Short answer: No. That comes from me asking this directly to a tech support guy at D-Link.
I'd get on the phone and plead your case for a replacement/RMA. I was outside the warranty period but the 1.33NA firmware upgrade effectively ''bricked'' my 655, which was the conclusion the tech reached after performing about a half-hour's worth of troubleshooting with me. The final thing we did together on the phone was to back-install an earlier firmware. This made things worse and at that point he set up the RMA to replace/exchange. I'm expecting it to arrive tomorrow--although I don't know what I'm getting. I tell you what though, if it comes with the original shipping firmware in the 1.X range. I'm not going to upgrade it, that's for sure. Every firmware upgrade since then has been nothing but ''carp'' if you get my meaning. Nothing but a slew of ''hey we're not responsible'' betas that didn't work, followed by a so called ''working'' firmware that didn't work.
I'm also going to sell it after making sure it ''works''--for whatever I can get--and then apply the money toward a router from reliable company that doesn't load up their router with ''carp'' that has no business being on it and that I didn't pay for, and that doesn't compromise security.
For a router that was so highly touted by various geek gurus a couple years back, this thing has been nothing but trouble from day one. I should have listened to my inner voice and taken it right back to Best Buy. Could have, would have, should have...
Sadly enough, when the folks at Revision3 gave it rave reviews, I passed the news along. I recommended the 655 to three friends of mine--two Mac users and one PC/Windows user. Now, two years out, none of the three of my recommend-ees use it anymore. The two Mac users; one took it back within weeks--he must have heard my inner voice--and decided that dealing the problems with the Airport Extreme were better than the problems with the DIR-655. The second bricked theirs and it eventually ended up in his box of cables and other ''carp'' in the garage. The PC/Windows guy RMA-d his a year or so back and when he got the new one, he didn't even open the box because he'd already gotten a different router. It's still sitting on his shelf next to old software. He says he keeps it as his emergency back-up--for when his router fails--which it hasn't. Now that I've joined the group, that's a ''four-peat fail'' in my book. Great going D-Link.