06-14-2019 05:31 PM
03-17-2021 12:47 PM
Hi,
Good idea.
You know how Mac’s can basically bridge their connections, so if they have wifi on and are plugged into ethernet, they use both.
Do you think the same can be true of wifi? if i have a laptop that supports 2.4 and 5ghz, that they could be using both at the same time?
I do think the issue is Windows default wifi drivers, and now knowing that a Windows Update can put their default drivers back makes this suck more. Because we will always be going back to that laptop when we find that it is connected to an AP thats a lot further away than one that may be in the same room as them (that was the initial giveaway when we first installed these AP’s).
J
03-11-2021 06:05 PM
Hello,
a easy test can be to create a new test SSID and use only 5GHz for that SSID if the client can see the SSID you know the client supports 5 GHz.
03-11-2021 01:22 PM
I cant say with 100% certainty that the laptop does, but in most cases, these are band new/latest laptops (brands from ASUS, Dell, HP, etc). Thanks, J.
03-11-2021 12:56 PM
Hi,
thanks for the reply.
We were having a heck of a time with 2.4, due to massive interference, and so i changed wifi0 to 5ghz, and only the outdoor AP1130’s have that running (irrigation system needs that and connects over its systems antenna).
Also, that makes sense to me that MS updates changes the NIC driver back to a MS default driver, as we have had a couple of Window PC start to have that same issue, knowing we removed the default driver and installed the latest manufacturers driver. Thanks for letting me know that.
That sucks, so potentially any Windows Update could set the NIC driver backwards, and cause the issue all over again, as we have seen here.
J
03-10-2021 09:41 PM
In addition to the good idea from dpanev. Are you sure the AP650 uses the same frequncy band (2.4/5) as the Laptop?
And yes some MS updates change drivers.