Wi-Fi Signal Strength is 5% lower compared to the previous alpha version.
I should macro this...
Zero wifi change between both firmwares.
Wi-Fi Signal Strength is 5% lower compared to the previous alpha version.
:-DI should macro this...
Zero wifi change between both firmwares.
That's not a completely fair comparison. Really you should test with one AP at a time, in an identical physical position, including antennae arrangement:-D
I can only compare to what I measure and see. Comparison between two RT-AC5300 routers (one with the previous Alpha side by side measured with WiFi Explorer on my Mac.
I did that. FYI: I am not the kind of person that makes remarks for the sake of making remarks.That's not a completely fair comparison. Really you should test with one AP at a time, in an identical physical position, including antennae arrangement
And most importantly same channel, as higher channels have more output power (especially at close, after several walls it levels out)!:-D
I can only compare to what I measure and see. Comparison between two RT-AC5300 routers (one with the previous Alpha side by side measured with WiFi Explorer on my Mac.
Ok guys, to cut a long story short: the second alpha and latest alpha were tested on the same spot, same configuration. I am not comparing Apples with pears, only that I see a clear signal power difference. Thank you for the input anyway.
Maybe the first line of every changelog should be "Zero WiFi changes since 384.X"? Not that people read changelogs either, of course.I should macro this...
Zero wifi change between both firmwares.
I agree, 5% difference is generally statistical at best!While I'm not arguing the point, I can sit and watch levels change over a short period of time on any device in my house.
If you were getting 20% differences, then I'd be concerned. Less than that just goes with the technology.
Unless you have high-end RF test equipment in a test chamber.
While I'm not arguing the point, I can sit and watch levels change over a short period of time on any device in my house.
[FAQ] READ ME FIRST before posting a questionDear @RMerlin , сould you make the wifi region change menu available in the firmware, as in the Chinese firmware?
That might work in your case, but unfortunately with 5% less I encounter black spots in the coverage in my home.While I'm not arguing the point, I can sit and watch levels change over a short period of time on any device in my house.
If you were getting 20% differences, then I'd be concerned. Less than that just goes with the technology.
Unless you have high-end RF test equipment in a test chamber.
Back in the day when doing tests with different RT-N66U wireless driver, I discovered that just by changing the angle at which my laptop screen was open would have a drastic impact on the wireless signal. Which made sense, since the antenna is within the screen frame.
That might work in your case, but unfortunately with 5% less I encounter black spots in the coverage in my home.
I do not thing he understood any of us at all; I tried to be clear, and especially RMerlin vas concise...It's not a matter of "My case", it's just how the technology works.
Ok guys, to cut a long story short: the second alpha and latest alpha were tested on the same spot, same configuration. I am not comparing Apples with pears, only that I see a clear signal power difference. Thank you for the input anyway.
Indeed everybody was concise but apparently not in language that I understood. Your answer puts it all in perspective. I am a poweruser and understand how things work but it does not make me the mister know it all on routers and indeed I might not use the same semantics to express my observations and experiences.I do not thing he understood any of us at all; I tried to be clear, and especially RMerlin vas concise...
@SheikhSheikha No one is discussing whether 5% is important or not; but the fact that if your tests are not exactly identical conditions and all, and repeated several times they are not relevant.
Thus the same channel, the test device must be at the exact same spot (as RMerlin said, even a slight difference of angle the results differ greatly), even time of day is important (the sole amount of traffic over WiFi plays a role on noise - the neighbors I mean) etc.
Try even on the same FW several test at different time periods, and you will probably see even more than 5% difference...
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