It’s unlikely you would notice any improvement under normal usage unless you specifically tested for it.
Indeed. I keep Beamforming Enabled, but MU-MIMO Disabled. I have 8 clients with MUBF support on my network and the only MU-MIMO effect I notice is cutting down the link rates from 866Mbps to 433Mbps when MU-MIMO is trying to do something. With MU-MIMO enabled and 2x concurrent transfers from my NAS the graph looks like hills and valleys. With MU-MIMO disabled both transfers have almost flat graph. Most of the time the transfers finish faster when MU-MIMO is disabled. Also, I have 4x access points and they serve multiple clients at the same time anyway. Folks with wired AiMesh also don't really need MU-MIMO enabled. Multiple radios do the job better, even using the same available bandwidth on the same channels.
are you sure beamforming is ok?
That is a known “feature” of Broadcom’s implementation.the only MU-MIMO effect I notice is cutting down the link rates from 866Mbps to 433Mbps when MU-MIMO is trying to do something.
That is a known “feature” of Broadcom’s implementation.
Two stream MU-MIMO is actually supported in the spec. But since MU-MIMO works with spatial streams, using 2 streams cuts the # of supported STAs in half.I see this on my Ruckus R610 access points, Qualcomm hardware. They have 3x3 radios. I don't think there is other way to do MU-MIMO.
I don't know if it can do 2 + 1 streams on a 3-stream radio. My clients are 2-stream and if the link rate doesn't change, I don't know if it uses MU-MIMO or not. The fact is I see no difference in total throughput whatsoever. If there is a difference, it's not easily measurable.
Not under typical conditions, I.e. channel nowhere near capacity
That is a known “feature” of Broadcom’s implementation.
I'll double check with someone who has done more recent testing.I thought that was sorted on the 2nd Broadcom silicon...
Wanted to thank you for sharing this article which shed light on a feature I knew nothing about. And as you probably know the default ASWRT settings enable all these features. Now that I've disabled all of them along with all types of beam forming, I'm finding much better throughput and range with my AX-68U which has been rock solid since the day I purchased it. I'm grateful for the education. BlessingsDelays, missteps and over-aggressive marketing have made this once promising technology something you can live without.
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