NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
dyna962007
Sep 17, 2016Tutor
PLW 1000. How do I choose for it to use 5g instead of the 2.4. How do I shut off the wifi
The specs say its compatible with 2.4 and 5g. How do I make sure its using the 5g mode. Coming out of my router, its connected via ethernet obviouisly. My router is 2.4 and 5g capable tri band. Also...
dyna962007
Sep 18, 2016Tutor
Here is the point and the question more carefully put.
I am VERY familiar with this technology.
The unit is suppoed to operate on the 2.4 and 5 gig bands, not all extenders do this.
This unit is both and extender AND a powerline device.
As it relats to the extender part. When a signal is fed to it via ethernet cable from the router, it then
transmits that hard wire signal over your wiring system and is intersecpted at some other recepticle
with little loss in signal supposedly.
Now, it then transmits that signal via WIF on both 2.4 and 5gig bands as an extender of types. This is different
from a conventional extender which pulls the signal from the air (wi-fi) and then amplifies and it and rebroadcasts it.
This netgear unit takes the hardwire signal from the wirign system, and rebroadcasts that signal AND also allows
for access to the signal via an ethernet connection much like a conventionly extender does.
So the point is, this is a unique type of powerline adapter AND extender built into one.
The one thing that it does NOT do, is receive WIFI and rebrocast the WIFI as do most typcial extenders.
So when it says it transmits over the 2.4/5g bands, that signal is only as good as it what it takes from the wiring system and
sends out via WIFI.
There is very little in the way of specs, no bandwith info, data rate info.
Try to compare how well this unit works compared lets say with a dual band router is hard to get a grip on with no data to compare.
Now when I ask the question, HOW DO I turn OFF the WIFI. here is why I asked, I want to use the wired feature of this like a typcial powerline converter but do NOT want to use the WIFI. So I reasoned that if I dedicated the full signal its getting from the wiring system, to the ethernet output port, and it was NOT sharing signal with brodcasting 2.4/5g WIFI, it would be better, thus the question, how do I turn that part off?
dyna962007
Sep 18, 2016Tutor
Everything I said up to that point is NOT irrelevant for all of the people who buy it to use it in WIFI mode.
BUT, to be even more clear, yes, yes, I am trying to figure out how to disable or turn off the WIFI feature of the POWERLINE adapter itself and ONLY use its wired ethernet port. There is nothing I can find in the utility or manual on how to do this
- michaelkenwardSep 19, 2016Guru - Experienced User
Looking at the powerline utility, there is no option to turn off wifi.
I guess that Netgear assumes that people who buy a wifi Powerline device want to use wifi, and people who don't want wifi buy a LAN-only powerline device.
In any case, I suspect that you are barking up the wrong tree as your understanding of how things work may be a bit wonky.
Take this bit:
I reasoned that if I dedicated the full signal its getting from the wiring system, to the ethernet output port, and it was NOT sharing signal with brodcasting 2.4/5g WIFI, it would be better
It makes no sense. LAN is digital technology, there is no "signal strength" to worry about.
Having the wifi turned on will not, as you put it earlier, "drag down the signal" on the ethernet (LAN).
Don't worry about theoretical scenarios. Just leave the wifi turned on and see how things work. It might even come in useful.