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Forum Discussion
Sandshark
Jul 31, 2021Sensei - Experienced User
Nighthawk EAX20 Extender set up -- but doesn't recognize it is
I got tired of a dead spot in my home addition and added an EAX20 extender to fix that. Setting it up via the app worked as expected, until the last step. In fact, it clearly is set up, but the app...
plemans
Aug 01, 2021Guru - Experienced User
Is there a reason you're skipping setting up the 2.4ghz?
Have you tried using a pc/laptop for setup? (I'm not a fan of the app setup process)
Sandshark
Aug 01, 2021Sensei - Experienced User
I am skipping the 2.4 GHz because it's got my security cameras on it and I don't need anything else on it when 5GHz is mostly unused and everything that needs WiFi in the area the extender will service is 5GHz capable. The unit came with no instructions for setting it up via anything other than the app.
- plemansAug 01, 2021Guru - Experienced User
Sandshark wrote:I am skipping the 2.4 GHz because it's got my security cameras on it and I don't need anything else on i-----Never know if it'll help or not. If you set it up with the mesh options (onessid) your security cameras might stay connected to the router or the extender depending on their roaming protocol. I've been pleasantly surprised when my 2.4ghz worked better with an extender running. It when 5GHz is mostly unused and everything that needs WiFi in the area the extender will service is 5GHz capable. If you've got the capability, spreading devices around (even security cameras) has usually been beneficial to my network. The unit came with no instructions for setting it up via anything other than the app.----I wish Netgear did a better job of showing the other installation methods. It seems like everytime the app gets updated to fix an issue, it breaks something else. That's why I prefer using the installation assistant. The other half the time, people use WPS and you see ISP supplied devices not coded properly so the extenders not functioning properly.
here's a video on using the assistant.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJVklshxBMk
And the support site with the manual that goes over it.
https://www.netgear.com/support/product/eax20.aspx
Let me know how the EAX20 works for you. I've got the EX8000 and love the dedicated backhaul. I haven't used any of the EAX line of extenders to see how they compare to the tribands.
- SandsharkAug 02, 2021Sensei - Experienced User
Thanks for the pointer to the manual. I suppose I should have looked for one first, but I still would have had questions.
The instructions for using the web interface for set-up included having to connect to SSID NETGEAR_EXT, which was no longer active. But I just guessed that I could use http://<extender’s IP address>, as suggested for Android devices and do so via Ethernet (on my home network, not directly connected to it). It went well until it said I had to connect to the device via WiFi. I checked my main router, and the IP address for the extender had changed, in fact it had three (at least three reserved, some my be waiting to expire), and I tried them until I found the right one. So it was not necessary to be on WiFi at all, though you do have to jump through hoops in uncharted territory to do so. I now have a device that knows it's set up, and I've moved forward with a firmware update, turning off the 2.4GHz, etc. It was a royal PITA to get past the extended warranty offer and such, but I've done it.
It did actually duplicate my 5GHz SSID on 2.4GHz, where my 2.4GHz normally has a separate one. I don't know if that has anything to do with the issue I forst saw, but it might. I was actually mistaken that the 2.4GHz LED was the one that was off -- it was the Ethernet LED. You would think that Netgear would reailize that if you choose to not connect to a 2.4GHz network that the default should be that the unit operates on 5HGz only.
As for your suggestions on my network configuration, you obviously have a main router that is mesh capable. Mine is not, so the extender works in a different manner, basically doubling the bandwidth necessary for anything that goes through the extender. Moving things that currently work perfectly well without the extender to it just doesn't make sense. If I could disable connection to my main router via 2.4GHz but still leave 2.4GHz on, I assume that would shift the burden of 2.4GHz devices connected to the extender to 5GHz on the main router, which could be nice.
- plemansAug 02, 2021Guru - Experienced User
Single/dual band extenders by their very nature do cut throughput in half and increase latency.
For most security camera's this shouldn't be much of an issue as there's usually already a lag/decrease FPS.
I've never used that specific extender (or any of the EAX extenders) so I'm not sure if disabling the 2.4ghz connection to the router just puts the backhaul burden on the 5ghz or not. That'd actually be better in my optinion as the 5ghz has more capability/bandwidth to tolerate the speed impact. DarrenM or Christian_R might be a better resource in terms of the capabilities of the EAX line and how it impacts it.
Sadly, I'm one of the few who help on the extenders forums :)