Spent some time today trying to further characterize the issue. I had always had the Bandwidth in 20/40/80Mhz, paying no attention to it until jeg, you mentioned your 5G setting stable at 80Mhz, which prompted me to try some things.
Here is what I found today.
Interesting that for the suspect channels (149, 153, 157, 161), that any setting above 20Mhz is unstable and turn on and off aperiodically, usually seconds at the 20/40/80 and 80 setting, and maybe up to a minute for the 40Mhz setting on those channels.
(Along with the 2.4G channels, the lower 5G channels and 165 were stable at any Bandwidth setting, although you cannot select 40Mhz or 80Mhz for channel 165)
No idea of this architecture but maybe a freq or clock multiplier or something?
Strange pattern. Probably a no-brainer for an ASUS engineer armed with the evidence, but I'm not smart enough to know firmware/nvram or an actual hardware issue.
Interested in any other thoughts, observations, experiences or tests...
Ken:
Remind me please: If you are able to get clear tx/rx using the lower Uni band channels 36, 40, 44 and 48, but can't get decent or stable connections (as we've discussed) on the upper band channels (149, 153, 157 and 161) due to DFS, then clearly the choice is that you must use the lower channels. Right?
Also, I'm not sure how the ACI graph depicts your particular issue. It simply appears that ACI in the 80mzh channels is double that of 40mhz, which makes sense, but how would it pertain to the DFS issue that you think is affecting your upper-band channels? Can you explain further?
"...DFS requirements are complex and costly to get regulatory certification from FCC/ETSI. Following are the typical requirements for access points (AP) operating on 5GHz DFS channel:
1.Before starting operation on DFS channel, scan the channel for Radar devices for 1 minute. If radar is detected follow step 4 otherwise start operation of DFS channel.
2.Must detect non-Wi-Fi Radar devices with pulse width as small as 5us
3.When radar device are detected stop operation on the channel within 500 milliseconds. ---For AP vendors, this also means informing wireless clients to move away from this channel.
4.Do not become operational of this DFS channel for at least 30 minutes and after that go to step 1 before becoming operational again."
The more interesting thing is what happens when Radar is detected, i.e., what a device licensed for use in the U.S. with DFS is supposed to do and how it behaves. According to an article I found at Extreme Networking:
So, it's a circular process. Once radar is detected, the device has to shift away from the channel, and it won't become operational again for at least 30 minutes. It's not "learned" in the sense that it will always block that particular channel, but if it goes back to Step 1 and again detects radar interference, it shuts down and is supposed to switch to the nearest non-interfering channel.
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