Shopping Cart

Your cart is empty.

Your cart is empty.

TP-Link AV600 Powerline Ethernet Adapter - Plug&Play, Power Saving, Nano Powerline Adapter, Expand Home Network with Stable Connections (TL-PA4010 KIT)

Free shipping on orders over $29.99

$33.99

$ 14 .99 $14.99

In Stock

About this item

  • Fast speed: Wired connection with high speed data transfer rate, ideal for HD video or 3D video streaming and online gaming
  • Plug and Play: No new wires and no configuration required; Step 1: connect 1 adapter to your router. Step 2: plug in another Powerline adapter wherever you need wired internet service.
  • Network expansion: The TL-PA4010 KIT transforms your home's existing electrical circuit into a high-speed network with no need for new wires or drilling and brings wired network to anywhere there is a power outlet(Up to 300 meters)
  • Miniature design: Smaller than most Powerline adapters in the market, blends discreetly in front of any power outlet
  • Power Saving Mode: TL-PA4010 KIT automatically switches from its "Working" mode to efficient "Power-Saving" mode when not in use, reducing energy consumption by up to 85%.
  • Please note that powerline adapters must be deployed in sets of two or more
  • Kindly Reminder: Powerline Adapters must be on the same electrical circuit for connectivity. Requires direct outlet plug in. Does not work with surge protectors. Appliances and devices running on the same circuit may affect powerline performance.
  • Compatible with all TP-Link Powerline Ethernet Adapters AV2000, AV1300, AV1200, AV1000, AV600, AV500, AV200. TL-PA4010 KIT can only provide wired connections. No WiFi.


Using advanced Home Plug AV technology, TL-PA4010 KIT provides users with stable, high-speed data transfer rates of up to 600Mbps on a line length of up to 300 meters. With speed of up to 600Mbps, TL-PA4010 KIT enables heavy-bandwidth applications like HD streaming, on-line gaming and large file downloading, turning your home into a robust and high-speed networking.
The terms “AV600” and “600Mbps” are derived from applicable specifications and refer to the theoretical maximum physical-layer data transfer rate. Those terms are used on this product solely to indicate its compatibility with other “AV600” or “600Mbps” powerline devices. Actual data speeds vary and may be limited by the product’s Ethernet port and other network conditions such as data traffic, electrical noise, and wiring issues. For better performance, powerline devices should be deployed on the same electrical circuit and rated for the same HomePlug standard. A minimum of two powerline devices are required to establish a powerline connection. If you are uncertain about your network conditions, you should consult an IT professional to assist in selecting a networking product.
About power saving, actual power saved varies based on network conditions and environmental factors.


