we see that having Starlink + a cellular connection as the best setup to ensure you have the best chance at obtaining a reliable internet signal. That's why Roamlink works very well in combination with Starlink because it allows access to the four best cellular carriers in the country! If you'd like to learn more about how Peplink routers and Roamlink can help improve your internet setup, reach out to us via email at info@mobilemusthave.com and we'll be happy to help!
Kinda sounds like Nomad and Travlfi. Nomad was a scam outright. Travlfi was good, until it wasn't. Verizon worked at first, but last year, you had to contact them to activate it, and it would only last until you left the area or turned off your hotspot. This service is kinda expensive. Makes me suspicious and gives me some Nomad vibes. Good luck. Hope it works.
Not sure how the channel bonding works with roamlink. Are you saying you can combine the bandwidth of all the carriers on peplink routers? If that's not the case, i'd rather just get my own sims and put them into a router that does the bonding and pay that as a separate service.
certainly welcome to use your own sims, that's the configuration we build out business on and a great way to get connected. RoamLink would use all the carrier aggregation and technology of LTE and 5G available in the area you are in on the carrier you connect to (one of the big 3) so there is no draw back and for customers with multiple roamlink connections we can steer each modem to a different primary carrier for each modem, for example Verizon on Modem 1 and ATT on Modem 2 or many customers choose a roamlink sim and pair it with their own carrier direct sim or Starlink. The point is ultimate flexibility and of course RoamLinks benefit is priority access to all carriers for one low price.
True, but how often is that? For most, they are not traveling to extremely remote places without service. And if you are, pair Roamlink and Starlink together. Best of both worlds!
Except you have to pay more per month to bond them, the $99 a month isn't enough! This service is not a good value if you already have Starlink. Two weeks in and I'm already regretting it. @@MobileMustHave
@@MobileMustHave it's actually not that hard.....I know a spot 3/4 mile off a major MN state hwy that only has cell signal when atmospheric conditions are good, while that hwy has great signal. Anywhere in the UP of MIchigan is about the same as soon as you get away from a town.
@@CaptConfusion71probably true for phones but with roof antennas (our Parsecs for example are the same used by organizations like the California Hwy patrol) its quite rare we dont have signal. It’s much more frequently our Starlink is obstructed as we like to park under trees or use in motion and we cant loose zoom calls with every bridge overpass. That said we would always only travel with both. Cellular is worst in valleys, they struggle anywhere surrounded by mountains but thats where our Starlink shines. Both have pros and cons and for true unstoppable connectivity you need to look at a multi internet solution or choose to just stay in one place and put up with potential outages (Starlink and cellular carriers had quite a few last year, thats where multi cellular shines as you get all carriers for one price).
@@jefftaylor844 I just camped near Hetch Hetchy reservoir just outside Yosemite and we were completely under trees. Luck for us, we were able to connect with RoamLink via Verizon with speeds good enough to even watch a video. I was pleasantly surprised.
We have not opened up Roamlink for outside of Peplink routers as of today. but subscribe to our email list as that will be the first place we announce updates like expanded router options. it is something we are discussing and making sure we can offer proper support.
Yes. However this router has two sim slots and is eSIM compatible. We have other models that are dual modem so you can have multiple connections to lte/5g simultaneously. Shoot us an email and we can send you more info. Info@mobilemusthave.com