If anyone has successfully connected a Netgear X6S EX8000 triband WiFi Extender to an Asus GT-AX11000 using the router's 5MHz high band (5MHz-2) as a dedicated backhaul, PLEASE tell me how!!
My network has 3 stations - main router is my new triband GT-AX11000. I have an Asus RT-AC68U (dual band) connected in Access Point mode with ethernet wired backhaul. I am trying to connect the Netgear X6S EX8000 triband Wi-Fi Extender, using the 5 Mhz high band (5MHz-2) as dedicated backhaul, which both devices claim they can do.
In setting up the Extender, I am asked for the SSIDs of the 2.4 and 5 bands I want to extend. There is no way to enter an SSID and password for the router's 5MHz-2 band that I want to use for backhaul. I have tried the following:
1. GT-AX11000 and RT-AC68U in AiMESH mode. All SSIDs are the same (all passwords are always the same in all of these scenarios). The GT-AX11000 reports that the xxxx-5-2 high band is reserved for Asus AiMESH backhaul (even though though the backhaul is wired, and that shows), so it is not available for the Netgear Extender, or for any device connections. Lame...
2. GT-AX11000 and RT-AC68U NOT in MESH - just primary router and wired access point. The GT-AX11000's 5MHz-2 band has different SSID from the low band 5MHz-1 band and the Access Point's single 5MHz band, which are the same. Since there was no way to tell the EX8000 extender the SSID and PW of the 5MHz-2 band, the extender did not see it, and connected to an upper 5 MHz channel on the Access Point, at half its potential speed. That band is shared by devices, and so backhaul is not dedicated. Best I can obtain so far.
3. Same as #2, but 5MHz radio on the Access Point turned off. SSID of GT-AX11000 5-1 and 5-2 different. I ask the extender to extend 5-1. Again, it does not have the info for 5-2, and connects to low band 5-1 as backhaul.
If I re-enable the Access Point radio and restart the extender, it again connects to higher channel on the Access Point.
4. I give GT-AX11000 5 MHz-1 and 5MHz-2 SAME SSID, AND turn off Access Point 5MHz radio. So now I ask the extender to extend the 5MHz-1 band. NOW, since the info is the same, it sees and connects to the 5MHz-2 band at high speed. But so do my Apple devices (iPhone, iPad, macbook). Tried hiding the SSID on 5MHz -2 after connecting, but the Apple devices keep finding it (same SSID that is being broadcast for 5-1. Tried having all those smart Apple devices "forget this network" at once so they wouldn't keep telling each other - but they kept finding it, so STILL not a dedicated backhaul. If I then changed one of the SSIDs to make them different, the extender jumped back to the Access Point.
I am asking this question on Netgear forums as well. I've used Asus routers for years and love them - the upgrade from my old RT-AC68U to the GT-AX11000 was so easy! The EX8000 seemed the most versatile extender at the time, and is advertised as forming dedicated hi band backhaul, and being cross comatible with other bands.
My network has 3 stations - main router is my new triband GT-AX11000. I have an Asus RT-AC68U (dual band) connected in Access Point mode with ethernet wired backhaul. I am trying to connect the Netgear X6S EX8000 triband Wi-Fi Extender, using the 5 Mhz high band (5MHz-2) as dedicated backhaul, which both devices claim they can do.
In setting up the Extender, I am asked for the SSIDs of the 2.4 and 5 bands I want to extend. There is no way to enter an SSID and password for the router's 5MHz-2 band that I want to use for backhaul. I have tried the following:
1. GT-AX11000 and RT-AC68U in AiMESH mode. All SSIDs are the same (all passwords are always the same in all of these scenarios). The GT-AX11000 reports that the xxxx-5-2 high band is reserved for Asus AiMESH backhaul (even though though the backhaul is wired, and that shows), so it is not available for the Netgear Extender, or for any device connections. Lame...
2. GT-AX11000 and RT-AC68U NOT in MESH - just primary router and wired access point. The GT-AX11000's 5MHz-2 band has different SSID from the low band 5MHz-1 band and the Access Point's single 5MHz band, which are the same. Since there was no way to tell the EX8000 extender the SSID and PW of the 5MHz-2 band, the extender did not see it, and connected to an upper 5 MHz channel on the Access Point, at half its potential speed. That band is shared by devices, and so backhaul is not dedicated. Best I can obtain so far.
3. Same as #2, but 5MHz radio on the Access Point turned off. SSID of GT-AX11000 5-1 and 5-2 different. I ask the extender to extend 5-1. Again, it does not have the info for 5-2, and connects to low band 5-1 as backhaul.
If I re-enable the Access Point radio and restart the extender, it again connects to higher channel on the Access Point.
4. I give GT-AX11000 5 MHz-1 and 5MHz-2 SAME SSID, AND turn off Access Point 5MHz radio. So now I ask the extender to extend the 5MHz-1 band. NOW, since the info is the same, it sees and connects to the 5MHz-2 band at high speed. But so do my Apple devices (iPhone, iPad, macbook). Tried hiding the SSID on 5MHz -2 after connecting, but the Apple devices keep finding it (same SSID that is being broadcast for 5-1. Tried having all those smart Apple devices "forget this network" at once so they wouldn't keep telling each other - but they kept finding it, so STILL not a dedicated backhaul. If I then changed one of the SSIDs to make them different, the extender jumped back to the Access Point.
I am asking this question on Netgear forums as well. I've used Asus routers for years and love them - the upgrade from my old RT-AC68U to the GT-AX11000 was so easy! The EX8000 seemed the most versatile extender at the time, and is advertised as forming dedicated hi band backhaul, and being cross comatible with other bands.