BlueOrbit
Regular Contributor
Hello,
I recently got a new Samsung Q80T 65 inch TV. It has an 802.11 AC and a LAN port (10/100), disappointing that its not a 1 gig port. I don't have an Ethernet cable available at the location where the TV is placed. Tried running it over 5Ghz WiFi connection and noticed that sometimes it buffers streaming 4K content on YouTube. I am now trying to run it (as a test) connected to LAN port on a RT-AC86U configured as a media bridge and connected over 5Ghz to an RT-AX86U router (TV -> bridge -> router).
It appears that I am getting a stronger WiFi connection between the bridge and the router then when I have the TV connected directly, but the LAN port is limited to 100 Mbps vs. WiFi, which is faster when connected directly (TV -> router) vs. (TV -> bridge -> router).
Is there any benefit when using a WiFi bridge or should I just connect the TV over WiFi directly?
Thanks for any input on this.
I recently got a new Samsung Q80T 65 inch TV. It has an 802.11 AC and a LAN port (10/100), disappointing that its not a 1 gig port. I don't have an Ethernet cable available at the location where the TV is placed. Tried running it over 5Ghz WiFi connection and noticed that sometimes it buffers streaming 4K content on YouTube. I am now trying to run it (as a test) connected to LAN port on a RT-AC86U configured as a media bridge and connected over 5Ghz to an RT-AX86U router (TV -> bridge -> router).
It appears that I am getting a stronger WiFi connection between the bridge and the router then when I have the TV connected directly, but the LAN port is limited to 100 Mbps vs. WiFi, which is faster when connected directly (TV -> router) vs. (TV -> bridge -> router).
Is there any benefit when using a WiFi bridge or should I just connect the TV over WiFi directly?
Thanks for any input on this.