Hi there SMB, new member here, been lurking for a few days here and elsewhere but registered to clarify some details that for the life of me I cant find the exact answers to.
Now this may be a slightly long and convoluted post because some of my questions are interreleated to eachother so bear with me and if anyone has any of the answers please chime in (especially Merlin, I dont even use your stuff yet but having seen what great work you do im already a fan), anyway so here goes
My situation is that I currently have a 150/10mbps fibre optic connection here in the UK coming into a flat of 3 students (me and two others) in North London. The router that came with the internet package seemed a decent piece of kit (gave me 160/10mbps via wireless connection once it was set up in the same room) but the problem is the wireless range was very poor to nonexistent in the rest of the house. The house is quite small (could say very small) and mostly underground flat with rectanuglar shape, with the living room/converted bedroom on one end to the right of me, my bedroom in the middle (where the router was located for full coverage) and a set of internal wooden stairs that lead to the other bedroom that is on ground level on the left of me.
The living room kinda got some reception but speeds were around 10mbps on 2.4G (we only have 2 laptops that have 5G capabilities out of our 10 devices in the house so we dont really use the 5G, plus it has even worse reception) and the upper room devices struggled to connect but got similar speeds or less. After trying all the standard tricks like 20mhz only on the 2.4 band, using InSSIDer to scan the srrounding area for channel interference (we have alot of other routers unfortunately as we live in a 5 flat terraced building with other flats around us) and locking the router to the least busy channel, repositioning angle of the router, upgrading firmware etc but none or minimal improvment.
As such I decided to upgrade to a better quality dedicated wireless router. I looked through reviews etc and decided to buy an ASUS N56U and hooked it up as a wireless router via modem mode, but alas, again no improvment. Its an excellent piece of kit, set up really easily, upgraded to latest firmware from ASUS website, factory resets and clearing nvram, repositing the router angle to avoid deadspots, the works, I still get excellent wireless speeds in my room (160mbps) and outside my bedroom door on the stairs I get about 80mbps on the 5G band but reach the top of the stairs and into the bedroom (5 meters further away) and reception suffers and hits about 8-10mbps, there have been moments where my friends laptop in his room has connected and reached 30mbps down but the connection is very shaky and drops and speeds vary wildly, the living room speeds are as poor as before.
Now before people suggest the following solutions, they are unfortunately unfeasible or I am aware of them but dont want to try them just yet
Instead what I have decided to do after researching even more and using the router ranker etc is decided upon the N66U instead as it is the highest ranked router for wireless range in the SMB rankings, especially for hard to reach spots like the deadspot F used during reviews and as I suspect what is happening in my situation is the signal is being severly attenuated by the basement walls (although when the house was converted it didnt even have sound proofing installed, we get noise complaints from above for the slightest sound, go figure) I think the basement walls themselves must be quite thick (possibly brick or cement judging from an unpainted storage room we have access to) and at this junction is where my questions come in.
Now I am aware that when the N66U was reviewed in 2012 its incredibly range was due to its power output being very high (500mW for the US I think ? and 200mW for GB). I am also aware that after its release new FCC legislation came in that deemed such poower outputs illegal and ASUS patched its N66Us to a new output of 80mW or 100mW??? if I am correct, and since then the N66Us tremendous range capabilites have been somewhat diminished, although it is still incredibly capable (please correct me if Im wrong so far, until a few weeks ago I knew almost nothing about routers although I am a bit of a computer hardware geek otherwise). It is also my understanding that ASUS moved from SDK5 to SDK6 in its firmware at some point in time, I am not sure if this is the same point where the power output was patched or if this is the same thing or if they are even related, but from what Ive read the switch from SDK5 to SDK6 also introduced some range issues. Now my questions are as follows
Essentially my overall question is, what is the best optimal firmware/settings etc to squeeze every last bit of wireless range and performance from an N66U and is it possible to achieve its range capabilities as they were at release (because they are adequate for my needs I think) or is there no way to go back to those levels of power ? The 3 of us really arent interested or need any other features except stable downspeeds of around 40-50% of the speeds we are paying ATLEAST or otherwise the other two housemates feel rightfully short-changed, so I do not care about FTP, VPN etc etc, I would hoever like working a QoS to distribute the badwidth between our devices fairly as we will be torrenting and also have an xbox etc. I also do not particularly care if I have to use an older firmware with security vulnerabilites (I understand people may disagree with me on this) aslong as I can get the best performance out of the N66U.
Also to premept any of the following suggestions or corrections, I am aware of them but id just like my specific questions answered, forgive my stubbonrness . I understand my logic may be wrong and I am happy to be corrected, but I would really like the answers to my questions first and then constructive advice secondary as it is always welcome
Well I guess thats everything, sorry for writing such a huge essay or if mods feel I went off on a tangent, they can clear the rest of the post and just leave the questions if that is the case, I just thought id give a bit of context and background to my questions and why I need every last bit of power and range I can get, and a big thank you to anyone that takes the time to read this and give me any of the info Im looking for
Now this may be a slightly long and convoluted post because some of my questions are interreleated to eachother so bear with me and if anyone has any of the answers please chime in (especially Merlin, I dont even use your stuff yet but having seen what great work you do im already a fan), anyway so here goes
My situation is that I currently have a 150/10mbps fibre optic connection here in the UK coming into a flat of 3 students (me and two others) in North London. The router that came with the internet package seemed a decent piece of kit (gave me 160/10mbps via wireless connection once it was set up in the same room) but the problem is the wireless range was very poor to nonexistent in the rest of the house. The house is quite small (could say very small) and mostly underground flat with rectanuglar shape, with the living room/converted bedroom on one end to the right of me, my bedroom in the middle (where the router was located for full coverage) and a set of internal wooden stairs that lead to the other bedroom that is on ground level on the left of me.
