Ubiquiti Mini Rack
The Ubiquiti Mini Rack is a 6U open-frame rolling rack designed for UniFi equipment. The build quality is excellent—smooth-rolling wheels, sturdy frame, toolless mounting for UniFi gear—and it’s genuinely useful for staging and organizing equipment before deployment. But 6U is an awkward size that gets cramped fast once you account for a switch, gateway, and power distribution, and the open mobile design creates an aesthetic problem: cables running to a rack on wheels look perpetually temporary. My gear ultimately ended up in a wall-mounted rack that looked intentional rather than improvised. The Mini Rack remains a good workbench on wheels for assembly and configuration, just not where I wanted my network infrastructure to live long-term.
Ubiquiti Switch Pro 24 PoE
The Ubiquiti USW-Pro-24-PoE
is a managed Layer 2/3 switch with PoE on every port that slots neatly into the UniFi ecosystem. Coming from unmanaged Netgear PoE switches, the visibility it provides into network topology transformed how I diagnose problems—the controller’s topology view shows exactly which devices connect to which ports, turning what used to require physical investigation into a glance at the dashboard. I bought it because every port has PoE, eliminating the guesswork of which wall port maps to a powered switch port. I kept it because of that topology view. Twenty-four ports sounds like plenty until you start counting cameras, wall jacks, access points, and infrastructure devices, so plan your deployment carefully.
Ubiquiti U6 Long Range Access Point
The Ubiquiti U6 Long Range
access point makes a bold claim right in its name. After deploying a single ceiling-mounted unit in a 4,000 square foot two-story home, that claim holds up—complete coverage across both floors with no dead spots, handling approximately fifty devices without complaint. Previous access points produced spotty coverage in corners and struggled through walls; those problems simply don’t exist with this unit. The UniFi integration is seamless, roaming between multiple APs is invisible to connected devices, and WiFi 6 efficiency keeps everything stable even when the household is actively streaming, video conferencing, and transferring files simultaneously. Just don’t mount it on your bedroom ceiling—the blue status LED is bright enough to disturb sleep.
Ubiquiti Dream Machine Pro
The Ubiquiti Dream Machine Pro
represents a significant step up from consumer networking gear, offering enterprise-grade features in a package that’s actually manageable for technically-inclined home users. After three years of continuous use, it’s proven itself as the backbone of a demanding home network running four VLANs, approximately fifty devices, nine cameras through Protect, and automatic WAN failover. The centralized management interface handles both networking and Ubiquiti’s camera system from a single console, replacing what would otherwise require command-line configuration or separate tools. The cloud login trend and occasional UI hiccups are annoyances worth noting, but they haven’t undermined three years of reliable operation. If you’re comfortable managing VLANs and understand why IoT devices belong on a separate network, this delivers.