... A difference in PERFORMANCE I should have said. Can't edit that now.
While I was digging for some information about whether my RT-AC68U (B2) is the identical same as RT-AC68P (which I still don't know) I stumbled down a rabbit hole leading to FCC certification documents for FCC ID MSQ-RTAC68UV2. Of course, one of these is for radio emissions as relates to human exposure. It was interesting that they tested the upper and lower 5G ranges separately... and got different measurements.
If I read it right -- and this is a giant "if" to be sure -- it looked to me that the lower band (UNII-1 / ch 36-48 / referenced as 5GHz UNII ) showed rather lower power output than the upper range (UNII-3 / ch 149-165 / referenced as 5GHz ISM).
Here's the documents page, https://fcc.io/MSQ/-RTAC68UV2
The one that got my attention is "MPE Report / RF Exposure Info" on the last page.
I'm looking at the output power (positive dBm and mW) and the Power Density. The difference is a factor of two. It also shows slight differences in antenna gain, which are opposite the power imbalance. They tested with 20MHz bandwidth.
So I wanted to know if it made a difference in my setup. I came up with the opposite to what I expected. At a set distance (one notch down on the power, same for both bands) I used the auto 20/40/80 setting, and switched the control channel between 44 and 157. It made a more significant difference than I expected. On the lower band I averaged somewhere around -55dBm to -60dBm, and for the higher band between -65dBm and -72dBm. That's enough to make the difference between stable around 500mbps and very flaky sub-200. I repeated this in a few locations several times each for a few minutes, and got consistent results.
There are a handful of other very weak networks out there, two on each part of the band, which I can occasionally see in WiFi Analyzer. But, I don't have a comprehensive site survey, so I can't rule out other interference.
If it does have anything to do with the tuning of the antennas, though, I'd be surprised if this is the only model that has some sort of fluctuation. Antenna efficiency also has a role to play in component life. (The more that goes out, the less reflects back to the components to stress them.)
I found this certainly interesting enough to share here, and searching quite a bit with all sorts of terms hasn't come up with any evidence that this is "a thing" so if you've seen it happen too, I'm interested to hear about it!
If nothing else, it's one more thing to tinker with for a little bit extra boost (or a little less tx power).
PS: Is in fact the AC68U B2 the same as AC68P? I still flipping haven't answered my original darn question!
While I was digging for some information about whether my RT-AC68U (B2) is the identical same as RT-AC68P (which I still don't know) I stumbled down a rabbit hole leading to FCC certification documents for FCC ID MSQ-RTAC68UV2. Of course, one of these is for radio emissions as relates to human exposure. It was interesting that they tested the upper and lower 5G ranges separately... and got different measurements.
If I read it right -- and this is a giant "if" to be sure -- it looked to me that the lower band (UNII-1 / ch 36-48 / referenced as 5GHz UNII ) showed rather lower power output than the upper range (UNII-3 / ch 149-165 / referenced as 5GHz ISM).
Here's the documents page, https://fcc.io/MSQ/-RTAC68UV2
The one that got my attention is "MPE Report / RF Exposure Info" on the last page.
I'm looking at the output power (positive dBm and mW) and the Power Density. The difference is a factor of two. It also shows slight differences in antenna gain, which are opposite the power imbalance. They tested with 20MHz bandwidth.
So I wanted to know if it made a difference in my setup. I came up with the opposite to what I expected. At a set distance (one notch down on the power, same for both bands) I used the auto 20/40/80 setting, and switched the control channel between 44 and 157. It made a more significant difference than I expected. On the lower band I averaged somewhere around -55dBm to -60dBm, and for the higher band between -65dBm and -72dBm. That's enough to make the difference between stable around 500mbps and very flaky sub-200. I repeated this in a few locations several times each for a few minutes, and got consistent results.
There are a handful of other very weak networks out there, two on each part of the band, which I can occasionally see in WiFi Analyzer. But, I don't have a comprehensive site survey, so I can't rule out other interference.
If it does have anything to do with the tuning of the antennas, though, I'd be surprised if this is the only model that has some sort of fluctuation. Antenna efficiency also has a role to play in component life. (The more that goes out, the less reflects back to the components to stress them.)
I found this certainly interesting enough to share here, and searching quite a bit with all sorts of terms hasn't come up with any evidence that this is "a thing" so if you've seen it happen too, I'm interested to hear about it!
If nothing else, it's one more thing to tinker with for a little bit extra boost (or a little less tx power).
PS: Is in fact the AC68U B2 the same as AC68P? I still flipping haven't answered my original darn question!