Expert's Rating
Pros
- Incredibly small
- Versatile
Cons
- Eval unit shipped with pre-defined password of “Test1234”
- Poor range
- Slow TCP throughput
Our Verdict
The Asus WL-330NUL is amazingly small, but that attribute doesn’t make up for its flaws.
The Asus WL-330NUL is even tinier than TP-Link’s diminutive TL-MR3040. In fact, it’s smaller than some USB thumb drives I’ve used. Its size and weight will tempt anyone who insists on traveling light. My advice: Resist that temptation.
The WL-330NUL is a very simple device. There’s a USB 2.0 connector on a stubby cable at one end, and an RJ-45 ethernet port on the other. Inside is an 802.11b/g/n chipset that supports one 150Mbps spatial stream on the 2.4GHz frequency band. It has no other USB port, so it can’t share files on an attached USB storage device, nor can it support a cellular USB modem.
You can operate the WL-330NUL in one of four modes: If you provide a USB power adapter, it can perform as a wireless router when connected to a DSL or cable modem or another hardwired Internet connection (such as you might use in a hotel or convention center), or as a wireless router when connected to a WISP (Wireless Internet Service Provider). While drawing power from a laptop, it can perform as a wired or wireless USB ethernet adapter for an MacBook Air or any other model that doesn’t have an ethernet adapter of its own.

The Asus WL-330NUL finished in fourth place overall, but its tiny size means it can deliver fewer features than the rest of its competitors.
So it’s more limited than several of the larger travel routers, but that’s a reasonable trade-off for its size. This router’s performance, on the other hand, was decidedly average. With the client in the same room, nine feet from the router, the WL-330NUL managed to deliver TCP throughput of 21.2Mbps. Its performance barely slipped when I moved the MacBook Pro to the kitchen, 20 feet from the router and separated by one wall, delivering 20.2Mbps. The Asus was one of three routers that could reach the MacBook Pro when it was in my home office, 65 feet away with several walls in between, but mustered TCP throughput of only 14.5Mbps. On the other hand, its other three competitors couldn’t reach the client in that location at all.
Flame on
The rest of this review is dedicated to those who decide that the WL-330NUL’s miniature proportions outweigh its performance shortcomings, but encounter trouble setting it up. Few things in this world are more maddening than a poorly written user manual. I have a bad habit of plugging things in and stumbling my way through the installation process. When I review a product, however, I always try to follow the vendor’s installation procedure as outlined in the product’s user manual; the manufacturer deserves the due diligence.
In this case, Asus’s user manual instructs you to plug the WL-330NUL into a USB power source (Asus doesn’t provide one, so I used the one that came with my phone), wait for the router to boot up, select its SSID on the computer you want to wirelessly connect to it, and then enter the “supervisor code” (i.e., the preconfigured WPA2 passphrase) that’s helpfully printed on the side of the router.
I followed those steps, but the client repeatedly reported that the passphrase was not valid. The manual doesn’t have a real table of contents, but I finally flipped through a few pages to find on page seven a section titled “For Mac OS X Users,” which instructs you to follow the instructions for setting up the router using at tablet or smartphone, from a few pages back, those were of no help, either.
I finally committed the act that reviewers hate to resort to: I called Asus’s PR department. Asus’s advice? Connect the router to a Windows PC, launch the router’s utility software, and check to see if default password matches what’s printed on the device. So I followed their instructions and lo and behold! The router was configured not with the password printed on the side of the router, but with this default password: “Test1234.”
Bottom line
The WL-330NUL doesn’t support WPS (Wi-Fi Protected Setup) via either a button or software, but that’s a good thing. If it did, any user who relied on that would have unwittingly ended up using one of the most easily hacked network passwords imaginable.
Should you decide this router’s dimensions override its lack of features and performance shortcomings, just make sure that the factory-assigned passphrase matches what’s on the router (or change it to something even more secure).