i got it working for some reason. i needed to put a cat 7 cable in the wall to my gigabit switch then to the router. then i have 3 other cable that is cat 7 plugged in t the router to my devices, now everything works fine i got 450mbps download and upload. for some reason i had a cat 5e and cat 6 cable in that was messing up the connection totaltly werid
So the main difference now (apart from the cable types) is that you have added a gigabit switch between the router's WAN port and the wall socket which wasn't there before. Correct?i got it working for some reason. i needed to put a cat 7 cable in the wall to my gigabit switch then to the router. then i have 3 other cable that is cat 7 plugged in t the router to my devices, now everything works fine i got 450mbps download and upload. for some reason i had a cat 5e and cat 6 cable in that was messing up the connection totaltly werid
Hi,@Cazzoi Welcome back!
Let me repeat back what you just stated:
Looking at the Network Map screen you should see that the WAN port has connected at 1Gbps.
- When you plug a PC into the wall socket you get 400Mbps
- Moving the cable from the PC to the router WAN port you then only get 100Mbps
View attachment 19315
- If the port is connecting at less than 1Gbps, then you have a cable issue.
- If the port is connecting at 1Gbps but you only measure 100Mbps, then there is additional data crossing the connection which is negatively impacting your measurement. This additional data is probably due to an auto negotiation issue between the router and your ISP equipment. There are three ways to resolve:
- Ask your ISP to replace their equipment with another model
- Install an Ethernet switch between the router and wall socket
- Use something other than ASUS but realize that the replacement may have same issue
I have an Asus RT-87U router.
My network map is as follows:
View attachment 25645
If I plug my computer directly into the wall socket and bypass the router I get gig speed 1Gbps.
If I plug my computer via the lan port I only get max 350Mbps.
1. Is there no switch on the router that must be set ?
2. Should I get Ethernet switch and try that ?
thank you for so many question, let me try and answer:Please answer each question.
- With regard to the network map, is your computer plugged into LAN 1 or LAN 2?
- With regard to the wall socket, what is the wall socket connected to?
- With regard to the wall socket, are you using the same cable as when you plug the computer into the router?
- With regard to 'max 350 Mbps, how are you measuring that?
- Advise as to what is written on the cable regarding its specifications
Cheers
It should give you the reason why it is disabled next to the "incompatible with:" message. That fact that there's nothing there means something about the router is messed up. Powering off the router for a minute and then turning it back on usually clears that issue allowing you to see the reason why it's disabled.How do I fix it ?
Hi Colin,It should give you the reason why it is disabled next to the "incompatible with:" message. That fact that there's nothing there means something about the router is messed up. Powering off the router for a minute and then turning it back on usually clears that issue allowing you to see the reason why it's disabled.
If that doesn't work the reasons for being disabled is either a) it's been manually disabled (LAN - Switch Control), or b) you are using an incompatible feature (IPTraffic, QoS, Repeater mode or USB modem).
Hi Colin,It should give you the reason why it is disabled next to the "incompatible with:" message. That fact that there's nothing there means something about the router is messed up. Powering off the router for a minute and then turning it back on usually clears that issue allowing you to see the reason why it's disabled.
If that doesn't work the reasons for being disabled is either a) it's been manually disabled (LAN - Switch Control), or b) you are using an incompatible feature (IPTraffic, QoS, Repeater mode or USB modem).
It's a hardware limitation AFAICT. WiFi connections can't fully exploit the hardware acceleration.NOTE: On my 5G wifi I only get 485 Mbps. Any reason why I'm not reaching 900+ Mbps ?
With the older generation of routers the WiFi speed seems to be limited by the router's CPU. I don't know whether the newer generation (like the RT-AC86U) are similarly limited. Even if they were I suspect that their faster CPU's might be able to simply "brute force" their way to the maximum speed. But that's speculation on my part. Maybe somebody with one of those routers and a gigabit connection can let us know for sure.ah, I see. Will the new routers have that capability ?
Colin Taylor - Good call. I have a AC86U (384.19) and my speed test shows the same whether I am LAN or WiFi connected. 235 Mbps down and 11.7 Mbps up. 'WiFi Explorer' shows my 5 GHz connection as being able to achieve 1.733 Gbps. Hope that helpsWith the older router generation of routers the WiFi speed seems to be limited by the router's CPU. I don't know whether the newer generation (like the RT-AC86U) are similarly limited. ... Maybe somebody with one of those routers and a gigabit connection can let us know for sure.
Hi Colin and others,With the older generation of routers the WiFi speed seems to be limited by the router's CPU. I don't know whether the newer generation (like the RT-AC86U) are similarly limited. Even if they were I suspect that their faster CPU's might be able to simply "brute force" their way to the maximum speed. But that's speculation on my part. Maybe somebody with one of those routers and a gigabit connection can let us know for sure.
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