Indeed, if I am not having any problems with a particular firmware version, I'll update to a new version over the previous. But with all the problems of the previous version of this firmware, I upgraded then factory-reset as you did, and I've now run for almost 48 hours without problems: excellent speed, with no fall-back in my 160MHz wireless backhaul, and no device disconnects.I lazily tried to upgrade over the previous version and that behaved very badly, so I factory reset all and now I’ve gone about 30 hours perfectly - rock solid. Router plus 2 in a dash chain.
No doubt that is the correct, textbook advice.Respectfully, before you do that, I recommend installing this new firmware on all nodes, then doing a factory-reset, and manually re-initialise, changing the minimum amount of backhaul settings that you have to for your situation. This gives you the chance to fully test the new firmware on its standard (factory) settings. The factory settings can and do change between firmware releases, and ASUS changes them to make it more stable. If you just upgrade on top of a previous version, you are keeping all the old settings, and those can contribute to it not working as solidly as it should.
I'm using my two 2021-model XT8s on this firmware with the 160MHz backhaul, and it seems solid - no fall-backs to 80 MHz or 2.4 GHz so far. After a reset, the only changes I made to the factory defaults for the backhaul are that I changed it to "AX only" and channel bandwidth "160 MHz" (only).
Totally agree, and if you upgrade and everything is fine - especially if upgrading from a version that works fine - then I often do the same.No doubt that is the correct, textbook advice.
But to be honest, it's a right pain the **** resetting everthing and re-entering all your settings.
Again, I agree, and I generally do the same. However, I reset when the version I came from gave problems - especially if several versions in a row report problems (as in this case) - or if I experience problems in the new version which other users don't.I upgraded without reset. No problems at all, as it should be!
In my opinion, it is simply absurd to think that it is a good thing to reset a router everytime there is a new firmware!
And if that's really the only way, then Asus has really made a less than mediocre product.
Set your 5 GHz to 20-40-80-160 and let the router, nodes and clients choose the best bandwidth. Forcing 160 MHz can be problematic.Everything worked fine at first, with 160 MHz channel bandwidth and great speed ...
But unfortunately with me the same, after about 35 hours a problem with the wireless backhaul occurred that the speed is totally collapsed although still 160 MHz bandwidth for the mesh node connection is displayed in the log. Not a single DFS event occurred in the whole time. However, there was no fallback to 2.4GHz. After a reboot everything is running fine for about 6 hours now.
My adjusted settings for the 5GHz-2 band are for Wireless Mode AX only and for Channel Bandwith 160 MHz only. The Control Channel is set to auto because in fact no fixed channel can be set.
I wish there would soon be a reliable solution for the wireless backhaul.
What's your explanation for this, if there is a strong signal, no interference, good/stable weather and no DFS events? If it's still "problematic" then the problem is with the firmware.Set your 5 GHz to 20-40-80-160 and let the router, nodes and clients choose the best bandwidth. Forcing 160 MHz can be problematic.
Because...?Try using the 20/40/80 bandwidth setting, without the 160.
You really do not know if there are RADAR bounces. Logs do not tell everything.What's your explanation for this, if there is a strong signal, no interference, good/stable weather and no DFS events? If it's still "problematic" then the problem is with the firmware.
Don't live anywhere near an airport, the weather was mild and dry, we (and our neighbours) have no cordless phones, and we weren't operating the microwave at 2.45 in the morning.You really do not know if there are RADAR bounces. Logs do not tell everything.
Strong signals can be interrupted. Have a microwave or cordless phone?
Weather? Lightning?
Do you really know more than the engineers who designed the equipment? Even tech support can be lacking in knowledge as they read from scripts of known issues. Always a good idea to go back to defaults.
Our Internet connection is much faster, and the connection/throughput to devices drops significantly with an 80MHz backhaul... that's why I bought the XT8s instead of going with a previous model.To see if the stability improves...
I've never used 160mhz for backhaul (my internet connection is greatly under the maximum WiFi connection at 80mhz)
Does this firmware version solve the WPA Pre-Share key over 32 characters bug from version 3.0.0.4.386.48706?
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