RamGuy
Senior Member
Greetings,
I'm having some issues with the 802.11ac range from my Asus RT-AC68U. It's currently running Merlin 380.59, but I've also tried with 380.58, 380.57 as well as the two latest Asus firmware's and the end result is pretty much the same.
My problem is quite simple. The wireless range/coverage when using 802.11ac to iPhone 6S and 6S Plus, and MacBook 12-inch notebooks. There is never more than maximum three to five units at a time connected to the 5.0GHz network. It's isolated for AC-usage only, everything else is connecting to either the 2.4GHz of the RT-AC68U or to my other Asus RT-AC66U which is running as a dedicated access point for older devices.
I have fiddled around with the professional settings to no avail. Disabling Beamforming etc, but it doesn't seem to change anything. Disabling 802.11ac / Explicit Beamforming seems to only make things even worse.
I'm currently running it in N/AC mixed mode, 80 MHz channel width on control channel 100 (the default). There are no other 5.0GHz in close proximity other than my RT-AC66U access point running on channel 36.
All professional settings are running default. Expect IGMP Snooping and Universal Beamforming disabled (802.11 / Explicit is enabled).
It's not like I'm expecting anything special. I do know that 5GHz range is not very good. But both my iPhone 6S Plus, my girlfriends iPhone 6S and our two MacBook 12-inch notebooks are struggling with the connection while in the bedroom. The router is located in the living room, which is next door to the bedroom. There is just a single wooden wall between the living room and our bedroom and we are talking about 10-12 meters in range.
What can I do to improve the range of 802.11ac? Using 802.11ac on the RT-AC68U is behaving about the same, so it does not seem to be something wrong with the RT-AC68U itself. It's located ontop of a bookshelf so it's standing high in the living room. It's not hidden behind anything.
A small portion of the wall in our living room is made out of concrete, and I suppose that is no good for 5GHz signal's. But this wall is not located in between the router and our bedroom so I find it hard to belive it should be affecting much? There isn't really anything between the router and our bedroom at all other than our fridge. We don't even have any door to our bedroom so instead of a wooden door, the entrance is covered by a carpet.
When lying in bed you will actually have free line of sight directly to the router right from the bedside if it wasn't for the fridge. You can see the antennas though a they raise higher than the top of the fridge.
Using 802.11n on the other hand, range is no problem at all. But then we are not able to utilise our 500/500mbit speeds to it's full extend. There is no obvious way to track wireless performance on iOS devices, but on our MacBook's we are able to see what kind of TX rates it's showing and whatnot. So I've attached two screenshots of what Mac OS X is reporting when connected with 802.11ac to my RT-AC68 and RT-AC66.
Of course while troubleshooting, it reports better performance right now compared to what I usually get. Normally the TX rate drops below 100 mbps and even though the TX rate itself doesn't really matter as long as the performance is good, my problem is that our iPhone 6S's and iPad Air 2's are simply dropping the connection entirely at times and even though or MacBook 12-inches never drops the connection entirely, the performance keeps dropping to a halt at times making the connection feeling pretty much useless for extended periods of time.
How to improve the range? This seems really lacklustre considering the short distance?
I'm having some issues with the 802.11ac range from my Asus RT-AC68U. It's currently running Merlin 380.59, but I've also tried with 380.58, 380.57 as well as the two latest Asus firmware's and the end result is pretty much the same.
My problem is quite simple. The wireless range/coverage when using 802.11ac to iPhone 6S and 6S Plus, and MacBook 12-inch notebooks. There is never more than maximum three to five units at a time connected to the 5.0GHz network. It's isolated for AC-usage only, everything else is connecting to either the 2.4GHz of the RT-AC68U or to my other Asus RT-AC66U which is running as a dedicated access point for older devices.
I have fiddled around with the professional settings to no avail. Disabling Beamforming etc, but it doesn't seem to change anything. Disabling 802.11ac / Explicit Beamforming seems to only make things even worse.
I'm currently running it in N/AC mixed mode, 80 MHz channel width on control channel 100 (the default). There are no other 5.0GHz in close proximity other than my RT-AC66U access point running on channel 36.
All professional settings are running default. Expect IGMP Snooping and Universal Beamforming disabled (802.11 / Explicit is enabled).
It's not like I'm expecting anything special. I do know that 5GHz range is not very good. But both my iPhone 6S Plus, my girlfriends iPhone 6S and our two MacBook 12-inch notebooks are struggling with the connection while in the bedroom. The router is located in the living room, which is next door to the bedroom. There is just a single wooden wall between the living room and our bedroom and we are talking about 10-12 meters in range.
What can I do to improve the range of 802.11ac? Using 802.11ac on the RT-AC68U is behaving about the same, so it does not seem to be something wrong with the RT-AC68U itself. It's located ontop of a bookshelf so it's standing high in the living room. It's not hidden behind anything.
A small portion of the wall in our living room is made out of concrete, and I suppose that is no good for 5GHz signal's. But this wall is not located in between the router and our bedroom so I find it hard to belive it should be affecting much? There isn't really anything between the router and our bedroom at all other than our fridge. We don't even have any door to our bedroom so instead of a wooden door, the entrance is covered by a carpet.
When lying in bed you will actually have free line of sight directly to the router right from the bedside if it wasn't for the fridge. You can see the antennas though a they raise higher than the top of the fridge.
Using 802.11n on the other hand, range is no problem at all. But then we are not able to utilise our 500/500mbit speeds to it's full extend. There is no obvious way to track wireless performance on iOS devices, but on our MacBook's we are able to see what kind of TX rates it's showing and whatnot. So I've attached two screenshots of what Mac OS X is reporting when connected with 802.11ac to my RT-AC68 and RT-AC66.
Of course while troubleshooting, it reports better performance right now compared to what I usually get. Normally the TX rate drops below 100 mbps and even though the TX rate itself doesn't really matter as long as the performance is good, my problem is that our iPhone 6S's and iPad Air 2's are simply dropping the connection entirely at times and even though or MacBook 12-inches never drops the connection entirely, the performance keeps dropping to a halt at times making the connection feeling pretty much useless for extended periods of time.
How to improve the range? This seems really lacklustre considering the short distance?