Hi Everyone,
I'm brand-new to the forum here and am having some issues I'm hoping everyone can help me sort out. I'm fairly technically minded, but networking is not my area of expertise.
Problem:
My problem is that I've recently added 9 Google home mini's to my network as part of a whole house audio system, and the result is many things on my network (including the mini's) are constantly disconnecting/reconnect, including the Google home mini's themselves. Things "seemed" to work find for the first few days. I say "seemed" as it's possible there were issues and I just hadn't realized it.
For instance, 2 days ago, music was playing on one of the speakers, and it couldn't seem to get enough bandwidth to play music. It dropped in and out for a second and then wouldn't respond to any commands and stopped playing music. Similarly, last night I tried to give one of the speakers a command and it and another nearby speaker responded that something went wrong.
I then started looking into things a bit more, and noticed through the setup page on my main router that not all the devices I thought were connected were, and that it seems to change quite frequently. Anyway, it seems the mini's are not the problem, so I suspected it's something to do with my router.
Digging in a bit more, I noticed that my main router seems to be only connecting to things on the 2.4GHz network, while the access point only seems to be connecting to things on the 5gz network. I don't know if this is a bug or something in the ASUS software, but it seems very strange. Resetting the AP router made everything jump over to the main router 5Ghz network, before they all came back over to the AP network once it was booted up.
Current set-up:
I currently have a RT-AC3100 main router centrally located in my house (main floor near the back). It's running stock ASUS firmware, and I recently updated it to the latest version (3.0.0.4.384_81116-g709c838) after I started having problems, to see if that would help (and also because it had been a while since I updated).
The main router is currently broadcasting 4 wireless, 2 2.4GHz and 2 5Ghz (we have a 2.4 and 5Ghz guest network since I don't trust my parents computers connecting to...anything).
In addition, I have a RT-AC1200G connected through ethernet to the main router and set-up in access point mode. Its running only 2 networks, a 2.4 and 5GHz, with the same SSID/password as the main router, in theory to allow "seamless" switching between routers. I haven't updated its firmware in a while, or checked if there's a more recent one, but it's current version is 3.0.0.4.382_50624-gdf1b286. This router is located
I don't think it matters, but both routers have multiple wired connections, in addition to the wireless networks.
Not sure if any other details are relevant, but please let me know what you need and I can upload.
Troubleshooting:
After I started having issues, I restarted both routers (in addition to updating the firmware on my main router). This did not solve the issue.
I started keeping a closer eye on my main router, wondering if it was being overworked (before I noticed the split of the 2.4Ghz/5Ghz connections between routers). It will typically show anywhere from 31-35 clients connected at a time. However, this doesn't seem to be stressing it out too much, as CPU/ram usage remains fairly reasonable (currently around 10% CPU on both cores and 37% RAM with 31 devices connected). The stats on my AP router are similarly low.
As mentioned, resetting the AP router does cause all devices on the 5GHz network to connect to the main router, but they jump back on the AP router once it's working again.
I DID have roaming assistant on for my 2.4GHz network on my main router, but NOT for the 5GHz network. I've turned that off, and it hasn't had an effect.
Questions:
- In general - anyone have any thoughts on what might be happening here?
- ASUS came out with the AI mesh stuff a few months after I bought my AP router. Not sure if that would help with the situation or not. If there is something causing all my 5Ghz connections to go to my AP and not my main router, AI mesh would presumably solve this......?
Thanks everyone in advance for the help - much appreciated!
Edited to correct router model number to RT-AC3100 from 3200
I'm brand-new to the forum here and am having some issues I'm hoping everyone can help me sort out. I'm fairly technically minded, but networking is not my area of expertise.
Problem:
My problem is that I've recently added 9 Google home mini's to my network as part of a whole house audio system, and the result is many things on my network (including the mini's) are constantly disconnecting/reconnect, including the Google home mini's themselves. Things "seemed" to work find for the first few days. I say "seemed" as it's possible there were issues and I just hadn't realized it.
For instance, 2 days ago, music was playing on one of the speakers, and it couldn't seem to get enough bandwidth to play music. It dropped in and out for a second and then wouldn't respond to any commands and stopped playing music. Similarly, last night I tried to give one of the speakers a command and it and another nearby speaker responded that something went wrong.
I then started looking into things a bit more, and noticed through the setup page on my main router that not all the devices I thought were connected were, and that it seems to change quite frequently. Anyway, it seems the mini's are not the problem, so I suspected it's something to do with my router.
Digging in a bit more, I noticed that my main router seems to be only connecting to things on the 2.4GHz network, while the access point only seems to be connecting to things on the 5gz network. I don't know if this is a bug or something in the ASUS software, but it seems very strange. Resetting the AP router made everything jump over to the main router 5Ghz network, before they all came back over to the AP network once it was booted up.
Current set-up:
I currently have a RT-AC3100 main router centrally located in my house (main floor near the back). It's running stock ASUS firmware, and I recently updated it to the latest version (3.0.0.4.384_81116-g709c838) after I started having problems, to see if that would help (and also because it had been a while since I updated).
The main router is currently broadcasting 4 wireless, 2 2.4GHz and 2 5Ghz (we have a 2.4 and 5Ghz guest network since I don't trust my parents computers connecting to...anything).
In addition, I have a RT-AC1200G connected through ethernet to the main router and set-up in access point mode. Its running only 2 networks, a 2.4 and 5GHz, with the same SSID/password as the main router, in theory to allow "seamless" switching between routers. I haven't updated its firmware in a while, or checked if there's a more recent one, but it's current version is 3.0.0.4.382_50624-gdf1b286. This router is located
I don't think it matters, but both routers have multiple wired connections, in addition to the wireless networks.
Not sure if any other details are relevant, but please let me know what you need and I can upload.
Troubleshooting:
After I started having issues, I restarted both routers (in addition to updating the firmware on my main router). This did not solve the issue.
I started keeping a closer eye on my main router, wondering if it was being overworked (before I noticed the split of the 2.4Ghz/5Ghz connections between routers). It will typically show anywhere from 31-35 clients connected at a time. However, this doesn't seem to be stressing it out too much, as CPU/ram usage remains fairly reasonable (currently around 10% CPU on both cores and 37% RAM with 31 devices connected). The stats on my AP router are similarly low.
As mentioned, resetting the AP router does cause all devices on the 5GHz network to connect to the main router, but they jump back on the AP router once it's working again.
I DID have roaming assistant on for my 2.4GHz network on my main router, but NOT for the 5GHz network. I've turned that off, and it hasn't had an effect.
Questions:
- In general - anyone have any thoughts on what might be happening here?
- ASUS came out with the AI mesh stuff a few months after I bought my AP router. Not sure if that would help with the situation or not. If there is something causing all my 5Ghz connections to go to my AP and not my main router, AI mesh would presumably solve this......?
Thanks everyone in advance for the help - much appreciated!
Edited to correct router model number to RT-AC3100 from 3200
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