I have the same problem.The issue I'm facing is that no matter what I do, I can't get more than ~300/300Mbps on my wireless.
yes, but it does not matter since we are talking about the speed in the radio channel.Did you use LocalForwarding
Ubiquiti or something better?I used to use one and in the end switched to another brand.
Systems like Aruba and Cambium you can forego cloud mgmt and set an ap in virtual mobility controller mode where a single ap acts as a master/main node that managed configs and can fail over to another ap in case of failure.Not great for big environments but we've put down these type of setups in 0-100 headcount places and they work pretty well.No, do not want cloud managed. Happy with capsman and controller running within routers, even controlling itself sometimes.
Do want reliable and good performance though.
Nah, I can get a better speed with my cap ac or hap ac2, a screenshot at the peak speed can't fool anyone, consistency is always a problem, try to run 10 speed test continuously and you will see, everyone here complain for a reason. Also, if you have a large number of clients you will find a bigger problem of it, home user will not use these devices and enterprise user will need for capacity. If you love MT, don't try to cover their problems, it will only result in a bad way, expose them will make them feel the pressure and work hard for a fix, this is the only way. We are waiting for your answer, MT.I am happy with mikrotik wireless products.
I understand that there are better products. but the value for money plus benefits is good
Speed is good
Price better
Ac2
Capsman work
Well that's a single Client download test with MikroTik's self made driver.Speed is good
.( you are getting ripped off in europe for this one)
TPLINK eap245
bpwl my friend, you simply do not know how to shop in Canada LOL..( you are getting ripped off in europe for this one)
I saw dramatic differences with Ruckus as well ...
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Amazing, do the same with hAP ac2 or any other Mikrotik device (Amazon.ca<->Amazon.de). " You are getting ripped off @anav in Canada for this one"
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Klembord-2.jpg
@anav
@ksuuk, most 2.4ghz is rated at 300Mpbs applying my 1/3 rule the best one should hope for is around 100Mbps one-way real world, any more fantastic, much less not good and your probably going through 1-2 walls for sure. The TPLINK gives me reasonable speeds based on the above and is stable!! (consistent)
@anav:
kkuuser, sounds like your 4GWan is about as good as 2.4ghz on the downside, but the TPLINK should improve your up speed.
Depends on what your provider gives you,............ ethernet cable from a modem? What do you get if attached directly to a PC.................
What router are you using?
They appear to make excellent outdoor products its just the indoor wifi home stuff that takes far too much work to optimize.@anav:
kkuuser, sounds like your 4GWan is about as good as 2.4ghz on the downside, but the TPLINK should improve your up speed.
Depends on what your provider gives you,............ ethernet cable from a modem? What do you get if attached directly to a PC.................
What router are you using?
I have unlimited 4G, so speed depends of the amount current users etc:
Huawei B818 > ethernet > Mikrotik > switch > PC = Huawei B818 > ethernet > PC speed.
Huawei B818 > ethernet > Mikrotik > 2,4Ghz > PC = max 20/20 (3 m from Mikrotik)
I have accepted the fact that Mikrotik is what it is and I'll keep it as a wired router only and add some AP for WiFi.
Why put in all the work to get inferior results?They appear to make excellent outdoor products its just the indoor wifi home stuff that takes far too much work to optimize.@anav:
kkuuser, sounds like your 4GWan is about as good as 2.4ghz on the downside, but the TPLINK should improve your up speed.
Depends on what your provider gives you,............ ethernet cable from a modem? What do you get if attached directly to a PC.................
What router are you using?
I have unlimited 4G, so speed depends of the amount current users etc:
Huawei B818 > ethernet > Mikrotik > switch > PC = Huawei B818 > ethernet > PC speed.
Huawei B818 > ethernet > Mikrotik > 2,4Ghz > PC = max 20/20 (3 m from Mikrotik)
I have accepted the fact that Mikrotik is what it is and I'll keep it as a wired router only and add some AP for WiFi.
After experimenting with the device, I found out that it works differently, depending on the frequency.I have the same problem.The issue I'm facing is that no matter what I do, I can't get more than ~300/300Mbps on my wireless.
RouterOS: 6.47.9
RouterBOARD: RBcAPGi-5acD2nD
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After experimenting with the device, I found out that it works differently, depending on the frequency.
5785:
5785.jpg
5180:
5180.jpg
Ridioether:
efir.PNG
Only changed the frequency, nothing more.... belive, or not :)
CLI:
interface wireless info country-list
interface wireless info country-info <region to check>
I'm sure it's a chipset or firmware issue. I have a few Samsung devices, an older 'higher end' tablet, a current Samsung phone and this cheap tier Samsung tablet, which is the newest device(but uses older tech). Only the new tablet has an issue.5700MHz is the max freq in many regions (and even 5700 is already special)! If your tablet is set to such a region/country it will not scan for other channels than allowed for the region.