

🚀 Unlock next-level networking with the Nanopi R5C — where power meets portability!
The Nanopi R5C is a compact, high-performance mini WiFi router featuring a quad-core ARM Cortex-A55 CPU, 4GB LPDDR4x RAM, and 64GB eMMC storage. It boasts dual PCIe 2.5Gbps Ethernet ports for lightning-fast wired connections and supports multiple OS options including FriendlyWrt, Debian, and Android. Designed for professionals and developers, it offers extensive expandability with M.2 WiFi/Bluetooth slots, USB 3.2 ports, and HDMI output, making it ideal for IoT, NAS, and smart home applications. Its 4K video decoding/encoding capabilities add multimedia versatility, all packed in a sleek, travel-friendly form factor.








| ASIN | B0BNNNGTND |
| Antenna Location | Home |
| Antenna Type | Internal |
| Best Sellers Rank | #199,832 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #1,297 in Computer Routers |
| Brand | WayPonDEV |
| Built-In Media | 1 x Nanopi R5C 4GB RAM 32GB eMMC Mini Router--with CNC Metal Case |
| Color | Black |
| Compatible Devices | Personal Computer, Tablet |
| Connectivity Protocol | Wi-Fi, Ethernet |
| Connectivity Technology | Ethernet, USB,HDMI, Wi-Fi |
| Control Method | Touch |
| Controller Type | Android |
| Coverage | standard |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 out of 5 stars 26 Reviews |
| Data Transfer Rate | 2.5 Gigabits Per Second |
| Frequency | 2 GHz |
| Frequency Band Class | Dual-Band |
| Has Internet Connectivity | Yes |
| Has Security Updates | Yes |
| Is Electric | Yes |
| Is Modem Compatible | No |
| Item Type Name | mini router |
| LAN Port Bandwidth | 10/100/1000 Mbps |
| Manufacturer | WayPonDEV |
| Maximum Upstream Data Transfer Rate | 2500 Megabits Per Second |
| Mfr Part Number | Rockchip RK3568B2 |
| Model Name | Nanopi R5C Wireless Mini WiFi Router |
| Model Number | Nanopi R5C 4+64GB WiFi Router |
| Number of Antennas | 2 |
| Number of Ports | 2 |
| Operating System | Android, FriendlyWrt 22.03 (64-Bit), Buildroot, Debian Buster-Desktop (64-Bit), FriendlyCore Focal Lite (Basis auf Ubuntu 20.04) |
| Other Special Features of the Product | Access Point Mode, Guest Mode, QoS |
| RAM Memory Installed | 4 GB |
| Router Network Type | wireless_router_with_ethernet |
| Security Protocol | WPA-PSK, WPA2-PSK, WPA3 |
| Special Feature | Access Point Mode, Guest Mode , QoS |
| Voltage | 5 Volts |
| Warranty Description | WayPonDEV Return Policy: You may return any new computer purchased from WayPonDEV that is "dead on arrival", arrives damaged, or is still in unopened boxes for the refund within 30 days of purchase. WayPonDEV reserves the right to return " Dead on Arrival" and charge a customer fee equal to 15 percent of the product retail price if the customer misrepresents the condition of the product. For any r… |
| Wi-Fi Generation | Wi-Fi 5 |
| Wireless Communication Standard | 802.11a, 802.11ac, 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n |
| Wireless Compability | 802.11a, 802.11ac, 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n |
J**.
Works great. Just don't try to restore a backup from different hardware like a Raspberry Pi
I was running OpenWRT on a Raspberry Pi 4 for a very long time but it kept crashing on me. I later found out that it was the USB Ethernet adapter but I decided I'd rather have a piece of hardware with 2 ethernet ports baked in. This unit fit the bill. The fact it can do 2.5 Gbps was just icing on the cake. First thing I did was remove FriendlyWRT and install OpenWRT. I made the mistake of trying to restore my config from my Raspberry Pi install and that bricked it. So I was able to flash OpenWRT on a microSD card and boot from that. I wound up making another ext4 filesystem on the card and putting the .img file in there and then running the 'dd' command to get it on the internal 32gb storage. After that, I expanded the ext4 filesystem on the internal storage and then very carefully started copying over everything in /etc/config manually making sure not to copy anything with mentioning eth0 and eth1. Eventually I got it setup just like I had it on my Raspberry Pi and my speedtests look pretty good. I don't know much about FriendlyWRT but I wanted OpenWRT straight from the source. Can't be too careful these days. Ease of Setup: 4/5 Customization: 5/5 Wireless Connectivity: You can add a card and antennas, but I didn't need that. Looks: Pretty good. Would have preferred at least 1 USB port on the rear Power: I'm using the power cord for my Raspberry Pi 4. Everything is peachy so far Thermals: Only a little warm. I'm talking comfortable enough to hold in your hand. Fanless, but the shell acts as a heat sink. Recovery: It does include a button to force it to not boot from the internal storage. This came in handy. Overall, 4.8 / 5 stars. Only thing I'd change is for it to come with OpenWRT and not FriendlyWRT out of the box but I would have still flashed it myself straight from the source just to be safe.
C**W
2months. seems great. gets hot... but doesn't crash!
I bought a $10 laptop cooling pad for this and my unmanaged switch, which has taken care of what felt like high temps (but were within normal). seems pretty good. runs a couple moderate docker apps like adguardhome and swag with no trouble, along with way more OpenWRT luci apps than I really need. currently at a couple months of solid OpenWRT use. be aware that OpenWRT is much more complicated than most router firmwares, but there's plenty of good documentation out there. manufacturer documentation is adequate, but not entirely complete. I have not tested the Debian or Android firmware images, but I bet it would make for a great streaming box. probably not powerful enough for proxmox / heavy docker apps / or multi-client Plex transcoding? I already have a Plex server on a NAS. Seems to have plenty of RAM for being a router. great price point, although RasPi5 probably beats it now if you don't need 2.5gbe.
