Separate RT-AC68U v4 image was added to Merlin 386.7 alpha1 builds yesterday afternoon.Tried flashing both alpha versions available for my RT-AC68U v4
(RT-AC68U_386.7_alpha1-g82406ddc5d.trx and RT-AC68U_386.7_alpha1-g8ee6420ea6.trx)
to see if this would fix the issue with my 2.4ghz network becomes inoperable after a period of time. Seems others have reported this fix this issue.
When I try to flash says firmware not for that router.
Im gussing they are on 30+ megs instead of 80+ meg that the newer v4 needs or just not built for the Rt-AC68U yet?
Any eta for an alpha that will work on v4?
In other news, more GPLs came in to merge in the coming days. Hopefully should have them all before the weekend, although things will be more complicated for one of these.
The RT-AC5300 has to be built off a different GPL version due to an issue that it resolved for this model.I hope you are not talking about GT-AXE11000... I didn't see any alpha versions for it...
OMG, thanks for sharing your real-world testing... I never would have expected such results.Another data point:
I kept the 2x GT-AX6000 routers until the last day I could have possibly returned them. Testing, not just GT-AX6000_386.6_0_nand_squashfs.pkgtb, but also 386.7 Alpha 1 on them for extended periods.
No matter what I did with either firmware, the performance in my environment was markedly worse with this pair of routers in wired (2.5GbE) backhaul mode than the 2x RT-AX86U I have from over 18 months ago today.
Full resets, multiple resets, different types of resets, nothing worked to get the GT-AX6000 to a good/known state.
New SSIDs, no scripts, amtm not enabled, didn't make a difference. Client devices would 'stick' to the main router vs. the wired node. Worse of all (and what finally prompted the return), the wireless throughput was erratic, always changing, and could only occasionally match what the 2x RT-AX86Us could in my environment (no matter what wireless settings were tried over the month).
Initially, kind of surprised at these results, particularly when reading about the many happy users with this model on these forums.
Looking at the differences between my network and others here, the performance of a single GT-AX6000 is superior to the RT-AX86U.
However, when a second (wired, 2.5GbE backhaul) GT-AX6000 router is added as an AiMesh node, the overall wireless network performance tanks by 40% or more.
In comparison, a single RT-AX86U has great performance as I've posted before, When another RT-AX86U is added as a wired node, that performance extends throughout the entire home/property (as expected).
I could have kept the $1K+ routers and hoped that a final 'release' firmware solved the issues. But it was hard to come home to a network that was inferior to the networks I was creating for my customers, and with far cheaper equipment.
AC88u alpha image does not exist yet. About when will it be available? THXThe RT-AC5300 has to be built off a different GPL version due to an issue that it resolved for this model.
Because it tells you in the first line the name of the process that crashed: "Comm: dcd".
"Broadcom-v8A (DT)" is just the hardware platform of the router and would therefore be the same for every crash on the router regardless of the process that caused it.
The RT-AC5300 has to be built off a different GPL version due to an issue that it resolved for this model.
No. RT-AX86U can still be safely built and flashed provided you use the non-cferom image file.Does the same "different GPL version" await the RT-AX86U ?
They're testing a fix.Is Asus still busy with a permanent patch to the bricking issue - rather than a "work-around" ?
These are not discussing update-bricked routers. First one actually had serial output (so it was not bricked), others were having failed wifi radios or bad nand.I'm not a coder - but could this bricking issue with the RT-AC86U identified 4+ years ago be similar ?
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