Just Checking
Regular Contributor
[Ed. Note: Moved to its own thread to increase visibility]
I spent several months researching and trying different antenna configurations for my RT-AC66 routers. I went to radio sites and posted on their antenna design sections. I bugged people on this site till they were sick of me.
The things I found out were:
1. You can make significant improvements to the 2.4GHz band in terms of longer range signal strength and quality (both sending and receiving) by using relatively cheap high gain (9dBm) antennas. I liked the TP-Link 8dBm antennas until I found some cheap ($11 for 3 antennas) on Amazon which had metal ferules that didn't slip or break and which maintained orientation when set off-vertical. Without changing the output power of the radio on the router I was able to get stable WiFi signals downlink and uplink at more than 20 meters away through 4 plaster walls filled with romex wiring, copper water pipes, cast Iron waste lines, and quite a bit of low voltage wiring. I am able to get signal out through a metal sheathing and reasonable signal strength 50 meters outside the building (enough to stream video).
2. There is a thing called "rotational polarization" which means that when a signal is transmitted through a solid object (like a wall), or bounced off a surface, the signal orientation can change such that an antenna oriented in one direction (vertical for example) cannot pick up the signal as effectively as two oriented in different directions. (This is a major oversimplification so people who have the background and experience to understand all that is behind this statement are free to offer clarification if you believe it contributes to the discussion.) I found that having two omni-directional antennas oriented 90 degrees from each other (example one antenna vertical and one antenna horizontal; or one antenna at -45 degrees from vertical and another antenna at +45 degrees from vertical) allowed me to have the strongest signal at the receiver of the router WiFi and the client. It also helped to get around the multi-floor concern of a omni-directional antenna oriented vertically.
3. I found no commercially available antennas which would improve the signal strength of both the 2.4GHz band and the 5GHz band simultaneously.
4. I found no commercially available antenna which would improve the signal strength or quality of the 5GHz band better than the stock antenna on the RT-AC66 that came with the router.
5. On the RT-AC66 router, having all three antennas oriented vertically seemed to cause "interference" and decreased sensitivity. I eventually ended up with an outside antenna (2.4GHz high gain antenna) oriented vertically, the middle antenna (Stock RT-AC66 antenna) oriented at a 45 degree angle away from the vertical antenna, and the third antenna (2.4GHz high gain antenna) oriented horizontally (45 degrees away from the center antenna). The 2.4GHz high gain antennas I use are 38cm (15 inches) long. I didn't notice the same signal interference when I was just using the stock antennas. Most observers will look at the antenna configuration and think it is "ugly", "weird", "asymmetrical", "ungainly", or "unattractive". You will have to make the judgement yourself of "function" or "form".
6. If you want to concentrate on the the 5GHz Band, use two of the stock RT-AC66 antennas with the center antenna being a 2.4GHz high gain antenna. The smaller stock antennas should be oriented at 45 degree angle from the center vertical antenna.
7. It is possible to make a 5GHz antenna array that is more sensitive and better signal strength than the stock antennas. My final antenna was very large with multiple smaller antennas oriented and separated in the array. The gains I got from this were not remarkable. It was not worth it IMO so I went back to the stock antennas for the 5GHz band.
8. The actual signal strength/sensitivity varied from antenna post to post on the RT-AC-66 routers that I tried. I believe that this is because of the different wire length from the actual radio on the PCB in the router to the antenna stub. There may be other reasons that an electrical engineer with radio background can discern. All I know is that on the two RT-AC66 routers that I have, the right antenna (looked at from the back side) has the strongest signal.
9. Changing antennas and configurations will not increase your maximum data transmission rate over what you achieve when you put the transmitter and receiver close together. What the antennas and configuration will do is increase the distance that you can separate the transmitter and receiver while still maintaining a high data transmission rate. True data transmission has error corrections and connection delays. The better the signal quality at a distance (Higher signal to noise ratio), the higher the data transmission rate that can be maintained.
10. Surprisingly, changing the orientation of the transmitter and receiver in the same plane (moving the client device to a different position on the same floor of the home wrt the orientation of the router) does make a measurable difference, even with omni-directional antennas. The difference is enough to cause connect or disconnect issues at far distances. The better antennas extended this distance in the 2.4GHz band such that I never had disconnect problems but the 5GHz is still problematical at distances over 20 meters from the transmitter or where there are significant signal attenuators (brick/concrete/stone walls, metal sheathing, Large Appliances, or other RF transmitters).
