sm00thpapa
Very Senior Member
There won't be an official MU-MIMO firmware until Q3 or Q4 of 2016.
What is your source for those dates?There won't be an official MU-MIMO firmware until Q3 or Q4 of 2016.
What is your source for those dates?
That's later than the Q2 I was hearing at CES. At this point, I think they just don't know.JJ and Asus tech support for AC5300 and AC88U.
That's what I was thinking. They are not even sure of the release date. We'll just have to wait.That's later than the Q2 I was hearing at CES. At this point, I think they just don't know.
If you want working MU-MIMO, better buy a QCA-based router.
802.11ad support can be added by fw ow we will see a new router soon with the support?
There won't be an official MU-MIMO firmware until Q3 or Q4 of 2016.
Sources (undisclosed) - I've heard is sometime 2Q-2016 for North America - which isn't that big of a deal - the driver is not the Router/AP, it's the clients... and most of them will be handsets/tablets at first...
Which is probably best for all...
We'll see if Asus makes that release date in which I doubt they will.
RSSI will vary wildly with distance, reflections, etc; but my US model RT-N66U 5GHz signal within a meter or three from the router ranges in the -20dB to -30dB area. I would expect your AC5300, given more antennas, would be higher (i.e., less negative).If I am standing right next to the router, does anyone know for the UK what dB figures I should be seeing for the various channels (assuming this Android app is giving me correct numbers)?
RSSI will vary wildly with distance, reflections, etc; but my US model RT-N66U 5GHz signal within a meter or three from the router ranges in the -20dB to -30dB area. I would expect your AC5300, given more antennas, would be higher (i.e., less negative).
@jonstatt I have seen, on other models, cases where I had throughput issues on Wifi when my neighbor's device was on a nearby channel. The situation improved for me when I put the main channel on the exact same channel as the neighbor's router. It seems that encountering interference on the extension channel from another device's main channel is handled more poorly than encountering interference on the control channel! So if you can experiment by changing your control channel manually, you may see improved results.
I cannot answer why one product would be more affected than another. But it IS often published that adjacent-channel interference is more harmful than same-channel. The explanation given is that two radios on the same channel can synchronize their frequency-hopping to avoid each other, while this is not possible on adjacent channels.For whatever reason, the 5300 gets very upset with non WiFi devices on the same frequency when other Asus router models like the 68 do not. I would be fascinated to know why.
I cannot answer why one product would be more affected than another. But it IS often published that adjacent-channel interference is more harmful than same-channel. The explanation given is that two radios on the same channel can synchronize their frequency-hopping to avoid each other, while this is not possible on adjacent channels.
That suggests that your headphones do not implement that feature at all and thus clobber any nearby channel.
Do you have both ends of the 5G band available? If you can figure out which end (36, 40, ... versus 165, 161, ...) the headphones use, does it help to put router at the opposite end?
So, I thought I knew a little bit about Wi-Fi, turns out, my knowledge has been outdated since N was released
I have >100 mbit fiber in my appartment, and used to have a 300N router (new at that time). As performance wasn't good enough, I added 500mbit powerline adapters to the mix, and to my surprise got 100mbit actual throughput between the two outlets farthest from eachother. The electricity company replaced part of the system in my apartment recently, and now powerline speeds have been decimated. I already wanted something faster, but now I'm forced to get it done ASAP.
I can't put ethernet in this appartment without violating a lot of housing rules or putting cable in visible areas (ugh) so I'm looking into this AC5300 unit. In fact, two of them, or a combo with AC88U. The second unit would be in media bridge mode in my home office, approximately 35 feet from the main unit connected to the fiber modem (two single-brick walls and one window in between). In case you are wondering why I would use a second AC5300 instead of an AC88U, the latter is not yet available in my country, while the former is, and the price difference isn't big enough for me to care.
(1) My TV/media room is even further than the main router from my office, but tends to stream everything from my main office desktop. Others have tested my media player to be able to reach 300mbit actual throughput on AC, but for my needs 100mbit would easily be enough. Is it realistic to expect with such a setup? (desktop->gbitEth->bridge->5ghz(35ft)->main->5ghz(15ft)->player). FWIW, I did use the player with the 300N router (before powerline) and got about 35mbit actual throughput.
(2) If I understand correctly, the bridge unit would simply connect on a single band, and not link both 5ghz bands simultaneously for even more speed? So this means 2167mbps link speed is the theoretical max?
(3) In one of the manuals I was able to download, I found a note saying that in bridge mode, the main router only connects wirelessly and bridge only connects wired. While I'm a bit miffed that the bridge can't also be an AP at the same time (seems the AC5300 would have enough bands for that?), I can live with that. What really strikes me is that statement that the main router only connects wirelessly, as I am considering hooking up my NAS to the main router instead of the bridge. I suspect this is just a faulty/ambiguous statement and you can still connect to the main router through ethernet as well, but it would be great if someone could confirm this!
I hope someone has some answers for me, thanks in advance. Any tips on improving the setup are of course always welcome.
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