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Forum Discussion
CordThomas
Dec 29, 2018Tutor
Poor range between router and satellite - RBR50
I have an older house, circa 1950 with plaster walls. I have the RBR50 near the middle of our house. I am trying to setup the RSR50 satellite on the far side of one wall about 25 feet from the rout...
- Dec 29, 2018
CordThomas wrote:
The status of the satellite is Good.
What tool would you recommend for a WiFi scan? I have Mac and iPhone. On the iPhone I have installed a few WiFi tools but none seem to give me a neighborhood scan.
My Mac's WiFi lists only about 6 other networks it can see. I live in a residential neighborhood without too many people living that close by.
Since you have a Mac you can use the native wifi analyser in MacOS as follows:
- Press Option key + Click on the Wi-Fi menu item in OS X
- Choose “Open Wireless Diagnostics”
- Go to the “Window” menu and choose “Scan” to immediately open the Wi-Fi Stumbler tool built into Mac OS X
- Within the Scanner tool, click on the Scan button to scan for available networks
- This will open the wireless card to detect all possible nearby wifi networks, effectively stumbling onto available wireless routers and discovering details about those networks.
FURRYe38
Dec 29, 2018Guru - Experienced User
What FW is currently loaded?
What is the Mfr and model# of the ISP modem the NG router is connected too?
Is the Orbi system operating in Router or AP mode?
What is the size of your home? Sq Ft?
What is the distance between the router and satellite(s)? 30 feet is recommended in between them to begin with depending upon building materials.
What channels are you using? Auto? Try setting manual channel 1, 6 or 11 on 2.4Ghz and any unused channel on 5Ghz.
Any Wifi Neighbors near by? If so, how many?
What WPA security modes are you using?
Try disabling the following and see:
MIMO, Daisy Chain, Fast Roaming, IPv6 and Set 20/40Mhz Coexistence to 40Mhz only. Save settings and reboot the router and satellite(s).
Disney Circle: https://community.netgear.com/t5/Orbi/WARNING-Firmware-2-2-1-210-is-junk/m-p/1667485/highlight/true#M45926
If you updated to recent FW v.210, try enabling Daisy Chain. Some have mentioned that this seems to be working in reverse order, enabling means disabled actually.
CordThomas
Dec 29, 2018Tutor
Turning off daisy chain made a dramatic improvement to throughput. With enabled, i was getting ~40 Mbps on devices connected to the satellite. With disabled, I am getting 500-600 Mbps...
- ekhalilDec 29, 2018Master
CordThomas wrote:
Turning off daisy chain made a dramatic improvement to throughput. With enabled, i was getting ~40 Mbps on devices connected to the satellite. With disabled, I am getting 500-600 Mbps...
So what is the status of the Satellite connection now as you see it in the GUI? Do you have a Good connection?
I think all you need to do now is to select the correct radio channels. Please make a wifi scan and see what channels are being used and choose the 2.4 and 5 GHz channels that are not or least used. This is for the client networks.
Unfortunately, for the backhaul networks you will not be able to select the channels but you can see in the wifi scan if the channel that you use is also being used by neighboring networks.
- CordThomasDec 29, 2018Tutor
The status of the satellite is Good.
What tool would you recommend for a WiFi scan? I have Mac and iPhone. On the iPhone I have installed a few WiFi tools but none seem to give me a neighborhood scan.
My Mac's WiFi lists only about 6 other networks it can see. I live in a residential neighborhood without too many people living that close by.
- ekhalilDec 29, 2018Master
CordThomas wrote:
The status of the satellite is Good.
What tool would you recommend for a WiFi scan? I have Mac and iPhone. On the iPhone I have installed a few WiFi tools but none seem to give me a neighborhood scan.
My Mac's WiFi lists only about 6 other networks it can see. I live in a residential neighborhood without too many people living that close by.
Since you have a Mac you can use the native wifi analyser in MacOS as follows:
- Press Option key + Click on the Wi-Fi menu item in OS X
- Choose “Open Wireless Diagnostics”
- Go to the “Window” menu and choose “Scan” to immediately open the Wi-Fi Stumbler tool built into Mac OS X
- Within the Scanner tool, click on the Scan button to scan for available networks
- This will open the wireless card to detect all possible nearby wifi networks, effectively stumbling onto available wireless routers and discovering details about those networks.
- FURRYe38Dec 29, 2018Guru - Experienced User
When you disabled Daisy Chain, is the check mark removed from the box or check in the box?
CordThomas wrote:
Turning off daisy chain made a dramatic improvement to throughput. With enabled, i was getting ~40 Mbps on devices connected to the satellite. With disabled, I am getting 500-600 Mbps...
- CordThomasDec 29, 2018Tutor
The checkbox is unchecked which I believe to be disabled. Since it is enabled by default (what i read online at least), it was checked to begin with and I unchecked it. I did see someone mention that with the latest firmware it might be reversed but that's not what it appears to be for me.