Thank you Tim. I am a new member, and I love to see these more scientific tests to assess hardware performance.So no comments on the article from the peanut gallery? No one want to comment on how poorly the AC88U did?
None that I know of. The reason you see a difference in the "Tri-band" routers is one of the 5 GHz radios shares external dual-band antennas and the other has its own internal 5 GHz antennas.That said are there any advantages to the lower or higher channels now that they transmit the same power levels ?
I checked all sites for new firmware before testing.Still, will you be able to retest the AC88U with the new firmware (your test seems to be running with an older one)?
No. MU-MIMO enables higher total throughput use for multiple devices for AP/router transmit only. It does this by letting up to three devices share the same transmit slot air time.One question I do have is could MU-MIMO have any benefit if used in a wireless bridge?
So no comments on the article from the peanut gallery? No one want to comment on how poorly the AC88U did?
I checked all sites for new firmware before testing.
The RT-AC5300 and AC88U will have full reviews.
So no comments on the article from the peanut gallery? No one want to comment on how poorly the AC88U did?
None that I know of. The reason you see a difference in the "Tri-band" routers is one of the 5 GHz radios shares external dual-band antennas and the other has its own internal 5 GHz antennas.
In theory, wouldn't lower frequencies have better range? (like 2.4Ghz vs 5Ghz)
teaming is useless on consumer routers because the switch chip only has 1Gb/s links to other components (wifi, CPU, etc).
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