To clarify - I'm talking about the max number of client connections, not TCP/UDP connections. In other words, the number of devices that can be wirelessly connected concurrently.
I'm running Merlin 380.63_2.
Is this limit in hardware or firmware?
TIA.
To clarify - I'm talking about the max number of client connections, not TCP/UDP connections. In other words, the number of devices that can be wirelessly connected concurrently.
I'm running Merlin 380.63_2.
Is this limit in hardware or firmware?
My rule of thumb is pretty much a max of 25 clients per radio with most AP's - some routers will start dropping clients (wired and wireless) as low as 32, but most modern consumer routers can handle 50 total depending on traffic and usage.
With WiFi - it's mostly driven by air time capacity...
Thanks sfx2000, Nullity, and CaptainSTX for your comments.
I guess I should have given some context up front. I'm not talking about setting up a new network here. I really just want to know what the max number is. In other words, at what number is an existing connection to a device dropped in order to make a connection to a new device (or the new connection disallowed).
The reason I ask is because I have some LIFX bulbs that occasionally lose connection which is annoying. The LIFX support pages mention that wireless routers often have a hard limit on the number of wireless connected devices. I am wondering if I am running into this limit with the rt-n66u. I typically have 25 devices on my network - around 15 wireless and 10 wired.
I'd say something like 255 might be the hard-limit. Regardless of the number of clients you could possibly overload the RT-N66U by saturating the WiFi bandwidth or packet-per-second processing capabilities.
NAT table size starts to become a problem many times before one runs out of addresses inside a netblock.
32 to 50 clients is not an unreasonable number for a BHR..
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