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Forum Discussion
Rogelio1
Nov 29, 2024Apprentice
Identify which clients are WPA3 vs. WPA2
As far as I can tell, there's no way within "attached devices" (the panel that shows all clients) to see in a mixed WPA3 + WPA2 setup which clients are connected to which -- is this correct? I'd lik...
CrimpOn
Nov 30, 2024Guru - Experienced User
Correct. The Orbi system does not provide information about which authentication method was used for each WiFi device. The solution described will provide the desired information in a relatively short time.
It is not clear (to me) what benefit will be derived from restricting the primary WiFi connection to WPA3 while allowing the IoT network to accept WPA2. The Orbi system places devices in the primary network (wired and WiFi) and the IoT network (WiFi only) into the same IP subnet. Devices gain no additional capabilities by joining the primary network over the capabilities they have when joining the IoT network.
I would expect that nearly all of the devices connecting at 2.4G will not support WPA3.
Rogelio1
Nov 30, 2024Apprentice
My goal was to designate the iot network as strictly wpa2 at 2.4ghz and normal one at 5ghz only wpa3. Hoping this might resolve issues I have with traversing the house and getting stuck off WiFi for far too long before handing off and sitting in some spots where it just cycles on and off WiFi on my iphone despite being 30 feet from a satellite . I’ve tried every other option like reduced power, changing channels, moving satellites, 20/40 coexistence, rts threshold, etc.