A**S
Skip this board. You've been warned.
Worthless. Undocumented. Proprietary. Overpriced. I build linux systems from scratch for a living. This system is completely unmanageable. Good luck trying to find a working .dtb. There's a tool, rkdeveloptool, used to interface with the board. It's broken. Everything is broken. DDR RAM training blob is generic, fails radically. Nonsense from China foisted on the American consumer. There was another board I tried to buy from them a few months back too. They listed the order without having the inventory then sent me desperate messages asking me to cancel the order, attached fake tracking information to it. Do not trust friendlyelec. They take no pride in their product whatsoever. You guys want this review taken down? Contact me to issue a full refund. The board is completely dead with a zeroed eMMC and microSD card only containing vendor image. Probably marginal RAM.
T**S
Good hardware and fast ethernet speeds but vendor support and software need improvement
I want to implement a NAS (network attached storage) with multi-Gig ethernet support. I picked this ARM-Linux box because it has two 2.5G ethernet ports. After receiving the shipment from Amazon, I found its case is made of aluminum, which serves as a large heatsink. Thus, no fan is needed for cooling. As a result, it makes no noise and is suitable for home office and entertainment environments. Based on the information provided, I opened its wiki page and downloaded the firmware provided there. Everything worked pretty well. No issue was encountered at this stage. I installed the Debian 11 (bullseye) core as its OS. It booted smoothly after burning the rootfs image to a micro SD card, plugged in and powered on. However, the rootfs image is a little bit weird. As far as I know, most of such image for ARM single board computer (SBC) contains one partition (rootfs) or two partitions with a separate boot partition. However, this image contains many small partitions. Not sure what are those partitions for. I then checked the network speed. By using a 2.5G ethernet switch and an USB3.0 to 2.5G ethernet adapter on my Windows 11 PC, my iperf3 test showed that its speeds on both directions were about 2.35 Gbps. Which is not bad. In order to set up a NAS, I installed OpenMediaVault 6 (OMV6) on the Nanopi R5C with Bullseye Debian Linux. A 2.5" hard disk (hdd) with a USB3 interface was used as the storage. Installation carried out smoothly with no problem. When I used it as the fileserver, I found the read speed (NAS to Windows PC) could reach over 200MB/s, which should be satisfactory. However, the write speed (PC to NAS) was only somewhat over 10MB/s. This is essentially ethernet 100M speed. (Update: I noticed that the vendor just updated the OS firmware provided. In particular, the new firmware includes an OVM6 implementation. I tried their implemented OVM6. Both the write and read speeds were higher than 200 MBytes/s at start, then they reduced to about 100 MB/s and 60 MB/s, respectively. I think the speed reductions were due to the write and read speeds limitation of the hdd used in the NAS. However, when I used their new Bullseye firmware and implemented OMV6 from scratch, the write speed is still about 10 MB/s. I am not sure why. I contacted them but no reply was received.) One warning I want to make is that if you decide to buy this SBC, don't expect community and/or the vendor's supports like you would get for the Raspberry Pi's. However, if you want to take the adventure of utilizing its fast ethernet speed or other features that are not provided by Raspberry Pi's, this unit may not be a bad choice.
P**W
Very low power, very stable, can install your own Linux
I love this little thing. It uses next to no power. It came with Linux-based routing software installed. I got a good micro-SD card and am running my own Linux installation on it instead, using their kernel, but Gentoo Linux for everything else (not recommended, but I already knew the configuration system and wanted to port complicated networking scripts). Yes, it's slow, but everything works great. I did not get the WiFi option, as I have separate access points on a switch; this is the firewall/gateway for my home, and I've tossed a number of additional services on it, and it handles everything just fine.
M**V
Real 2.5Gbps speed
I was looking for a solution to distribute my 2Gbps internet connection through my home wired network. It appears that it is not so easy to find a 2.5 WAN / 2.5 LAN router for a reasonable price. Then I found this R5C and combined it with 2.5Gbps unmanaged switch (WiFi APs installed additionally). The result exceeds my expectations, I’m able reach 2Gbps from my wire-connected PCs. I decided to keep the pre-installed OpenWRT software. At the maximum network speed CPU reaches 80% load and works well. Not bad for a low-end device. One note about the temperature. R5C has a solid metal case that allows it to keep stable temperature at 50 degrees Celsius without any additional cooler. I decided it is a bit too much for a 7/24 device and installed a low-rpm fan. Now temperature dropped down to 37 degrees and I’m happy with the result. Summary: a great option if you’re ready to consider your home network as a DYI project.
P**N
Challenging to set up, not powerful enuff for home assistant
Took a lot of fiddling to get a different image loaded. Despite numerous attempts and multiple reads of various instructions. Then, once I got Debian and Docker installed, the device was not powerful enuff to run home assistant and pi hole simultaneously. I'll find some other use for this little computer. But running containers isn't one of them.
M**N
Stock firmware is fishy.
The stock firmware is, basically, a modified version of OpenWRT and the modifications are suspicious. The hardware itself is decent, so flash plain vanilla OpenWRT and you'll get a good router for peanuts. When flashing the firmware, use the SD card. This method is simple and it works. Using sysupgrade may get the router bricked.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
1 month ago