Gaza
Reviewed in Australia on January 6, 2024
Works fine easy to set up
Gaza
Reviewed in Australia on January 6, 2024
Works fine easy to set up
Ana
Reviewed in Brazil on August 9, 2022
Produto cumpre o que promete! Original e consegue trazer o sinal sem perda para todos os cômodos da casa
Ana
Reviewed in Brazil on August 9, 2022
Produto cumpre o que promete! Original e consegue trazer o sinal sem perda para todos os cômodos da casa
sa mk
Reviewed in Saudi Arabia on January 19, 2022
الجهاز لا يعمل
sa mk
Reviewed in Saudi Arabia on January 19, 2022
الجهاز لا يعمل
Daniel
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 26, 2019
Izz sooo good
Daniel
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 26, 2019
Izz sooo good
Cohen
Reviewed in France on November 29, 2017
Bon produit dans l’ensenble, facile à installer et peut être acoupler avec plusieurs TP link en même temps de même référence.
Cohen
Reviewed in France on November 29, 2017
Bon produit dans l’ensenble, facile à installer et peut être acoupler avec plusieurs TP link en même temps de même référence.
A. J. Safian
Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2014
This won't be too much of a technical review. I live in a 3-story apartment with 5 guys. The router is dual N band (linksys) 2.4Ghz/5.0Ghz. Most of our devices run on the traditional 2.4Ghz band. Unfortunately the router is by the TV, microwave and other electrical appliances. Did I mention we live in a 3-story apartment? Well, I was looking at wireless repeaters for a long long time and was getting dizzy by the number of reviews that contradicted themselves. I decided to stay away from it altogether. But then these products came up and utilized something that's been around for a long time. Powerline technology. I admit, the process still eludes me, but if data can be transferred via our old school copper telephone cables, why couldn't it be transferred via the power lines that ran throughout the house? I was very skeptical but took the plunge. I went with the TL-PA4010KIT AV500 (up to 500Mbps).I have a macbook with windows installed on it (via bootcamp). On the mac side (Mavericks), just plug ethernet cable into laptop and turn wifi off and works like a charm. With windows (Win 7) it was not working at first. I had to disable my wifi entirely before it could receive data from the ethernet cable. But just for good measure I installed the Drivers from the website and downloaded the firmware update as well. Though I don't have to disable wifi anymore, the laptop will always prefer wifi for some reason. So I just turn wifi off when plugged in with a cable and I get connection. And boy that connection! Once you install the utility driver off their website you can view the speed of the connection via cable to adapter. On wifi, I was getting 26Mbps (3.17MB/s). Once I connected the ethernet cable and shut off my wifi I opened up the utility and saw my connection speed a whopping 320Mbps (39MB/s). *on the central coast of California, we have Charter internet so its very very fast and not throttled. Watching Netflix, downloading files, everything....was much faster.When I say much faster, I don't mean it will speed up your internet. That is dependent on your internet plan with an ISP, the modem/router you use (update, update, update [firmware]), and any interference of devices near your router if going wireless. If not wireless, then the cable. Are you using cat5/cat5e cables? If you are paying for 25Mbps internet connection you will most likely be consistently getting 15Mbps (I also live in La and can attest to this). This device is rated for 500Mbps. Not even our internet plan with charter reaches that speed yet. Our router can't even push those speeds. So I went for over kill, yes. But when we updrade our speeds in the near future, we will be future proof. Besides, the build quality on these looked superior to the level below it (300Mbps?).****How These WorkYou plug each of these into an electrical outlet (not surge protector); you need a constant volt of energy being supplied. You plug in one near your router. You plug in the other near the area you'd like to have internet connection (room, office, patio, etc.). Next (you will need cat5/cat5e ethernet cables) you take one ethernet cable and connect it from the router to the adapter in the outlet. You connect the second ethernet cable from the second outlet into your laptop/pc. You press the square button on the bottom right side (below the blinking lights) of BOTH adapters. This will tell them to look for each other and automatically connect (aka "pairing"). If you are on a mac, installation of drivers is not neccessary. Though many Windows users have successfully just "plugged and go," it wouldn't hurt to install the driver software of your product BEFORE you plug anything in!*Sometimes I will not get internet connection. Our router is getting old and finicky. It will not send data to the adapter and the adapter may disconnect. All you have to do is "pair them" again. Just press the square on both (or if you bought more than 2 adapters) and wait for them to find each other again. Has happened only twice over 3 months?