businesstx
Occasional Visitor
I have a small office network that contains the following:
QNAP 453A NAS connected via ethernet directly to the TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router
Huawei WS832 Wifi router (only used as access point) connected directly to the TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router
TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router (5 port with no wifi) connected to ISP modem
Two 16 port switches (TP-Link SG-1016DT) – to various ethernet ports around the office.
Two HIKVision 16 port POE Switches connected to 25 POE IP Cameras
Printer (Wifi only)
10-15 laptops (wifi only - no ethernet ports)
1 old laptop with ethernet
I attach an image of the setup.
The TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router (5 port with no wifi) is connected to the ISP modem and the Huawei router is connected to this R476G+. The Huawei Wifi router is configured as an access point only so that we can connect to the printer and NAS via wifi.
Due to the lockdown, we do a lot of video conferencing calls and online PPT presentations to different people and the quality of the video calls or online PPTs is sometimes bad due to lag. We use software like Zoom to hold the video meetings. Sometimes there are 2 or 3 of these meetings going on at the same time. Nearly all the devices being used for these meetings are laptops (as they have built in webcams and microphones) and all the laptops are wireless ac standard. Only one laptop has an ethernet port which we prefer to use over wifi.
We run the online meetings and each meeting has between 9-18 people remotely attending and are at least an hour long. Whoever starts a meeting first (from this office), generally has the best connection and all the others do not. Sometimes some people cannot even connect the internet at this time i.e. their wifi cannot connect to the Huawei AP.
All the equipment we currently have uses ethernet or wifi (ac standard). We have a fibre optic connection with an advertised 200Mbps.
The POE cams all record locally. They do not access the internet, so on a daily basis the POE cams are not using the internet connection as no-one is remotely viewing the cams.
I think the problem is that the Huawei router LAN ports only support 100Mbps so the connection from the Huawei to the TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router is slowing everything down.
My question is whether getting a MU-MIMO wifi 6 router like the TP-Link Archer AX6000 or Asus AX86U or AX88U will improve the performance of our video calls and network?
Can the older devices benefit from the wifi 6 router even though they are not running on the wifi 6 standard? Doesn't the fact that it can manage the devices better, mean that all wireless devices have a more access to the internet (thereby improving call quality)? My understanding is that the AC standard router doesn't manage the traffic as well and only serves one client at a time, hence if one client is hogging the connection, all the others are left waiting. The MU MIMO router should manage this better so all clients (even non-ax standard clients) get better access to the internet.
Also, if I did get a wifi 6 router, where would be the best place for it to sit in the network? I was thinking of removing the Huawei and TP-Link TL-R476G+ Routers and replace them with this single Wifi 6 router connected to the ISP Modem.
As for routers, I would like the Asus AX88U as it has 8 LAN ports but it is toooooooo expensive so I might go for the AX86U instead. If you have any suggestions for alternatives, please let me know.
Any comments or suggestions would be appreciated.
Thanks
Ray
QNAP 453A NAS connected via ethernet directly to the TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router
Huawei WS832 Wifi router (only used as access point) connected directly to the TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router
TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router (5 port with no wifi) connected to ISP modem
Two 16 port switches (TP-Link SG-1016DT) – to various ethernet ports around the office.
Two HIKVision 16 port POE Switches connected to 25 POE IP Cameras
Printer (Wifi only)
10-15 laptops (wifi only - no ethernet ports)
1 old laptop with ethernet
I attach an image of the setup.
The TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router (5 port with no wifi) is connected to the ISP modem and the Huawei router is connected to this R476G+. The Huawei Wifi router is configured as an access point only so that we can connect to the printer and NAS via wifi.
Due to the lockdown, we do a lot of video conferencing calls and online PPT presentations to different people and the quality of the video calls or online PPTs is sometimes bad due to lag. We use software like Zoom to hold the video meetings. Sometimes there are 2 or 3 of these meetings going on at the same time. Nearly all the devices being used for these meetings are laptops (as they have built in webcams and microphones) and all the laptops are wireless ac standard. Only one laptop has an ethernet port which we prefer to use over wifi.
We run the online meetings and each meeting has between 9-18 people remotely attending and are at least an hour long. Whoever starts a meeting first (from this office), generally has the best connection and all the others do not. Sometimes some people cannot even connect the internet at this time i.e. their wifi cannot connect to the Huawei AP.
All the equipment we currently have uses ethernet or wifi (ac standard). We have a fibre optic connection with an advertised 200Mbps.
The POE cams all record locally. They do not access the internet, so on a daily basis the POE cams are not using the internet connection as no-one is remotely viewing the cams.
I think the problem is that the Huawei router LAN ports only support 100Mbps so the connection from the Huawei to the TP-Link TL-R476G+ Router is slowing everything down.
My question is whether getting a MU-MIMO wifi 6 router like the TP-Link Archer AX6000 or Asus AX86U or AX88U will improve the performance of our video calls and network?
Can the older devices benefit from the wifi 6 router even though they are not running on the wifi 6 standard? Doesn't the fact that it can manage the devices better, mean that all wireless devices have a more access to the internet (thereby improving call quality)? My understanding is that the AC standard router doesn't manage the traffic as well and only serves one client at a time, hence if one client is hogging the connection, all the others are left waiting. The MU MIMO router should manage this better so all clients (even non-ax standard clients) get better access to the internet.
Also, if I did get a wifi 6 router, where would be the best place for it to sit in the network? I was thinking of removing the Huawei and TP-Link TL-R476G+ Routers and replace them with this single Wifi 6 router connected to the ISP Modem.
As for routers, I would like the Asus AX88U as it has 8 LAN ports but it is toooooooo expensive so I might go for the AX86U instead. If you have any suggestions for alternatives, please let me know.
Any comments or suggestions would be appreciated.
Thanks
Ray