11. Antenna configuration is going to depend on the router you use. If you have a router with one antenna, you are pretty much stuck with improving the 2.4GHz band with, at best, no change to the 5GHz band. If you have a 2 antenna router, you can put a 2.4GHz high gain antenna on one post, and a 5GHz antenna on the other. Three, four, or Six Antenna configurations (if you can change out the antennas) are going to be a trial and error configuration like I did. It just takes time to do the testing.
I see that some of the new routers like the Asus RT-AC87 have different antennas than the RT-AC66. I'd like to try those to determine if they have a better design for 5GHz than the stock RT-AC66 antennas. Currently, I get 50% of the signal strength on the 5GHz band that I get on the 2.4GHz band and that is with the power setting of 140mW for 5GHz vs. 110mW for the 2.4GHz band.
You may ask "How did he do these measurements?". I did not use any other test chamber (other than my own home). I did not use specialized signal processing equipment (I don't have this at my home). I used two RT-AC66 routers with one being the transmitter and the other being the receiver. I used the "scan feature" available in the Asus-Merlin F.W. and InSSider software on a HP Elitebook 8460p laptop with an Intel 7260 WiFi 2X2 card to measure signal strength. I put different antennas in different numbers, and orientations on one router in different configurations and tested signal strength. I connected a computer to each router so I could measure both the sending and receiving signal strength. I left the routers, and PC's in standard positions and orientations so I could reproduce the results. Finally, I tested "real world" results by sending a "standard" 3GB MP4 video file back and forth between PC's on the routers to determine if there were changes in the wireless transmission rates with different configurations. I did measurements at two standardized distances. The first at 2 meters distance where the transmitter and receiver were on the same plane (same height off the floor) with no obstructions in between. The second where the transmitter and receiver were approximately 20 meters apart on the same plane but with 4 walls and various pieces of furniture between them. I also did some testing where the transmitter and receiver were in different planes (on different floors of the building) and where the transmitter and receiver were oriented at different angle to one another (moving the receiver to a different position 90 degrees from the face of the transmitting router.)
I spent several months researching and trying different antenna configurations for my RT-AC66 routers. I went to radio sites and posted on their antenna design sections. I bugged people on this site till they were sick of me.
The things I found out were:
1. You can make significant improvements to the 2.4GHz band in terms of longer range signal strength and quality (both sending and receiving) by using relatively cheap high gain (9dBm) antennas. I liked the TP-Link 8dBm antennas until I found some cheap ($11 for 3 antennas) on Amazon which had metal ferules that didn't slip or break and which maintained orientation when set off-vertical. Without changing the output power of the radio on the router I was able to get stable WiFi signals downlink and uplink at more than 20 meters away through 4 plaster walls filled with romex wiring, copper water pipes, cast Iron waste lines, and quite a bit of low voltage wiring. I am able to get signal out through a metal sheathing and reasonable signal strength 50 meters outside the building (enough to stream video).
2. There is a thing called "rotational polarization" which means that when a signal is transmitted through a solid object (like a wall), or bounced off a surface, the signal orientation can change such that an antenna oriented in one direction (vertical for example) cannot pick up the signal as effectively as two oriented in different directions. (This is a major oversimplification so people who have the background and experience to understand all that is behind this statement are free to offer clarification if you believe it contributes to the discussion.) I found that having two omni-directional antennas oriented 90 degrees from each other (example one antenna vertical and one antenna horizontal; or one antenna at -45 degrees from vertical and another antenna at +45 degrees from vertical) allowed me to have the strongest signal at the receiver of the router WiFi and the client. It also helped to get around the multi-floor concern of a omni-directional antenna oriented vertically.
3. I found no commercially available antennas which would improve the signal strength of both the 2.4GHz band and the 5GHz band simultaneously.
4. I found no commercially available antenna which would improve the signal strength or quality of the 5GHz band better than the stock antenna on the RT-AC66 that came with the router.
