I need a wireless router that pairs nicely with an Intel AX200 Wi-Fi 6 wireless card. Dual stream (2x2) and dual band are sufficient.
This is for Europe, where you have two choices for placing the 160MHz wide channel, either at channels 36-64 (power limit 23dBm (200mW)) or channels 100-128 (power limit 30dBm (1000mW)).
Ideally I'd like to have the router to work like this: I configure the router to transmit the 5GHz Wi-Fi signal on channels 100-128. In case of a radar signal detection on those channels the router should temporarily switch to channels 36-64 and, once the regulatory waiting times have passed and the channel range 100-128 has been successfully re-checked for being free of radar activity, the router should switch back to my preferred channels 100-128.
While this sounds straightforward, it is apparently not so easy to implement for the manufacturers.
My problem is that router manufacturers don't tell you how they have implemented DFS and also product reviewers on the internet never go into detail how well a particular router's DFS works. So, as far as DFS is concerned, one ends up buying a pig in a poke.
I have already invested in two different Wi-Fi 6 160MHz AX3000-class routers, but both have let me down.
This is for Europe, where you have two choices for placing the 160MHz wide channel, either at channels 36-64 (power limit 23dBm (200mW)) or channels 100-128 (power limit 30dBm (1000mW)).
Ideally I'd like to have the router to work like this: I configure the router to transmit the 5GHz Wi-Fi signal on channels 100-128. In case of a radar signal detection on those channels the router should temporarily switch to channels 36-64 and, once the regulatory waiting times have passed and the channel range 100-128 has been successfully re-checked for being free of radar activity, the router should switch back to my preferred channels 100-128.
While this sounds straightforward, it is apparently not so easy to implement for the manufacturers.
My problem is that router manufacturers don't tell you how they have implemented DFS and also product reviewers on the internet never go into detail how well a particular router's DFS works. So, as far as DFS is concerned, one ends up buying a pig in a poke.
I have already invested in two different Wi-Fi 6 160MHz AX3000-class routers, but both have let me down.