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Forum Discussion
alokeprasad
Oct 05, 2018Mentor
Does the R9000 have the "tri band frature that R8000 does?
Does the R9000 (X10) have the following (taken from R9000 user manual...)
"
Tri-band WiFi delivers 3.2 Gbps combined WiFi speeds through three dedicated WiFi
bands—a 2.4 GHz band, plus two 5 GH...
- Oct 05, 2018
alokeprasad wrote:
schumaku wrote:
The R9000 has "true" triband with 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 60 GHz - but different from the R8000 it has only one 5 GHz radio.
Doesn't R9000's tiband require devices w 60Ghz support (very few, if any)?
Of course, there are not (and have never been) many 802.3ad 60 GHz clients available - for other users without such clients it's a dead horse.
alokeprasad wrote:
schumaku wrote:
The R9000 has "true" triband with 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 60 GHz - but different from the R8000 it has only one 5 GHz radio.
While R8000 can work with just 2.4 and 5 GHz devices?
Yes, the R8000 can operarate two 5 GHz radio access points, plus one 2.4 GHz, concurrently, on dedicated bands. Thus they use the marketing term tri-band.
alokeprasad wrote:
schumaku wrote:
The R9000 has "true" triband with 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 60 GHz - but different from the R8000 it has only one 5 GHz radio.
I don't know enough about 802.11xyz and triband .. so, just asking here. Whats a good web site to read up on to learn about this "tri-band" thing?
As mentioned above. tri-band is not a 802.11xyz thing - it's a marketing term for devices with three individual radio interfaces. As such there are no "tri-band" WiFi clients.
schumaku
Oct 05, 2018Guru - Experienced User
The R9000 has "true" triband with 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 60 GHz - but different from the R8000 it has only one 5 GHz radio. The same applies to the Nighthawk Pro Gaming XR700 by the way.
alokeprasad
Oct 05, 2018Mentor
schumaku wrote:
The R9000 has "true" triband with 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 60 GHz - but different from the R8000 it has only one 5 GHz radio.
Doesn't R9000's tiband require devices w 60Ghz support (very few, if any)? While R8000 can work with just 2.4 and 5 GHz devices?
I don't know enough about 802.11xyz and triband .. so, just asking here. Whats a good web site to read up on to learn about this "tri-band" thing?
- schumakuOct 05, 2018Guru - Experienced User
alokeprasad wrote:
schumaku wrote:
The R9000 has "true" triband with 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 60 GHz - but different from the R8000 it has only one 5 GHz radio.
Doesn't R9000's tiband require devices w 60Ghz support (very few, if any)?
Of course, there are not (and have never been) many 802.3ad 60 GHz clients available - for other users without such clients it's a dead horse.
alokeprasad wrote:
schumaku wrote:
The R9000 has "true" triband with 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 60 GHz - but different from the R8000 it has only one 5 GHz radio.
While R8000 can work with just 2.4 and 5 GHz devices?
Yes, the R8000 can operarate two 5 GHz radio access points, plus one 2.4 GHz, concurrently, on dedicated bands. Thus they use the marketing term tri-band.
alokeprasad wrote:
schumaku wrote:
The R9000 has "true" triband with 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 60 GHz - but different from the R8000 it has only one 5 GHz radio.
I don't know enough about 802.11xyz and triband .. so, just asking here. Whats a good web site to read up on to learn about this "tri-band" thing?
As mentioned above. tri-band is not a 802.11xyz thing - it's a marketing term for devices with three individual radio interfaces. As such there are no "tri-band" WiFi clients.
- alokeprasadOct 05, 2018Mentor
So, for someone with a few older 802.11n 2.4 Ghz devices, and many 802.11ac 5 Ghz devices, are they better off using R8000 that has 3 usable bands vs R9000 that has only 2 usable bands (for that user)?
- schumakuOct 05, 2018Guru - Experienced User
If considering one centrally located router with Wireless AP, permitting the building (materials, range) does allow 5 GHz coverage from a single point - yes.
However, for larger apartments or a houses this won't be possible - whatever marketing want to promise. This is where systems like Orbi/Orbi Pro or Insight managed switches and access points come into the play. And the willingness to install network cables - unbeatable for performance and connection quality. Saying that, just leaving now to throw in a bunch of CAT6A cables at a site to replace Powerline (which is causing isues on the DSL...).