****What these DON'T doThese are not the same as wireless repeaters. They do not connect to the wall outlet and magically transmit data wirelessly to every room in your home. These need to be physically connected to a source and a destination. There is a model on here that uses Powerline technology AND acts as a wireless repeater, but it is more expensive and the wireless speed is not as fast as the cable speed you will get from the adapter.They do not speed up your internet. If you are in big metropolitan areas you will most likely be throttled. Certain ISP throttle (artificially slow down) your speed no matter what your geographic location! And some throttle during peak hours (the equivalent of rush hour traffic). Use ookla speed test to determine what your speeds are and at different times of the day. If unsatisfied you can change ISPs, pay more $ for higher speed, or perhaps its the router they supplied you with and you should ask them to replace it if they value your patronage (routers get outdated very fast).****Final WordsIf you have multiple computers upstairs you can run the ethernet cable from the 2nd adapter straight to an ethernet port/switch (looks just like a usb hub except for ethernet ports) and plug multiple computers into that little hub- though you will now be splitting the incoming speed between multiple devices and it won't be as fast.I have read many reviews between these and wireless repeaters. Wireless repeaters sound nice in theory but there are too inconsistent. They are still affected by stairs, concrete, walls, devices, microwaves, etc. If you want something that has consistency, been used for a long time, and has a solid track record, try this option out.***UPDATE*** 6/21/2015Still working like a charm. A month after my review, the unit was a little buggy and kept disconnecting randomly. I was patient with it and just unplugged the units and plugged both back in. Ever since then I've had 0 issues with them for 5+ months now and amazing, uninhibited speed.
A. J. Safian
Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2014
This won't be too much of a technical review. I live in a 3-story apartment with 5 guys. The router is dual N band (linksys) 2.4Ghz/5.0Ghz. Most of our devices run on the traditional 2.4Ghz band. Unfortunately the router is by the TV, microwave and other electrical appliances. Did I mention we live in a 3-story apartment? Well, I was looking at wireless repeaters for a long long time and was getting dizzy by the number of reviews that contradicted themselves. I decided to stay away from it altogether. But then these products came up and utilized something that's been around for a long time. Powerline technology. I admit, the process still eludes me, but if data can be transferred via our old school copper telephone cables, why couldn't it be transferred via the power lines that ran throughout the house? I was very skeptical but took the plunge. I went with the TL-PA4010KIT AV500 (up to 500Mbps).I have a macbook with windows installed on it (via bootcamp). On the mac side (Mavericks), just plug ethernet cable into laptop and turn wifi off and works like a charm. With windows (Win 7) it was not working at first. I had to disable my wifi entirely before it could receive data from the ethernet cable. But just for good measure I installed the Drivers from the website and downloaded the firmware update as well. Though I don't have to disable wifi anymore, the laptop will always prefer wifi for some reason. So I just turn wifi off when plugged in with a cable and I get connection. And boy that connection! Once you install the utility driver off their website you can view the speed of the connection via cable to adapter. On wifi, I was getting 26Mbps (3.17MB/s). Once I connected the ethernet cable and shut off my wifi I opened up the utility and saw my connection speed a whopping 320Mbps (39MB/s). *on the central coast of California, we have Charter internet so its very very fast and not throttled. Watching Netflix, downloading files, everything....was much faster.When I say much faster, I don't mean it will speed up your internet. That is dependent on your internet plan with an ISP, the modem/router you use (update, update, update [firmware]), and any interference of devices near your router if going wireless. If not wireless, then the cable. Are you using cat5/cat5e cables? If you are paying for 25Mbps internet connection you will most likely be consistently getting 15Mbps (I also live in La and can attest to this). This device is rated for 500Mbps. Not even our internet plan with charter reaches that speed yet. Our router can't even push those speeds. So I went for over kill, yes. But when we updrade our speeds in the near future, we will be future proof. Besides, the build quality on these looked superior to the level below it (300Mbps?).****How These WorkYou plug each of these into an electrical outlet (not surge protector); you need a constant volt of energy being supplied. You plug in one near your router. You plug in the other near the area you'd like to have internet connection (room, office, patio, etc.). Next (you will need cat5/cat5e ethernet cables) you take one ethernet cable and connect it from the router to the adapter in the outlet. You connect the second ethernet cable from the second outlet into your laptop/pc. You press the square button on the bottom right side (below the blinking lights) of BOTH adapters. This will tell them to look for each other and automatically connect (aka "pairing"). If you are on a mac, installation of drivers is not neccessary. Though many Windows users have successfully just "plugged and go," it wouldn't hurt to install the driver software of your product BEFORE you plug anything in!*Sometimes I will not get internet connection. Our router is getting old and finicky. It will not send data to the adapter and the adapter may disconnect. All you have to do is "pair them" again. Just press the square on both (or if you bought more than 2 adapters) and wait for them to find each other again. Has happened only twice over 3 months?