ASUS ROG Rapture GT-BE98 unboxing
Dong complained about this as well in his review of the RT-BE96U. Stupid double wrapping, probably came like that from the antenna supplier.Lol - ripping off the antenna condoms...
The GT-BE98 splits the 5ghz band in half
I read Dong Ngo's RT-BE96U review and what intrigued me was the bit he wrote about the limitations of quad-band routers. The GT-BE98 splits the 5ghz band in half which limits flexibility of channel use. I experienced the same constraints when trying to use the two 5Ghz bands on the GT-AXE16000, namely having a harder time consistently accessing the DFS channels across the spectrum.
The same limitation seems to also apply with the GT-BE98 Pro's two 6Ghz bands based on the review he wrote on TP Link's Deco BE95 which also has two 6Ghz bands.
My hope is that his concern on MLO complicating/compounding the bandwidth-splitting issue is misplaced, and that MLO along with AFC will actually resolve the problem in the Wifi 7 era.
Yeah, thank goodness for Amazon's 30-day returns policy in my case.This is what all "tri-band" 2.4/5GHz routers do. One 5GHz radio is used for lower channels and the other 5GHz radio for higher channels. In countries with both U-NII-1 and U-NII-3 available the users have 2x non-DFS range channels. In countries with U-NII-1 only the second radio is in DFS and not guaranteed to work. Many users don't know this before the purchase and experience Wi-Fi issues. When they learn what the issue is - too late.
On the contrary, I find great value (if the cost for it isn't too prohibitive) in a 2nd 5GHz radio. One still has access to all the channels, but is now able to split clients up between radios for better performance. It's not like the division in the band occurs in a place which disallows /any/ 80 or even 160 MHz bonds.The GT-BE98 splits the 5ghz band in half which limits flexibility of channel use. I experienced the same constraints when trying to use the two 5Ghz bands on the GT-AXE16000, namely having a harder time consistently accessing the DFS channels across the spectrum.
Good for you. We're all entitled to our opinions and views in this forum so feel free to disagree with what I had observed. I was merely comparing what was seen in the review vs my personal experience with the quad-band GT-AXE16000 (consistent access to the 5Ghz DFS channels for multigig speeds with better range vs the 6Ghz band) and it seems to be in line with what Tech9 described above.On the contrary, I find great value (if the cost for it isn't too prohibitive) in a 2nd 5GHz radio. One still has access to all the channels, but is now able to split clients up between radios for better performance. It's not like the division in the band occurs in a place which disallows /any/ 80 or even 160 MHz bonds.
There is no practical downside whatsoever, only up. When MLO becomes available in WiFi7 both segments of the band will become usable to a single client in whichever mode desired.
Please explain the constraints you encountered. I'm extremely curious since for me it's been akin to having handcuffs /removed/, not emplaced.
Price: 914€4 units available on Amazon.de: https://www.amazon.de/dp/B0CKBY2NGV/
I referred to DFS above so that means the 160 Mhz channels on the 5Ghz band/s. While testing the GT-AXE11000 and RT-AX89X, both with one 5Ghz band, the instances where my Wifi 6/e clients could hit multi gig speeds (above 1Gbps) were far greater than when I was using the same clients on the two 5Ghz bands with the GT-AXE16000. In terms of connection/link speeds that means instead of 2.4Gbps for the earlier two, they're frequently maxed out at 1.2Gbps or less. Happy?Thanks for your permission. I grant you the same. : )
Again you refer to it as limiting. Just /how/ were you /limited/? Which {2,4,8,16}0 MHz-wide channels were made unavailable to you? Please, I'm curious.
Quite fair, that.Meanwhile, I too am curious as to which Wifi 6/e/7 routers and clients you have used/tested to warrant such unbridled optimism in quad-band hardware as well as a yet-to-be-certified wireless standard.
wise enough to recognise that marketing hype
Thank you for sharing your networking setup.Quite fair, that.
Maybe coming up on two years ago I purchased my first wifi hardware since a Netgear wireless G device. There's a gap, but won't expound now. Anyway, after messing with an available ISP Eero "set" I researched and landed on Asus gear. Got an XT8 pair used mostly as router/AP, then relatively recently supplemented that with a GT-AX6000 for the main unit. Got plenty of airspace so use about all the available spectrum, though not all the radios.
Not that it matters, but have symmetrical 1/2Gb fiber to the outside world.
On the two main GNU/Linux laptops I've employed Intel AX200 cards and each is associated to a 160-wide feed "of its own" connected by 2.5Gb ethernet. One has got an oblique path through a stud wall and floor (perpendicular to the joists) to its AP above (the good radio on an XT8) so its xmit path is weaker, but feeding it from mine I routinely exceed 1Gb realized.
Just the high points for reference.
Now, tat for tit, /how/ were you "limited" by the split 5GHz band? I'd venture you didn't use it the way I do...
Nope it took me a couple of tries to get that through my marketing-hype addled head. Now I know better.Are you saying you've never reached 16Gbps over Wi-Fi with your GT-AXE16000? Very interesting...
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