It should not be like that.It doesn't matter do you choose lower or higher channel, the problem is there as long as you have 802.11d+h.
802.11d+h involves DFS, which is only applicable to the channels above 48.
It should not be like that.It doesn't matter do you choose lower or higher channel, the problem is there as long as you have 802.11d+h.
As allready written: the default channel seems to be 48 in my case (not 36), which happens to be the same channel as my neighbors do use since some time....the things is do you have issue with default channel?
most people that have issue with 5ghz usually change channel to 40
This morning the 5 GHz signal was gone again, no entry in the systemlog.As allready written: the default channel seems to be 48 in my case (not 36), which happens to be the same channel as my neighbors do use since some time.
Channel 36 failed 2 times (the signal simply disappeared), after which I changed to channel 40, this works well for a few days now.
I signed up on this forum to share my experience on N66U, since I upgraded to 3.0.0.4.376.3861, I have issues on the 5Ghz band, connections drops after 2-3 days, I can switch to 2.4Ghz band or reboot router to get connectivity on the 5Ghz band.
Shame on Asus for still not fixing the problem, was thinking about switching back to 3.0.0.4.376.3754 but noticed in the change log of the recent ASUS WRT Merlin that they recognized the issues through user feedback and switched back the driver. I will be using that firmware since it seems more stable than ASUS (doesn't look like ASUS cares about issues, tells me not to buy their router next time maybe)
http://asuswrt.lostrealm.ca/changelog
I signed up on this forum to share my experience on N66U, since I upgraded to 3.0.0.4.376.3861, I have issues on the 5Ghz band, connections drops after 2-3 days, I can switch to 2.4Ghz band or reboot router to get connectivity on the 5Ghz band.
Shame on Asus for still not fixing the problem, was thinking about switching back to 3.0.0.4.376.3754 but noticed in the change log of the recent ASUS WRT Merlin that they recognized the issues through user feedback and switched back the driver. I will be using that firmware since it seems more stable than ASUS (doesn't look like ASUS cares about issues, tells me not to buy their router next time maybe)
http://asuswrt.lostrealm.ca/changelog
Do You raport issues to asus suport ? Without this asus never fix it.I signed up on this forum to share my experience on N66U, since I upgraded to 3.0.0.4.376.3861, I have issues on the 5Ghz band, connections drops after 2-3 days, I can switch to 2.4Ghz band or reboot router to get connectivity on the 5Ghz band.
Shame on Asus for still not fixing the problem, was thinking about switching back to 3.0.0.4.376.3754 but noticed in the change log of the recent ASUS WRT Merlin that they recognized the issues through user feedback and switched back the driver. I will be using that firmware since it seems more stable than ASUS (doesn't look like ASUS cares about issues, tells me not to buy their router next time maybe)
http://asuswrt.lostrealm.ca/changelog
After the change to Auto channel selection on 5 GHz it is rock solid again.This morning the 5 GHz signal was gone again, no entry in the systemlog.
I changed channel selection back from 40 to Auto.
Although it selects channel 48 again, the same as the neighbors, I am curious if the signal at least stays alive.
AC66u and n66u uses same wifi driver ?The RT-AC66U is the only router for which I had to downgrade the driver. I'm still using the same driver since December 2014 for the RT-N66U.
AC66u and n66u uses same wifi driver ?
The answer has not changed since your first report.Ok, thanks. I used telnet and I think everything went fine.
However, this firmware version seems to have the same problem as I've had with RT-N56U - if firewall is configured to log dropped packets, the router slows down during ShieldsUP test:
http://www.snbforums.com/threads/rt-n56u-firewall-logging-causes-serious-slowdown.13766/
Does anyone know what could cause this? Just a guess; could it write the log to the NVRAM (flash memory) now, in addition to having it in RAM? It would be slower than having it in the RAM only...
edit: The client list on the main page seems to be glitchy too. Looks like sometimes it doesn't show all clients...
I also seem to be getting issues with 3861 in that about once every week or 2 the DHCP seems to stop working and I have to reboot the router. I had a similiar problem with the previous release and I even tried a complete NVRAM clear and manual config.
Anway it may not hurt to upgrade to 3.0.0.4.378.4850, this is quite a major upgrade from 3.0.0.4.376.x to 3.0.0.4.378.x with for sure numerous undocumented enhancements:
- What exactly is the DHCP issue that you experience?
- How many clients do connect to the router?
- How many of these clients frequently disconnect and connect again to the router because they are carried away from home and return (e.g. mobile devices or laptops)?
- Are there DHCP reservations configured in the router?
- What have you configured in the DHCP Server Tab?
http://support.asus.com/Download.aspx?SLanguage=en&m=RT-N66U+(VER.B1)&p=11&s=2
Select OS = Others
The problem is related to your answer 5, the dynamic pool size and sort of bug in the firmware.1. When powering up a Device (only noticed on wired ATM) be it printer or PC sometimes they will fail to get an IP address. All my devices are on fixed IPs as defined in the router MAC/IP mapping.
2. I have approximately 20 devices with a mixture of WI-FI & Wired.
3. 2 Phones, but as yet I have not seen the issue with these.
4. Yes, see point 1
5. IP pool starts @ ...240 and ends at ...255, Lease of 1 day, plus all my devices outside of pool.
The problem is related to your answer 5, the dynamic pool size and sort of bug in the firmware.
Also have a look here:
http://www.snbforums.com/threads/as...ion-3-0-0-4-376-3657.21047/page-3#post-166021
Your fix would be to extend the IP pool, even you are not using that much dynamic addresses.
Welcome To SNBForums
SNBForums is a community for anyone who wants to learn about or discuss the latest in wireless routers, network storage and the ins and outs of building and maintaining a small network.
If you'd like to post a question, simply register and have at it!
While you're at it, please check out SmallNetBuilder for product reviews and our famous Router Charts, Ranker and plenty more!