Ian Manning
Occasional Visitor
For many years I've had a problem with wifi devices dropping off the network and being unable to reconnect without me rebooting either the router or the mesh network. I have 40-50 devices connected to the wireless network at any one time. Some of the devices in question have static IP addresses reserved on the router, others don't. This doesn't seem to affect whether or not they suffer from this problem.
My router is a Netgear R7800 running DD-WRT (it also acts as my DHCP server). My mesh network is a BT Whole Home Wifi with 4 discs. They're now all connected via ethernet, so I guess it's technically not a mesh network any more, but a group of managed access points.
My questions are:
1) what are the most common reasons for devices dropping off the network and not being able to reconnect automatically?
2) why is it sometimes possible to fix the problem by restarting the mesh network/access points (and not the router)? (since my understanding was that the router was in control of allocating IP addresses)
3) why will devices often not reconnect to the access point which is nearest to them? For example my video doorbell often connects to an access point at the back of the house, even though there is an access point 6 feet away from it, on the floor above.
I'd like to upgrade my way out of the current situation if that's possible, but first need to try to understand the possible root causes.
My router is a Netgear R7800 running DD-WRT (it also acts as my DHCP server). My mesh network is a BT Whole Home Wifi with 4 discs. They're now all connected via ethernet, so I guess it's technically not a mesh network any more, but a group of managed access points.
My questions are:
1) what are the most common reasons for devices dropping off the network and not being able to reconnect automatically?
2) why is it sometimes possible to fix the problem by restarting the mesh network/access points (and not the router)? (since my understanding was that the router was in control of allocating IP addresses)
3) why will devices often not reconnect to the access point which is nearest to them? For example my video doorbell often connects to an access point at the back of the house, even though there is an access point 6 feet away from it, on the floor above.
I'd like to upgrade my way out of the current situation if that's possible, but first need to try to understand the possible root causes.