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Forum Discussion
slash1981
Aug 30, 2017Tutor
R7000 issue with WAN speeds
Disclaimer: both of my R7000s are more than 2yo so they are not under warranty. Preambule: I had Comcast 100/20. Switched to WoW 500/50. I have two R7000. RouterA acts as a router (DHCP/ACL and s...
- Aug 30, 2017This is a known issue. AP mode disables hardware acceleration between the WAN and LAN ports. The workaround is to connect the R7000 to the network via one of its LAN ports. IOW, leave the WAN port disconnected. Note: You will lose the ability to log into the router's setup pages. Move the cable back to the WAN port for maintenance. Alternatively, disable AP mode and disable the DHCP server. Assign a sensible, unused IP address in the subnet. Then connect via the LAN port.
Chins
Aug 30, 2017Aspirant
Seems like you are experiencing a similar issue to what I am seeing on the R9000, in that WAN to LAN routing is causing a reduction in bandwidth. In my situation if I connect directly to the modem then my download speed is roughly 960Mbs, but if I connect via the R9000 then I can only see around 820Mbs.I dont have any answers but you are not alone. I am thinking of trying dd-wrt to see if this is a firmware thing or a hardware thing.
slash1981
Aug 30, 2017Tutor
Chins wrote:Seems like you are experiencing a similar issue to what I am seeing on the R9000, in that WAN to LAN routing is causing a reduction in bandwidth. In my situation if I connect directly to the modem then my download speed is roughly 960Mbs, but if I connect via the R9000 then I can only see around 820Mbs.I dont have any answers but you are not alone. I am thinking of trying dd-wrt to see if this is a firmware thing or a hardware thing.
Amen to that, brother. I'm considering two options at the moment:
1. Resetting my routers to factory defaults (hard reset)
2. Going down the rabbit hole with DD-WRT...