However, if you desire specifications and you are in the US the FCC certification documents should give that to you. Outside the US, look on the router label for the country specific organization that certified.Hi, does anyone know where I can find what the specs on TX Transmission power on for both 2.4ghz and 5ghz channels of the Stock Asus DSL-AC68U in performace? Thanks
That would depend on country specific requirements. You would have to check with the UK certification authority to determine what maximum power is allowed and then compare with the certification documentation which would have the results on tests, in a controlled environment, specific to that router.... what would be the maximum TX Power that the router firmware is limiting it to.
Not that I am aware of. Realize that you are dealing with electronics and firmware. The electronics should be designed not to exceed the maximum permitted in a country. The firmware, conceivably, could control the output on a percentage basis. Today, one cannot depend on transmit power being a constant because of newer routers having adaptive level capability.Other than that, there is no way to obtain the value set from the router?
Thank you all. I think the real question I am asking is when the stock router TX power is set on performance, what would be the maximum TX Power that the router firmware is limiting it to. Lets say for the UK variant. Thanks.
/* Locale K-13 (K_13) */
CHANNEL_SET_2, 0, /* Locale channels (20M), locale flags */
RESTRICTED_SET_NONE, /* Restricted channels */
1, /* Public Maxpwr: 1 elt(s) */
20, RANGE_2G_20M_1_13, /* 20dBm, 1-13 */
CLM_DATA_FLAG_WIDTH_20 | CLM_DATA_FLAG_MEAS_COND, /* Maxpower Group Flags */
3, /* Locale Maxpwr: 3 elt(s) */
62, RANGE_2G_20M_1_12, RATE_SET_20M_146, /* 15.50dBm, 1-12 , (OFDM6-54) */
72, RANGE_2G_20M_1_13, RATE_SET_20M_0, /* 18.00dBm, 1-13 , (DSSS1-11) */
60, RANGE_2G_20M_13_13, RATE_SET_20M_146, /* 15.00dBm, 13-13 , (OFDM6-54) */
Thanks guys. Yep, sure is complicated and way beyond me. I have found max for 2.4ghz is 100mw, for 5ghz (channels 36-64) is 200mw and for 5ghz (channels 100-140) it is 1000mw. The reason for my research is I am trying to understand without mentioning any names, why some Merlin mods are not allowed to be discussed on this forum. It looks like those mods are perfectly legal here in the UK if the reason for silencing discussion of those mods are because of the tx power transmission.
Really? Are you saying non-DFS 1000mW channels are perfectly legal in UK? Can you provide evidence which supports this?
RT-AC68U or DSL-AC68U (same beside DSL part, so some even running rt-ac68u firmware on it) never had more than 700mW max, not possible with this chipset and hardware. And over 350mW more destortions than benefit.Okay, I think I see what you mean. Those forks you have to use manual control of channel so I am assuming it would be constantly at 1000mW and not dynamic. Dammit. Why couldn't it just be left as it is without these mod with just the DSL component added.
Yes, and you lose functionalities such as modem, usb, the indicator lights and will be buggy as different chipsets and was not originally intended for that router. Which leaves the DSL users with nothing. The stock firmware is fine just that PS4 needs to bypass VPN and this is not available on stock. Didn't buy the RT as did not like the idea of a separate modem. One extra device was not appealing and didn't see the point.RT-AC68U or DSL-AC68U (same beside DSL part, so some even running rt-ac68u firmware on it) never had more than 700mW max, not possible with this chipset and hardware. And over 350mW more destortions than benefit.
Same for me, but needed new modem for v.fast (super vectoring) so sold it and got an RT.Didn't buy the RT as did not like the idea of a separate modem. One extra device was not appealing and didn't see the point.
Mere discussion of the certain mod in question is not illegal even under US Laws.
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