****What these DON'T doThese are not the same as wireless repeaters. They do not connect to the wall outlet and magically transmit data wirelessly to every room in your home. These need to be physically connected to a source and a destination. There is a model on here that uses Powerline technology AND acts as a wireless repeater, but it is more expensive and the wireless speed is not as fast as the cable speed you will get from the adapter.They do not speed up your internet. If you are in big metropolitan areas you will most likely be throttled. Certain ISP throttle (artificially slow down) your speed no matter what your geographic location! And some throttle during peak hours (the equivalent of rush hour traffic). Use ookla speed test to determine what your speeds are and at different times of the day. If unsatisfied you can change ISPs, pay more $ for higher speed, or perhaps its the router they supplied you with and you should ask them to replace it if they value your patronage (routers get outdated very fast).****Final WordsIf you have multiple computers upstairs you can run the ethernet cable from the 2nd adapter straight to an ethernet port/switch (looks just like a usb hub except for ethernet ports) and plug multiple computers into that little hub- though you will now be splitting the incoming speed between multiple devices and it won't be as fast.I have read many reviews between these and wireless repeaters. Wireless repeaters sound nice in theory but there are too inconsistent. They are still affected by stairs, concrete, walls, devices, microwaves, etc. If you want something that has consistency, been used for a long time, and has a solid track record, try this option out.***UPDATE*** 6/21/2015Still working like a charm. A month after my review, the unit was a little buggy and kept disconnecting randomly. I was patient with it and just unplugged the units and plugged both back in. Ever since then I've had 0 issues with them for 5+ months now and amazing, uninhibited speed.
Hyoun Kim
Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2013
I've been a Network Engineer for over 10 years and ever since I've dealt with computers, cabling is one of the worst aspects of the job. I can't tell you how many times I've run/extended CAT3/CAT5/CAT5e/CAT6 cabling and ended up terminating both ends and testing them. Some situations are easier than others when you're allowed to run a cable across the floor or above ceiling tile... but in other situations like getting networking in a certain room in your house can be a total pain in the butt.For the average home user, the only way to get networking from point A to your house to point B is either wired with cabling or use WiFi & bridging if the WiFi didn't extend far enough. When Powerline technology came out it added convenience of using existing power cabling but still was a little flaky and troublesome. But since then, Powerline has jumped leaps and bounds since and is much more reliable & faster.When it came time to buy originally back in July 2012, I put a lot of research into looking into the latest powerline solution for my home. I wanted something with high performance and the current version of "high performance Powerline devices" allows 500Mbps transfer rate. Even still, I was having trouble selecting which manufacturer to go with (Belkin, Cisco, Netgear, etc). After my homework (and despite Netgear's horrible sales support), I ended up with the .Despite the insane price point (currently $87.99 on Amazon - 12/13/2013; I bought these for $108 back in July 2012), the Netgear adapters worked wonderfully in my home. I was able to maintain faster throughput from device to device while on wired Ethernet while not saturating my WiFi network. However, over the course of a year and a half, the number of devices I had in my house grew considerably (especially over WiFi).In the past year, I added a few cell phones, a laptop, a tablet, a Roku 3, a Western Digital TV Live, 2 Chromecasts, and a new Smart TV. Because of that, my WiFi started to become degraded because every single one of those new devices was connecting to my network over WiFi. When multiple devices would start streaming things like Netflix and I was doing transfers from my media server to a PC, Netflix would stutter and my WiFi throughput would literally crawl slower than a snail on a salt bed. That's when I realized I needed to invest in more Powerline Adapters for certain rooms to speed up transfers as well as help reduce the load of my WiFi network.But you see, despite being pleased with my Netgear adapters, I didn't want to spend another $100. A friend of mine (who I told the Netgear adapters about) bought another brand of Powerline AV 500Mbit adapters from a company called TP-Link to save money. He said they worked pretty good. After finding out that they were $35 on Amazon, I immediately pulled the trigger. I mean after all, I had a word of mouth approval from a friend and you can't argue saving over $50 vs another set of my Netgear adapters... the result? Absolutely no difference in speeds.Just like the Netgear adapters, these are essentially Plug & Play. There were literally no problems connecting these in my house. I went to the living room where I needed wired connectivity and plugged these up to the wall. The TP-Link adapter immediately recognized my existing Netgear Powerline adapters and the 2nd LED (Powerline LED indicator) immediately lit up. I plugged in my small 10/100 switch to it and then my Roku & TV up to it and the 3rd LED (Ethernet indicator) lit up and the devices could not