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AirPort Express Base Station with 802.11n and AirTunes

Introducing the new AirPort Express Base Station, now with 802.11n wireless. Easily create a wireless network at home. Enjoy your iTunes music library in virtually any room of your house. Share a USB printer without obtrusive cables. And do it all with the latest wireless technology.

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Questions & Answers

384 Questions + 277 Answers

Purchase Information

€81.41

Ships: 2 business days
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Overview

5x faster icon

Up to 5x the performance, 2x the range

AirPort Express now uses next-generation 802.11n wireless technology1 to deliver up to five times the performance and up to twice the range of 802.11g wireless networks.2

Notes icon

Really rock the house

Play the music from your computer's iTunes library through a set of speakers or stereo in just about any room in your home — wirelessly. (See system requirements.)

Connect. Print. Listen. Wirelessly.
AppleTV, iPhone, iPod touch icon

Works with Apple TV, iPhone, and more

AirPort Express works flawlessly with Apple TV, iPhone, iPod touch, and all your other Wi-Fi devices that use the 802.11a/b/g/n wireless standards.

Printer icon

Print without wires

Print documents, photos, and more from any room in the house to one central USB printer. (See system requirements.)

Wireless networking icon

Easy wireless networking

The easy-to-use AirPort Utility — available for both Mac OS X and Windows — guides you through the setup process step by step. Use AirPort Express to create a new wireless network3 or to extend the range of your existing AirPort-based network.

Hand holding Airport Express icon

Take it with you

Lightweight and compact, AirPort Express is built for mobility, so you can create an instant wireless network at your hotel, job site, or wherever you need one.

What's in the Box

  • AirPort Express
  • CD with AirPort Utility (Mac and Windows), 802.11n Enabler (for Intel Core 2 Duo and Xeon-based Macintosh computers except 17-inch 1.83GHz iMac and Mac mini), Bonjour for Windows
  • Printed and electronic documentation

System Requirements

For setup and administration:
  • Macintosh computer with Mac OS X v10.4 or later, CD drive, Ethernet or wireless networking capability
  • PC with Windows XP (SP2) or Windows Vista, CD drive, Ethernet or wireless networking capability
For wireless client access:
  • Mac with AirPort or AirPort Extreme wirelesscapability
  • PC with 802.11a/b/g/n
For shared printing:
  • USB printer
  • Macintosh computer with Mac OS X v10.2.7 or later
  • PC with Windows XP (SP2) or Windows Vista; Bonjour for Windows included on AirPort Express CD
For iTunes music streaming:
  • Stereo or powered speakers
  • Audio cable
  • iTunes 4.6 or later
Bottom of Aiport Express showing ports and labels.
  1. (1) The AirPort Express Base Station is based on an IEEE 802.11n draft specification and is compatible with IEEE 802.11a, IEEE 802.11b, and IEEE 802.11g.
  2. (2) Based on a comparison with Apple's 802.11g products. Comparison assumes AirPort Express network with 802.11n-enabled computer. Speed and range will be less if an 802.11a/b/g product joins the network. Accessing the wireless network requires an AirPort- or AirPort Extreme-enabled computer or other Wi-Fi Certified 802.11a/b/g-enabled computer. Actual performance will vary based on range, connection rate, site conditions, size of network, and other factors. Range will vary with site conditions.
  3. (3) Wireless Internet access requires a wireless-enabled computer, a base station or other access point, and Internet access (fees may apply). Some ISPs are not currently compatible with AirPort Express.
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Ratings & Reviews

3.5

Based on 195 reviews

Most Useful Reviews

  • AirPort Express Base Station with 802.11n and AirTunes

    5.0

    Greatness in a little white box

    Written by DN from Bradford

    27-Mar-2008

    Well worth the money! I bought this as a quick fix to extend the wireless network in the old house I live in. The problem I'd been having with my wireless router was that due to the density of the walls the wireless signal was not reaching all parts of the house, and so the only way of using the internet/network in some areas was via ethernet cable for each and every device that needed it. However, this little box has changed all that! I now have a single ethernet cable running into the Base Station, and this provides wireless coverage where I need it. It also is great for broadcasting music wirelessly to a stereo, which is a benefit as I use a MacBook Pro, and don't want potential trip hazards everywhere!

    As for setting up the device, things couldn't be easier. It worked straight out of the box (although was an unsecured network), and once the software had been installed on my Mac and PC, I was able to set a WEP or WPA/WPA2 password to secure everything. It also works fine connecting with a PS3!

    A light on the back of the Base Station displays different colours depending on the status of the device, and any problems can be sorted from the Apple software that you install on your Mac or PC. Broadcasting to your connected speakers is also simple, with a quick and easy change of settings in iTunes.

