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Forum Discussion
dctheobald
Jan 28, 2018Tutor
Orbi Satellite dropping connection to VOIP
I have the RBR50 router and 2 RBS50 satellites - each device is on a separate floor of my 3 story house. They are close enough in proximity with each other as they do not show issues in the Orbi con...
dctheobald
Jan 29, 2018Tutor
For your Ooma, was it ethernet cabled into the router? I'm curious why the device would be impacted by wifi signal if it's cabled in? I switched satellites and still had the Avaya reboot mid-call...so it doesn't seem to be a particular satellite acting poorly....
SBell
Jan 29, 2018Guide
Yes, it was Ethernet cabled to the router. I never would have expected it was the issue since it was hardwired, but after I finally broke down and called Ooma support, it was one of the first things they asked about so they obviously knew it was an issue. Probably just poor shielding of the electronics in the Ooma box.
I’m not saying that’s the case with yours, but it’s an easy thing to check and rule out. But the Orbi is such a mess, it’s probably something you’re going to spend weeks troubleshooting and never get an answer. I’m having tons of internet and network drop outs with my RBK50 and 2 Satellites. Some 2.4 GHz devices won’t connect at all, streaming drops, etc. etc. The amount of time I’ve wasted trying fix various issues with this thing is ridiculous. So far the Orbi has been nothing but problems. They should really either get their firmware sorted out finally, or offer people refunds. Sorry my advice turned into an anti Orbi rant!
- dctheobaldJan 30, 2018Tutor
I've played around with some of the WAN settings tonight to turn off SIP ALG to see if this helps....
- dctheobaldJan 30, 2018Tutor
After turning off SIP ALB (under WAN settings) and Backhaul Daisy Chain Topology (under Advanced Setup>Wireless settings) it seems the satellite isn't dropping my wired in VOIP, but the voice quality is still pretty choppy. Was hoping there was a QoS control settings but nothing seems to work in the hidden /QOS_main.htm page....
- t_kFeb 08, 2018Luminary
I know your issue is specific to VOIP, but I believe I know what you're running into. I believe it's likely that what you're seeing is the various WDS (backhaul) issues that show up with the Orbi's. Especially with devices that are "chatty".
If I'm right, and what would be hard to prove unless you can make your VOIP device use a different MAC, there is nothing you can do about it. Here's my related post. Hopefully it saves you some time.
- dctheobaldFeb 08, 2018Tutor
Thanks for sharing, your summary is pretty helpful! I narrowed my issue down to the backhaul stability as well and found it wasn't just the VOIP but any high-bandwidth device like my Lifesize Video screen as well....i've decided to give the ethernet daisy chaining option a try but need to get an electrician out my office to install some cabling to try it due to the locations of my router and satellites. This is more work than i was hoping from this expensive system....
- t_kFeb 08, 2018Luminary
dctheobald - Since you mentioned wiring your office, I have more bad news! A few weeks ago I finally broke down and paid to have my home wired (which cost thousands of dollars). There are three people that work from my home frequently. After a year of being interrupted to look at the Orbi's multiple times almost every day, I finally caved and spent the money.
I know for certain that the ethernet backaul feature of the Orbi's, at least as of firmware version 2.1.2.18, is too unstable to use. There is no way to force the Orbi to use either the ethernet or wireless backhaul, and the system will not consistently stay on one or the other. The net effect is that you can end up with both the original stability issues (if an Orbi decides to use a wireless backhaul for whatever reason), or deal with a broadcast loop caused by a multi-path issue (both a wired and wireless path to a MAC address), or deal with random "cut outs" for all devices as the Orbi changes from using an ethernet vs wireless backhaul.
Also, even if the Orbi's stayed on the ethernet backhaul for the day, I still ended up having to restart one of them nearly every day.
Since I had paid to wire my home anyway, I spent $650 more and just bought a Unifi 5 pack. Litterally, 0 issues since then and it's been several weeks. No drops, no pauses, no complaints, it just works. I'm even able to do proper channel organization, though that's just a bonus. Interference was never the problems with the Orbi's. For reference, I have between 6-10 devices using traffic all day, and 20-30 devices using traffic intermittiedly.
If you're paying to wire the place, just get a more professional product (like Unifi's or, really, anything else).