Vandergraff
Regular Contributor
I am running the Merlin 374.43 fork.
This gives me close to the original firmware WiFi range - but still gives me spotty coverage in some remote locations that were originally OK.
After reading 'The Best Way to Point Your Wi-Fi Router Antennas: Perpendicularly' I thought I would try some experimentation.
I mounted my RT-N66 vertically on its stand and have the antennas pointing up, left and forward (orthogonal and pointing in the -x, y , -z axis). The improvement for remote clients in all directions and for both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz was pretty dramatic - significantly better RSSI and link speeds (confirmed by speed tests from the remote clients).
I know Asus recommends \ | / (which I was using previously) and the math of MIMO and Beamforming is complicated but for me (3 level house on 1 acre) the orthogonal orientaion works much better (and yes you mileage may vary depending on your situation).
For those trying to improve WiFi coverage I would definitely recommend experimenting with Antenna Orientation.
This gives me close to the original firmware WiFi range - but still gives me spotty coverage in some remote locations that were originally OK.
After reading 'The Best Way to Point Your Wi-Fi Router Antennas: Perpendicularly' I thought I would try some experimentation.
I mounted my RT-N66 vertically on its stand and have the antennas pointing up, left and forward (orthogonal and pointing in the -x, y , -z axis). The improvement for remote clients in all directions and for both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz was pretty dramatic - significantly better RSSI and link speeds (confirmed by speed tests from the remote clients).
I know Asus recommends \ | / (which I was using previously) and the math of MIMO and Beamforming is complicated but for me (3 level house on 1 acre) the orthogonal orientaion works much better (and yes you mileage may vary depending on your situation).
For those trying to improve WiFi coverage I would definitely recommend experimenting with Antenna Orientation.