The living room kinda got some reception but speeds were around 10mbps on 2.4G (we only have 2 laptops that have 5G capabilities out of our 10 devices in the house so we dont really use the 5G, plus it has even worse reception) and the upper room devices struggled to connect but got similar speeds or less. After trying all the standard tricks like 20mhz only on the 2.4 band, using InSSIDer to scan the srrounding area for channel interference (we have alot of other routers unfortunately as we live in a 5 flat terraced building with other flats around us) and locking the router to the least busy channel, repositioning angle of the router, upgrading firmware etc but none or minimal improvment.
As such I decided to upgrade to a better quality dedicated wireless router. I looked through reviews etc and decided to buy an ASUS N56U and hooked it up as a wireless router via modem mode, but alas, again no improvment. Its an excellent piece of kit, set up really easily, upgraded to latest firmware from ASUS website, factory resets and clearing nvram, repositing the router angle to avoid deadspots, the works, I still get excellent wireless speeds in my room (160mbps) and outside my bedroom door on the stairs I get about 80mbps on the 5G band but reach the top of the stairs and into the bedroom (5 meters further away) and reception suffers and hits about 8-10mbps, there have been moments where my friends laptop in his room has connected and reached 30mbps down but the connection is very shaky and drops and speeds vary wildly, the living room speeds are as poor as before.
Now before people suggest the following solutions, they are unfortunately unfeasible or I am aware of them but dont want to try them just yet
- Moving the router to another room
- Running ethernet cables to our devices
- setting up wireless repeaters/AP
- Use powerline adapters
Instead what I have decided to do after researching even more and using the router ranker etc is decided upon the N66U instead as it is the highest ranked router for wireless range in the SMB rankings, especially for hard to reach spots like the deadspot F used during reviews and as I suspect what is happening in my situation is the signal is being severly attenuated by the basement walls (although when the house was converted it didnt even have sound proofing installed, we get noise complaints from above for the slightest sound, go figure) I think the basement walls themselves must be quite thick (possibly brick or cement judging from an unpainted storage room we have access to) and at this junction is where my questions come in.
Now I am aware that when the N66U was reviewed in 2012 its incredibly range was due to its power output being very high (500mW for the US I think ? and 200mW for GB). I am also aware that after its release new FCC legislation came in that deemed such poower outputs illegal and ASUS patched its N66Us to a new output of 80mW or 100mW??? if I am correct, and since then the N66Us tremendous range capabilites have been somewhat diminished, although it is still incredibly capable (please correct me if Im wrong so far, until a few weeks ago I knew almost nothing about routers although I am a bit of a computer hardware geek otherwise). It is also my understanding that ASUS moved from SDK5 to SDK6 in its firmware at some point in time, I am not sure if this is the same point where the power output was patched or if this is the same thing or if they are even related, but from what Ive read the switch from SDK5 to SDK6 also introduced some range issues. Now my questions are as follows
- Is it still possible to have the router transmit its old power levels by downgrading to the most recent firmware before the power output was patched, and if yes, which is this firmware revision ?
- I have read that since the power change, Merlin has refused on legal grounds/cannot due to ASUS encrypting the wireless drivers to change the power output back to its original levels, which I completely understand and respect, however it is also my understanding that ASUS provided him with an engineering mode wireless driver to incorporate into his custom firmware, is the performance of the em driver equivalent to the pre-patched power output in current firmware ? Is it the em driver the actual pre patched power output ? How does this work ?
- I have read something about since the power patching happened for the US the power output for other locales has been broken in the firmware, (e.g from what I understand the UK still has a 200mW limit but the N66U does not operate at that level), is this still broken or will I be able to utilise the correct power output for my locale ? Ideally I would like the full 500mW output even if it limits my channels to US levels, but I would atleast settle for the GB output levels
- What is the current performance of the stock firmware in terms of wireless range ? Is it still diminished ? Good ?
Essentially my overall question is, what is the best optimal firmware/settings etc to squeeze every last bit of wireless range and performance from an N66U and is it possible to achieve its range capabilities as they were at release (because they are adequate for my needs I think) or is there no way to go back to those levels of power ? The 3 of us really arent interested or need any other features except stable downspeeds of around 40-50% of the speeds we are paying ATLEAST or otherwise the other two housemates feel rightfully short-changed, so I do not care about FTP, VPN etc etc, I would hoever like working a QoS to distribute the badwidth between our devices fairly as we will be torrenting and also have an xbox etc. I also do not particularly care if I have to use an older firmware with security vulnerabilites (I understand people may disagree with me on this) aslong as I can get the best performance out of the N66U.
Also to premept any of the following suggestions or corrections, I am aware of them but id just like my specific questions answered, forgive my stubbonrness . I understand my logic may be wrong and I am happy to be corrected, but I would really like the answers to my questions first and then constructive advice secondary as it is always welcome
- I understand power output does not translate to linear increase in range aka doubling power only makes a few dBm difference etc
- I understand transmission power is only one side of the equation and the client side must be equally able to communciate with the router for a fast stable connection (in the room with the worst signal we have a high gain USB wireless dongle that still gets pitiful speeds so I doubt client side is the issue)
- I understand it may cause interference with neighbours wifi if I blast a very powerful signal from my router, I will keep that in mind
- I understand very high power may introduce distortions into the signal without providing any benefits in range
- I do not want to try replacing the N66U external antennas with high gain external antennas
Well I guess thats everything, sorry for writing such a huge essay or if mods feel I went off on a tangent, they can clear the rest of the post and just leave the questions if that is the case, I just thought id give a bit of context and background to my questions and why I need every last bit of power and range I can get, and a big thank you to anyone that takes the time to read this and give me any of the info Im looking for