Yeah, it will probably work if you have all the bands broadcast by the same router, and you have set up the phone to allow connections to all three bands. Apple devices will not connect to 6GHz if they don't see an RNR element that advertises that band's existence in the router's 2.4 or 5GHz beacons. However, according to my current understanding of things, the lower-band beacon can be for a different SSID on the same router.So I have a 15 Pro Max on 17.2.1, and it connects to 6E just fine for me. All 3 bands have different SSIDs. I can just pick which one I want to connect to, and it gives me no issue.
In any case, Apple's official support document still tells you not to do this, and says that you may encounter problems if you don't use the same SSID across all bands. They don't say exactly what, but maybe there are specific services that don't work on 6GHz? Or maybe they are just worried about having a lower band to fall back to if the 6GHz signal gets too weak. In any case, you're not going to get a lot of sympathy if you have problems after not following their advice.
RNR is a bit different than FILS, and info I've seen is that Apple, in their infinite (loop) wisdom uses Reduced Neighbor Reports to suggest that the SSID is more than just 5GHz, there's a 6GHz AP out there to look for...
Knowing this, what Apple is implying is they look for 5Ghz first, camp, and then search for neighbors
Well, they're just making use of a feature mandated by the wifi standard for exactly this purpose, ie not having to scan all of the 6E channels.
Yeah when I connect it says there could be compatibility issues, but everything works fine. It says I could have issues with airplay or homekit devices. I had no such problems though. I was connected out of necessity.Yeah, it will probably work if you have all the bands broadcast by the same router, and you have set up the phone to allow connections to all three bands. Apple devices will not connect to 6GHz if they don't see an RNR element that advertises that band's existence in the router's 2.4 or 5GHz beacons. However, according to my current understanding of things, the lower-band beacon can be for a different SSID on the same router.
In any case, Apple's official support document still tells you not to do this, and says that you may encounter problems if you don't use the same SSID across all bands. They don't say exactly what, but maybe there are specific services that don't work on 6GHz? Or maybe they are just worried about having a lower band to fall back to if the 6GHz signal gets too weak. In any case, you're not going to get a lot of sympathy if you have problems after not following their advice.
As a rule, the mentality of "I'm going to force this device to connect to AP X not AP Y" does not lead to good wifi experience. The client chooses where it's going to connect when there are multiple possibilities. You can set the AP to kick it off, but the client might just try to connect to the same AP again ... and even if it doesn't, you've caused a connection drop and momentary loss of service. The only way to really force matters is to tell the client to use an SSID that's only being broadcast by one AP on one band. As already discussed, that's not a great option when considering 6GHz.And what about if I want a specific device to connect only to the 6GHz. Will setting the Wireless MAC Filter in the router to force the device not to connect to the 2.4/5Ghz work?
And what about if I want a specific device to connect only to the 6GHz. Will setting the Wireless MAC Filter in the router to force the device not to connect to the 2.4/5Ghz work?
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