only talk to other devices on my LAN, but they had Internet access as well. I personally noticed NO DIFFERENCE in throughput speeds both within the LAN and the Internet.The *ONLY* difference between the TP-Link set and the Netgear is the that the TP-Link doesn't tell you the "current speed" of that adapter's Powerline network. The Netgear has multicolored LEDs that indicate the speed of your Powerline network. While this normally won't matter to a lot of people, it will tell you whether you are having degraded performance within your home's electrical wiring. It also aids in troubleshooting as well. But it's not a show stopper...Personally, I would recommend this product over the Netgear adapters I have.1. The price is a LOT cheaper.2. TP-Link has a TWO YEAR WARRANTY vs the Netgear's ONE YEAR WARRANTY. If you're really concerned on whether you're buying "a crap product", rest assured that this works just as good as the bigger name brands and you have an extra year of product care!Highly recommended.
Hyoun Kim
Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2013
I've been a Network Engineer for over 10 years and ever since I've dealt with computers, cabling is one of the worst aspects of the job. I can't tell you how many times I've run/extended CAT3/CAT5/CAT5e/CAT6 cabling and ended up terminating both ends and testing them. Some situations are easier than others when you're allowed to run a cable across the floor or above ceiling tile... but in other situations like getting networking in a certain room in your house can be a total pain in the butt.For the average home user, the only way to get networking from point A to your house to point B is either wired with cabling or use WiFi & bridging if the WiFi didn't extend far enough. When Powerline technology came out it added convenience of using existing power cabling but still was a little flaky and troublesome. But since then, Powerline has jumped leaps and bounds since and is much more reliable & faster.When it came time to buy originally back in July 2012, I put a lot of research into looking into the latest powerline solution for my home. I wanted something with high performance and the current version of "high performance Powerline devices" allows 500Mbps transfer rate. Even still, I was having trouble selecting which manufacturer to go with (Belkin, Cisco, Netgear, etc). After my homework (and despite Netgear's horrible sales support), I ended up with the .Despite the insane price point (currently $87.99 on Amazon - 12/13/2013; I bought these for $108 back in July 2012), the Netgear adapters worked wonderfully in my home. I was able to maintain faster throughput from device to device while on wired Ethernet while not saturating my WiFi network. However, over the course of a year and a half, the number of devices I had in my house grew considerably (especially over WiFi).In the past year, I added a few cell phones, a laptop, a tablet, a Roku 3, a Western Digital TV Live, 2 Chromecasts, and a new Smart TV. Because of that, my WiFi started to become degraded because every single one of those new devices was connecting to my network over WiFi. When multiple devices would start streaming things like Netflix and I was doing transfers from my media server to a PC, Netflix would stutter and my WiFi throughput would literally crawl slower than a snail on a salt bed. That's when I realized I needed to invest in more Powerline Adapters for certain rooms to speed up transfers as well as help reduce the load of my WiFi network.But you see, despite being pleased with my Netgear adapters, I didn't want to spend another $100. A friend of mine (who I told the Netgear adapters about) bought another brand of Powerline AV 500Mbit adapters from a company called TP-Link to save money. He said they worked pretty good. After finding out that they were $35 on Amazon, I immediately pulled the trigger. I mean after all, I had a word of mouth approval from a friend and you can't argue saving over $50 vs another set of my Netgear adapters... the result? Absolutely no difference in speeds.Just like the Netgear adapters, these are essentially Plug & Play. There were literally no problems connecting these in my house. I went to the living room where I needed wired connectivity and plugged these up to the wall. The TP-Link adapter immediately recognized my existing Netgear Powerline adapters and the 2nd LED (Powerline LED indicator) immediately lit up. I plugged in my small 10/100 switch to it and then my Roku & TV up to it and the 3rd LED (Ethernet indicator) lit up and the devices could not only talk to other devices on my LAN, but they had Internet access as well. I personally noticed NO DIFFERENCE in throughput speeds both within the LAN and the Internet.The *ONLY* difference between the TP-Link set and the Netgear is the that the TP-Link doesn't tell you the "current speed" of that adapter's Powerline network. The Netgear has multicolored LEDs that indicate the speed of your Powerline network. While this normally won't matter to a lot of people, it will tell you whether you are having degraded performance within your home's electrical wiring. It also aids in troubleshooting as well. But it's not a show stopper...Personally, I would recommend this product over the Netgear adapters I have.1. The price is a LOT cheaper.2. TP-Link has a TWO YEAR WARRANTY vs the Netgear's ONE YEAR WARRANTY. If you're really concerned on whether you're buying "a crap product", rest assured that this works just as good as the bigger name brands and you have an extra year of product care!Highly recommended.
Recommended Products