5. On the RT-AC66 router, having all three antennas oriented vertically seemed to cause "interference" and decreased sensitivity. I eventually ended up with an outside antenna (2.4GHz high gain antenna) oriented vertically, the middle antenna (Stock RT-AC66 antenna) oriented at a 45 degree angle away from the vertical antenna, and the third antenna (2.4GHz high gain antenna) oriented horizontally (45 degrees away from the center antenna). The 2.4GHz high gain antennas I use are 38cm (15 inches) long. I didn't notice the same signal interference when I was just using the stock antennas. Most observers will look at the antenna configuration and think it is "ugly", "weird", "asymmetrical", "ungainly", or "unattractive". You will have to make the judgement yourself of "function" or "form".
6. If you want to concentrate on the the 5GHz Band, use two of the stock RT-AC66 antennas with the center antenna being a 2.4GHz high gain antenna. The smaller stock antennas should be oriented at 45 degree angle from the center vertical antenna.
7. It is possible to make a 5GHz antenna array that is more sensitive and better signal strength than the stock antennas. My final antenna was very large with multiple smaller antennas oriented and separated in the array. The gains I got from this were not remarkable. It was not worth it IMO so I went back to the stock antennas for the 5GHz band.
8. The actual signal strength/sensitivity varied from antenna post to post on the RT-AC-66 routers that I tried. I believe that this is because of the different wire length from the actual radio on the PCB in the router to the antenna stub. There may be other reasons that an electrical engineer with radio background can discern. All I know is that on the two RT-AC66 routers that I have, the right antenna (looked at from the back side) has the strongest signal.
9. Changing antennas and configurations will not increase your maximum data transmission rate over what you achieve when you put the transmitter and receiver close together. What the antennas and configuration will do is increase the distance that you can separate the transmitter and receiver while still maintaining a high data transmission rate. True data transmission has error corrections and connection delays. The better the signal quality at a distance (Higher signal to noise ratio), the higher the data transmission rate that can be maintained.
10. Surprisingly, changing the orientation of the transmitter and receiver in the same plane (moving the client device to a different position on the same floor of the home wrt the orientation of the router) does make a measurable difference, even with omni-directional antennas. The difference is enough to cause connect or disconnect issues at far distances. The better antennas extended this distance in the 2.4GHz band such that I never had disconnect problems but the 5GHz is still problematical at distances over 20 meters from the transmitter or where there are significant signal attenuators (brick/concrete/stone walls, metal sheathing, Large Appliances, or other RF transmitters).
11. Antenna configuration is going to depend on the router you use. If you have a router with one antenna, you are pretty much stuck with improving the 2.4GHz band with, at best, no change to the 5GHz band. If you have a 2 antenna router, you can put a 2.4GHz high gain antenna on one post, and a 5GHz antenna on the other. Three, four, or Six Antenna configurations (if you can change out the antennas) are going to be a trial and error configuration like I did. It just takes time to do the testing.
I see that some of the new routers like the Asus RT-AC87 have different antennas than the RT-AC66. I'd like to try those to determine if they have a better design for 5GHz than the stock RT-AC66 antennas. Currently, I get 50% of the signal strength on the 5GHz band that I get on the 2.4GHz band and that is with the power setting of 140mW for 5GHz vs. 110mW for the 2.4GHz band.
You may ask "How did he do these measurements?". I did not use any other test chamber (other than my own home). I did not use specialized signal processing equipment (I don't have this at my home). I used two RT-AC66 routers with one being the transmitter and the other being the receiver. I used the "scan feature" available in the Asus-Merlin F.W. and InSSider software on a HP Elitebook 8460p laptop with an Intel 7260 WiFi 2X2 card to measure signal strength. I put different antennas in different numbers, and orientations on one router in different configurations and tested signal strength. I connected a computer to each router so I could measure both the sending and receiving signal strength. I left the routers, and PC's in standard positions and orientations so I could reproduce the results. Finally, I tested "real world" results by sending a "standard" 3GB MP4 video file back and forth between PC's on the routers to determine if there were changes in the wireless transmission rates with different configurations. I did measurements at two standardized distances. The first at 2 meters distance where the transmitter and receiver were on the same plane (same height off the floor) with no obstructions in between. The second where the transmitter and receiver were approximately 20 meters apart on the same plane but with 4 walls and various pieces of furniture between them. I also did some testing where the transmitter and receiver were in different planes (on different floors of the building) and where the transmitter and receiver were oriented at different angle to one another (moving the receiver to a different position 90 degrees from the face of the transmitting router.)