Yes.It is default by default on ASUS routers and I also noticed many members here don't enable it. What is the benefit of it anyway? Does it give any extra speed
Because to have 160 MHz of contiguous frequency on the 5 GHz band, you need access to the DFS channels, which aren't available in every countries, which can take over a minute to become available, and also can be problematic if you live in area where there are other services using the same frequencies. 80 MHz is far more reliable.why is it disabled by default?
I have the same question. Thanks for your explaination, very clear!Yes.
Because to have 160 MHz of contiguous frequency on the 5 GHz band, you need access to the DFS channels, which aren't available in every countries, which can take over a minute to become available, and also can be problematic if you live in area where there are other services using the same frequencies. 80 MHz is far more reliable.
As Merlin said above, you’re likely to hit the DFS channels and reduce your reliability. But what’s the use case, where you’ll use that much bandwidth for any sustained period of time that would offset the lower reliability?Any disadvantages of enabling 160hz? i too scared to mess up my network is keeping it off just for compatibility reasons as i have few wifi 6 clients
On my Alienware m15 R7, it came with a MediaTek MT7921 Wireless card which was randomly disconnecting all the time so I bought an Intel AX211 from Amazon. When I installed it, it didn't appear in the device manager so I contacted the reseller and he told me that the Intel AX211 needs a CNVio2 compatible slot so he advised me to get the Intel AX210 instead which I did and that worked fine. So I thought that my laptop isn't compatible with this CNVio2 spec.160 gets me 1.5gbps with an AX411 card and an AP with a 2.5ge port.
Thanks for saving me the hassle of buying it and returning it. MediaTek MT7921 actually gave me slightly faster WiFi speeds (800mbps vs 720 Mbps on the Intel AX210), the problem with them as also reported by numerous people on the web is the frequent disconnection. Like I have my Lightech Anywhere MX3 mouse connected via Bluetooth and sometimes it works the whole day and sometimes, it would randomly turn off Bluetooth on/off the whole time until I reboot. While being in the middle of work this bothers the heck out of me to the point where I got so sick of it and just replaced it with the Intel AX210 and now not one disconnection. I've tried diff. drivers as well but Mediatek cards are just flawed and left sour taste in my mouth.@Spartan
Intel x11 cards need cnviX
x10 cards are fully compatible with most machines because they have all of the parts to operate independent of the CPU and even work in AMD machines.
I tested the mtk cards and wasn't impressed by them in comparison.
Now iirc 10 or 11 gen Intel has cnvi version 1 and may work with the ax201/211 cards. If yours didn't then I would rule out the 411 working as well.
Yes I've seen 10s of threads with issues for MediaTek, most if not all laptops that have an AMD CPU rather than an Intel have a MedaiTek Wireless card in them instead of Intel (my laptop is an Alienware m15 R7 AMD variant). Upgrading it to an Intel AX210 was the best 35 USD upgrade!Mediatek cards are notoriously atrocious (for some!).
Intel may not be the fastest, but it is the most stable and reliable one in my experience too.
Very good question. My last AMD computer was back in 2000 when the AMD Athlon was released offering similar performance to the Intel Pentium III CPUs at a much more affordable price. Since then, AMD has dominated by Intel for 2 decades.I have a few AMD systems (current) and older Intel laptops too, the newer AMD systems feel very molasses-like to me, particularly on battery power (and regardless of where the power settings are set to). This is true not just of WiFi usage, but general usage of the systems too.
Does your AMD variant offer better gaming performance for you? What were your reasons for purchasing it over the comparable (seems 'better'?) Intel model?
I've thought about AMD in the desktop side for some niche use cases but, the sticker price is a bit much for something like pcie bifurcation to just play with compared to Intel. The first PC I buot was amd back in the athlon days and it worked well. If I were to go AMD now though it wouldn't be Ryzen but more of a server CPU with higher core/thread count.But to me, those benefits are negated by that much sluggish performance.
Thanks for saving me the hassle of buying it and returning it. MediaTek MT7921 actually gave me slightly faster WiFi speeds (800mbps vs 720 Mbps on the Intel AX210), the problem with them as also reported by numerous people on the web is the frequent disconnection.
So putting 160mhz clients in a product is kind of redundant.
Should also note that 160MHz channels - it's 3 dB reciprocal hit on the link budget for Tx/Rx compared to 80MHz - so close in it might be fine, but put some distance on things, and it will fall off faster...
Should also note that 160MHz channels - it's 3 dB reciprocal hit on the link budget for Tx/Rx compared to 80MHz - so close in it might be fine, but put some distance on things, and it will fall off faster...
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