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enzovinc's avatar
enzovinc
Follower
Dec 12, 2023

I don't understand why a simple fritz.box router can have different ssid

Hi, just adding my reply here because I don't understand why a simple fritz.box router can have different ssid for the 2 frequencies and my more expensive Netgear Mesh setup cannot. I see this being requested for ages and Netgear not giving a damn 😕

4 Replies

  • I believe NG intended never to make separate networks for Orbi AC series. NG I believe has moved to EoL the AC series for Orbi and has driven towards AX and AXE systems. The Orbi AC series is going on up there in age and development isn't in NGs road plan for it any more. NG has implemented a IoT separate network features on there 7, 8 and 9 series systems as of this year. So users can get there 2.4Ghz specific IoT devices connected to a Orbi AX or AXE system. 

     

    If you still want some support for Orbi 50 series, check out Voxels FW for Orbi 50 series. He may support separate SSID networks with his FW. https://community.netgear.com/t5/Orbi/Voxels-FW-available-for-50-series-Orbi-only-available/m-p/1883615

     

    Good Luck.

    • schumaku's avatar
      schumaku
      Guru

      FURRYe38 wrote:

      NG has implemented a IoT separate network features on there 7, 8 and 9 series systems as of this year. So users can get there 2.4Ghz specific IoT devices connected to a Orbi AX or AXE system. 


      Just an additional IoT SSID, selectable band (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz, 2.4 GHz only, 5 GHz only for the IoT), and individual security (WPA2-PSK [AES], WPA-PSK [TKIP] + WPA2-PSK [AES] for IoT; WPA2-PSK [AES], WPA2-PSK [TKIP] + WPA3-Personal [SAE], and WPA3-Personal [SAE] for Guest) - no segregation, no separate network, no VLANs, one single network - same IP subnet, same broadcast domain, same DHCP, no L2 isolation - just multiple SSID entry points for the normal LAN, for IoT, for Guest. That much about the "separate" network features few users made a lot of noise about. And why? Just because some IoT vendors implemented ******, including Apps which error-out if they are not able to discover their IoT if they find the mobile device is not connected to a 2.4 GHz radio band - despite everything is on the very same network, the same broadcast and multicast domain - and no mobile client out there which does allow to select the band where they hope these wonderful IoT are. Not sure I should laugh or cry. Last but not lest: Many older AP designs have not allowed the same SSID on multiple radios, this is why the compromise of making SSID_24G and SSID_5G came from - this was never a requirement by the standards or a nice idea to allow connections selected by band. 

      • FURRYe38's avatar
        FURRYe38
        Guru

        Something some of us already know. 


        Thanks though. Hopefully helps the poster understand.