avtella
Very Senior Member
I've also generally said the same as L&LD above in regards to dual 5Ghz on a router. Unless you have a lot of Wifi LAN work going on, a tri-band may not help for most people. When talking about spreading the load for multiple devices, that argument really only make sense if ones internet connection wasn't the actual bottle neck, aside from high LAN side wireless use previously mentioned. I usually mention this because I've seen people with like little LAN side use and with for example 100-200 Mbps ISP side, wanting to buy a try-band expecting improvements, when the device airtime contention isn't usually the bottle neck at those ISP speeds. It's good that you are assessing your usage before diving into a tri-band as you could get a dual-band for like half the price if your needs aren't that demanding.
As for what @Tech9 and @Spartan said, that's another thing that often people don't realize, most users will be not doing stuff on phones/tablets requiring extremely high speeds, at least most of us. Even streaming, the most bandwidth intensive thing most people do on phones generally requires much less than a 100 Mbps.
As for what @Tech9 and @Spartan said, that's another thing that often people don't realize, most users will be not doing stuff on phones/tablets requiring extremely high speeds, at least most of us. Even streaming, the most bandwidth intensive thing most people do on phones generally requires much less than a 100 Mbps.
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