That's quite typical with some of the cheaper ISP supplied routers (that may have inherent memory leaks or other issues). Its a cheap form of insurance against the router mysteriously locking up or operating incorrectly. Some are set on a similar weekly watchdog reboot cycle.
Outside of free-issue, low-end consumer grade routers there is absolutely no reason for it. If the router is running robust and stable firmware, then there is certainly no need for a daily reboot.
Supplying and running your own router you should only have to reboot it occasionally, perhaps when doing a firmware upgrade or the like. A good, stable router should be able to run for many months without a reboot.
flippery (fountain of knowledge)
Mon 04-Oct-21 14:37:54
Was it the router the ISP supplied for use with their service? Then I suggest you leave it as the ISP set it. They presumably have a good reason for the setting - e.g. they *know* of a memory leak in certain situations, and after a few weeks of *not* rebooting it may slow down and/or lock up, and you'll be forced to reboot it anyway.
It's an indication that the router is poor though.
arfster (knowledge is power)
Mon 04-Oct-21 16:48:04
Not ISP supplied (Pulse8). As a light user I was hoping to use existing Billion 8800NL. However needed dual band and replaced with Tenda AC21. Works fine but has reboot as default.
Yes, our old BT Smart Hub 2 used to do that, but then stopped doing it. We have a new one now because we're on FTTP, it'll be interesting to see if this does similar...
BT FTTP 900/110
Colaton Raleigh Exchange
BuckleZ (knowledge is power)
Tue 05-Oct-21 19:45:50