

🔐 Vault your network with power, speed, and silence — because your security deserves the best.
The ProtectliVault Pro VP2420 is a compact, fanless firewall micro appliance powered by a quad-core Intel Celeron J6412 CPU with AES-NI encryption support. Featuring 4x 2.5G Ethernet ports, 8GB DDR4 RAM, and a 120GB M.2 SSD, it delivers high-speed, silent network security optimized for open-source firewall software. Ideal for professionals demanding robust, customizable, and quiet network protection.




| Brand | Protectli |
| Product Dimensions | 14.61 x 12.7 x 5.08 cm; 1.47 kg |
| Batteries | 1 CR2 batteries required. (included) |
| Item model number | VP2420-0-8-120 |
| Manufacturer | Protectli |
| Series | VP2420 |
| Colour | Black |
| Form Factor | Small Form Factor |
| Screen Resolution | 1920 x 1080 |
| Processor Brand | Intel |
| Processor Type | Celeron |
| Processor Speed | 2 GHz |
| Processor Socket | Socket F |
| Processor Count | 4 |
| RAM Size | 8 GB |
| Memory Technology | DDR4 |
| Computer Memory Type | SODIMM |
| Maximum Memory Supported | 8 GB |
| Hard Drive Size | 120 GB |
| Hard Disk Description | SSD |
| Hard Drive Interface | Solid State |
| Graphics Coprocessor | Integriert |
| Graphics Chipset Brand | Intel |
| Graphics Card Description | Integrated Graphics |
| Graphics Card Interface | Integrated |
| Connectivity Type | Wi-Fi |
| Wireless Type | 802.11ac |
| Number of HDMI Ports | 1 |
| Voltage | 240 Volts |
| Hardware Platform | PC |
| Operating System | Linux |
| Are Batteries Included | Yes |
| Lithium Battery Energy Content | 0.67 Watt Hours |
| Lithium Battery Packaging | Batteries contained in equipment |
| Lithium Battery Weight | 0.06 Grams |
| Number of Lithium Metal Cells | 1 |
| Item Weight | 1.47 kg |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
K**N
Great box to run pfSense
Great build quality. Might be overkill for just pfSense but I wanted to futureproof it a bit. At the moment running pfSense on the baremetal but might look to virtualise (Proxmox). pfSense is great, and before purchase I set up a virtual environment to test out it's features and mirror my existing ASUSWRT Merlin config. Restoring that config onto this was a simple matter - the restore prompts you to clarify which is your new WAN and LAN interfaces at that's it. So downtime was limited to 5-10 minutes which kept the family happy. So as I have a test environment that's why I didn't go for virtualising from the get-go Bought barebones and reused a stick of Corsair Vengeance memory and bought a 256Gb M.2 SATA (not NVMe) drive for £25. Cheaper than the official memory / disk. Four network interfaces means that setting up a real DMZ will be easy, or bridging the ports into the LAN in order to have additional LAN ports. It looks like you might be able to buy it slightly cleaper from Protectli's EU store, but ordering from Amazon gives easy returns, and no problem with shipping and import taxes. Recommended.
J**.
Dreadful, Please read what I have to say
DO NOT BUY. I bought the Protectli VP2420 for 369GBP, the SATA Drives in these devices are defunct and the BIOS can't read them. They will point you to a guide telling you to short CMOS headers (open the machine up and use metal to connect to pins on the board) This solution still doesn't work! Bitterly disappointed, they're selling systems they themselves know are faulty and they've tried to just cover it up with a cheap hardware hack fix - which most people aren't comfortable performing, nor should they have too after spending 350+. Please please please save yourself the money and the wasted time and find an alternative like I now have to! There customer service doesn't seem to care either, even if you mail them they'll just say here's a guid open it up and stick some metal in their then ignore when that doesn't work. Dreadful
F**R
Avoid this guys
At the beginning I thought it was good for home use, what I needed is cut some vlan for my home network, and with opnsense installed it get the job done. However after a year this I have found this CPU it can’t handle Zenarmor, every thing push the CPU 100%, which the results is long loading time for everything. For this price? It isn’t good enough, way over priced.
T**R
Great for OPNsense, low power and reliable
These are great firewalls for running OPNsense. Good performance and low power makes them suitable for most situations in domestic and small commercial settings for edge gateway devices. I have no problem using them with OPNsense. Do note that they do not have a standard serial port; they provide a USB TTL logic port which requires drivers on Windows and won't work with macOS, but should work natively on a Linux box so use a Linux laptop for configuration.
T**I
Als opnsense appliance sehr gut. Das Aufsetzen ist sehr einfach. Stabiler Betrieb. Die Betriebstemperatur der CPU liegt zwischen 48C und 60C. Kleiner Tip; zweite SATA SSD einbauen und via Rescuezilla (auf einem USB-Stick) das System clonen.