    All in all an excellent piece of kit, with little to fault!
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    801 of 921 people found this useful

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  • AirPort Express Base Station with 802.11n and AirTunes

    5.0

    Fast, easy, simple - or should that be express?

    Written by PG from LONDON

    25-Mar-2008

    Easy to install, 100% more reliable than the BT Home Hub we were using before. I think it's a little quicker but that could just be some Apple magic in the air.

    Airtunes will revolutionise the way we listen to music at home and can't understand why it's not standard on all Apple routers. Printed from the garden yesterday and we live on the upper ground floor of a central London apartment complex.

    All I need to do now is find a way of getting it out of the sideboard and on display because it's a funky little bit of kit. Thanks Apple.
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    475 of 598 people found this useful

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  • AirPort Express Base Station with 802.11n and AirTunes

    5.0

    easy peasy!

    Written by LH from Southampton

    19-Mar-2008

    insert the c.d., install the stuff! follow on screen instructions, to join your existing network have the way you are encrypted to hand and your w.e.p key or whatever. and you done.

    O.k, not the most technically detailed description, but then I'm not. works a treat
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    461 of 652 people found this useful

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Most Recent Reviews

  • AirPort Express Base Station with 802.11n and AirTunes

    1.0

    Just don't buy it!

    Written by LN from Coulsdon

    19-Dec-2009

    I have wasted so many hours trying to make this airport work it is ridiculous! It can't extend my wireless network, it constantly has a solid amber light and my macbook pro can never seem to find it! Airtunes doesn't work! Even when I have the airport next to my computer it doesn't recognise it. IT IS USELESS! DO NOT BUY THIS UNLESS YOU HAVE DOZENS OF HOURS TO WASTE CONFIGURING IT, ONLY TO HAVE TO RESET IT AGAIN EVERY TIME YOU TURN IT OFF! More

    0 of 1 people found this useful

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  • AirPort Express Base Station with 802.11n and AirTunes

    1.0

    Airport Express, not so fast....

    Written by MR from new eltham

    17-Dec-2009

    The main reason I shelled out this product was so I could listen to itunes all over the house. Apple staff at bluewater said it would work no problems....
    ....well let me tell you the trust about this device, no good at all! The songs strem over then signal is lost for half minute or so. Apple need to sort this out.I asked an Apple rep through work, he said he has one and there is nothing you can do to stop it, the smallest signal, like a light being switched on or off, microwave running, anything that sends off signals can interfear with the pleasure of listening to music.

    Think twice before spending £80.00 on this, just run a speaker cable from Mac to stereo
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    4 of 7 people found this useful

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  • AirPort Express Base Station with 802.11n and AirTunes

    1.0

    Great idea- doesn't work

    Written by RP from Robertsbridge

    16-Dec-2009

    The concept is great and when working is fine- unfortunately it's just too 'flakey' and unreliable.
    I bought this to stream music through and run a printer off. Worked like a dream straight out of the box but then started cutting out after 6 hours use. After setting it up countless times it may work for 10mins to a couple of hours then cuts out all the time/ my mac can't find it.
    I thought it may be a faultly product so got a replacement, but the same thing happens.
    Looking on the internet lots of people have had similar problems.
    Come on Apple, everything else you make works so well- so this problem out!
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    5 of 9 people found this useful

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Questions & Answers

Most Interesting

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  • Best Answer

    Yes...you can go into the settings for the AirPort Express and tell it how you want it to be used. You select 'Extend' and it's all setup. I just did it this weekend and it took all of 5 minutes from the time I opened the box. More

    • Answered by MW from Holland
    • 12-Oct-2009
    • 88 of 94 people found this useful
    • 6 more answers
  • Best Answer

    Yes, but only if the airport express is extending an existing airport network. In other words, if you already have an airport extreme, time capsule, or another airport express it is possible to do this. It's just, however, not the easiest or most reliable option in my opinion. More

    • Answered by RS from Syracuse
    • 11-Oct-2009
    • 16 of 21 people found this useful
    • 3 more answers
  • Best Answer

    Yes, as long as you know the credentials for joining a device to your current wireless network. You would setup the Airport Express to "Join Your Wireless Network" like a computer or laptop. You can then connect your printer to the USB port on the Airport Express making it available to any computers on the same network. (NOTE: the USB port on the Airport Express is not "hot-swappable" which means you should connect the printer first and then power on the Airport Express)

    The only issues that can occur include the security on your current wireless network not allowing the Airport Express to join it correctly if at all. I recommend using WPA-PSK security with a password of 8 or more characters (required). Wireless networks that are set to use a 10-character or 5 character passwords are most-likely using the older WEP security which doesn't always work well with the newer hardware in the Airport products.

    Hope this helps.
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    • Answered by KR from Folsom
    • 09-Oct-2009
    • 36 of 36 people found this useful
    • 1 more answer