anoukaimee
Occasional Visitor
I have an RT-AC56U on AsusMerlin v. 380.61.0 (I believe that's the newest build). My best friend, who lives in the apartment above and across from me in our old house, has generously agreed to share his bandwidth with me--I am on a fixed income. I'm going to give him my newer modem and the router to try to maximize speed for both of us.
My quick (lol) question is what is is the firmware built for range? Are there any methods to tweak the TX settings beyond the max allowed (I know this is capped by different gov'ts, but not a huge concern as a individual consumer in a semi-desperate situation--I hope no one thinks this is selfish)? I've seen that you can overclock routers. I understand that can drastically reduce the life of the router, but it might be the best option. Are there any firmware versions that let you do this? Or scripts that would optimize range power (note I don't do linux, but I do pick up things quickly and can probably figure things out if I'm pointed to a ready-made script).
Note too that I tested my setup with Acrylic, which said that my signal quality is optimal, my signal-to-noise is horrible and transmission power mediocre. I have the TX settings set to the max available. Anything I can do w/in AsusMerlin (or other firmware) to rectify this?
SIDENOTE: I posted in another forum about options like MoCA, powerline adapters, and your traditional plug-in adapters. Because of the ancient, ungrounded wiring in our old house, powerline is out; he said MoCA was improbable "because of splitters" (I think this has something to do with me having cut the cord entirely, and having no cable service in my house but I'm not totally clear)--note I do have coax outlets; and plug-in adapters weren't suggested just because of the range. I didn't inquire about bridges, etc., and am researching that. His main suggestion was to get a model with 3x3 or 4x4 to use as the main router. I know my model has beamforming and 2x2, but apparently that won't cut it. Of course, the RT-AC56 doesn't have antennae, which doesn't help, either--no tin can DIY solutions. If anyone has any other comments or suggestions on alternative solutions involving extra hardware, would love to hear them.
But in lieu of trying out options that would be expensive for me, I thought that changing my firmware to something that "supercharges" the router (!!!) would be the best option to start with. I'm a little leery of DD-WRT because it seems very complex and not entirely stable, and Open-WRT seems complex, too. I am totally open to figuring it out, though. I also saw that Padavan offers a build for RT-N builds, there's nothing specific for the RT-AC66, and I know very little about it. I've been fine with AsusMerlin, but don't know if there is something better (esp. given my test results re transmission power--see above).
Are there any scripts in Entware/Optware or specialized for some specific firmware to increase range?
I know QoS settings could help us (the last thing I want to do is inconvenience my friend, since he's basically financing my internet), but am unclear on good settings, and whether they work with access controls in AsusMerlin (read somewhere that they aren't). If not, that would be a dealbreaker; I've become quite the internet addict and having him hold on to the password after configuration and removing the main router from my house for easy reboot is necessary). In any case, I'll figure out QoS after finding a good firmware that gives maximum range.
Any opinions on something that might be good to try? Desperate for help to make this work for both of us. Thank you very much for your help!
My quick (lol) question is what is is the firmware built for range? Are there any methods to tweak the TX settings beyond the max allowed (I know this is capped by different gov'ts, but not a huge concern as a individual consumer in a semi-desperate situation--I hope no one thinks this is selfish)? I've seen that you can overclock routers. I understand that can drastically reduce the life of the router, but it might be the best option. Are there any firmware versions that let you do this? Or scripts that would optimize range power (note I don't do linux, but I do pick up things quickly and can probably figure things out if I'm pointed to a ready-made script).
Note too that I tested my setup with Acrylic, which said that my signal quality is optimal, my signal-to-noise is horrible and transmission power mediocre. I have the TX settings set to the max available. Anything I can do w/in AsusMerlin (or other firmware) to rectify this?
SIDENOTE: I posted in another forum about options like MoCA, powerline adapters, and your traditional plug-in adapters. Because of the ancient, ungrounded wiring in our old house, powerline is out; he said MoCA was improbable "because of splitters" (I think this has something to do with me having cut the cord entirely, and having no cable service in my house but I'm not totally clear)--note I do have coax outlets; and plug-in adapters weren't suggested just because of the range. I didn't inquire about bridges, etc., and am researching that. His main suggestion was to get a model with 3x3 or 4x4 to use as the main router. I know my model has beamforming and 2x2, but apparently that won't cut it. Of course, the RT-AC56 doesn't have antennae, which doesn't help, either--no tin can DIY solutions. If anyone has any other comments or suggestions on alternative solutions involving extra hardware, would love to hear them.
But in lieu of trying out options that would be expensive for me, I thought that changing my firmware to something that "supercharges" the router (!!!) would be the best option to start with. I'm a little leery of DD-WRT because it seems very complex and not entirely stable, and Open-WRT seems complex, too. I am totally open to figuring it out, though. I also saw that Padavan offers a build for RT-N builds, there's nothing specific for the RT-AC66, and I know very little about it. I've been fine with AsusMerlin, but don't know if there is something better (esp. given my test results re transmission power--see above).
Are there any scripts in Entware/Optware or specialized for some specific firmware to increase range?
I know QoS settings could help us (the last thing I want to do is inconvenience my friend, since he's basically financing my internet), but am unclear on good settings, and whether they work with access controls in AsusMerlin (read somewhere that they aren't). If not, that would be a dealbreaker; I've become quite the internet addict and having him hold on to the password after configuration and removing the main router from my house for easy reboot is necessary). In any case, I'll figure out QoS after finding a good firmware that gives maximum range.
Any opinions on something that might be good to try? Desperate for help to make this work for both of us. Thank you very much for your help!