J**F
I did a quick scan of the bad reviews, which I shouldn't do because sometimes they annoy me. One person accidentally received the wrong version and assumed that everyone would have the same problem, and the other said "it's too complicated". I mean okay, maybe it's complicated for a lot of people. But that's not the hardware's fault. Blame the people on the internet telling people with no networking experience that they need to buy it. Anyway, rant over, let's get into it. I'm not an expert by any stretch, as a software engineer I have plenty of computer experience but my networking knowledge is limited. Buying this Vault is actually partly to help me learn. I ordered the "bare bones" version because I did a quick search and found that the extra items I need -- namely, an M.2 SATA drive (not NVMe) and one DDR4 SO-DIMM RAM stick, cost less than having them already installed in the more expensive versions. What I didn't realize is that Protectli's website offers the same "bare bones" version for $40 less. Oh well, I suppose getting it the day after ordering it was nice. Unfortunately that wasn't my only mistake. I found a pretty good deal on a 32GB Corsair Vengeance RAM stick, which I bought along with a 500GB Kingston M.2 SATA SSD. When I installed them both and the Vault refused to boot, I went to the website and found that Corsair Vengeance RAM is not compatible for some reason. So I checked the compatibility list (highly recommend doing BEFORE you buy the RAM) and ended up getting a 32GB DDR4 3200MHz stick by Crucial . When I installed this, the box fired right up. Quick note on SSD and RAM install: it couldn't be easier. Four screws on the bottom to remove, the bottom panel comes right off, you install the things, and put it back together. Takes 5 minutes. The chassis is all metal, nice and heavy, with a great textured finish and beveled edges. It looks and feels great. Initial setup was pretty simple. I chose pfSense for the installation, so I downloaded the image to a USB drive and plugged it in. For initial setup, I plugged a cheap monitor into the HDMI port and a keyboard into one of the USB ports. There's also a console port, which I set up later, this uses the included serial-to-USB cable to plug into another PC, and you need to install serial drivers and PuTTY or an equivalent application for serial communication on the other PC. In most cases I assume people will generally use the HDMI port for setup and then just use the web console from that point forward. Install was easy, tell it what you want the IP to be, define which ports you want to associate with each interface, etc. It just takes a minute. At that point, it's pretty much ready to go. Internet into the WAN port, and I chose to plug my laptop into the LAN port at first just to configure my chosen address reservations etc that I had set up on my previous router (a Netgear router/AP combo), and then removed the Netgear and put the Vault in its place. Then I switched the Netgear into AP-only mode and added it to my switch, and everything just worked. Of course, I broke things a bunch of times later as I was messing around with creating VLANs and whatnot, but that's me learning the hard way, nothing to do with the Vault. The hardware is great for running pfSense, there's plenty of power on tap. The quad core Celeron runs normally at 2.0 GHz and can ramp up to 2.6 GHZ when needed, although I haven't seen it do that. In fact, the CPU rarely jumps up above 2% utilization. The 32GB RAM I put in there is also probably more than I'll ever need, as that value also stays at about 2% utilization. The Vault runs warm to the touch, but not hot. pfSense reports hardware temperature, but apparently this box lacks the sensor for that since it reports 0.1C all the time. [UPDATE 2024-07-23: I'm just an idiot. There's a setting somewhere in pfSense that allows you to specify your processor family, and then if you enable the temperature sensors widget on the dashboard, you can see the core temperatures. The "Zone 0 temp" is still not reporting, but at least the CPU core temps are there.] Total usage on my 500GB SSD is currently sitting at around 820MB. So what's missing? Well, I guess that Zone 0 temp sensor would be nice. And it also would have been nice to have a display-capable USB-C port, since I have a portable monitor that supports it, and plugging into USB for power AND HDMI for the display is kind of clumsy. Both of these issues are incredibly minor though, and I doubt I'll need the screen connected very often now that the initial setup is complete, and I always have the console port anyway if I need it. One last thing I'd like to add, temperatures tend to stay cool (relatively speaking), as the four reporting core temps always seem to hover around 117F-119F (ambient temperature near the box is probably close to 80F, since the room is air conditioned to 77 but there's nearby switches that warm up the immediate surroundings a bit). Because I'm weird and also since I had a couple of spare case fans laying around, I took one and hooked it up to a 12v power supply with a rotary switch and laid it on top of the Vault's fins to pull air away from them, set at a little under 50% where there's no fan noise but it's moving a decent amount of air. This in turn reduced the core temperatures down to about 91F-94F. I mean yeah, I'm certainly using more electricity powering the fan for no real gain whatsoever, and the temperature was WELL within the normal operating temperature for that CPU, but for some off reason, CPU temps below 100F bring me joy.
A**R
I have been wanting one of these Firewall devices for quite some time. Finally got one and installed OPNsense on it and it is working flawlessly.
S**T
Been thinking of buying one of these for a while and finally did last week. Couldn't be more happy with it, it's replaced 2 devices and having no fans it's sooo quiet. I was worried it might get hot but it just sits at a constant 42c. Have used proxmox on it which was up and running in no time at all, then running opnsense plus a bunch of other internal services and not breaking a sweat. The only thing I would have liked is more options through Amazon for configuration, ie a zero ram and SSD option.
F**5
Installed opnsense and inserted between my old router and home wifi in about 30 minutes - that's from unboxing to operating. Installed zenarmor and now have all the stats as well as advanced app-level blocking and reporting. Highly recommend for home network. Watched some YouTube videos to prepare.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
2 weeks ago