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Forum Discussion
mattdeluca
Mar 28, 2022Guide
MK63 daisy chain and star network layout
Hello all, I'm having some connectivity issues with one of my satellites on MK63, although the light is blue, when I'm connected to this satellite, the speed is very slow, almost non-existent. When ...
- Mar 28, 2022
hardwired is the way to go if you have that option. with the dual band mesh systems it has to use the same network to communicate router---satellites as it does satellites---devices. That cause a significant speed reduction (around 50%). If you're hardwired in, you don't take that speed hit and your latency is lower. That's why the tribands with their dedicated wireless backhaul perform so much better than the dual band mesh systems. but hardwired, the dual bands perform pretty much the same.
plemans
Mar 28, 2022Guru - Experienced User
there used to be a setting so you could disable daisy chain and force star topology.
It was removed a while ago.
so you're kind of stuck with letting it auto-negotiate.
A few things you can try.
Change locations. Sometimes a lateral move can help as much as moving closer because things in the walls (think hvac, etc) can be blocking signals.
Also, try hardwiring a pc/laptop into the satellite for testing other locations. that way you know you're actually testing the backhaul versus the fronthaul.
I'd also advise trying to swap the satellite with other satellites to see if its actually a location issue or that specific satellite issue.
- mattdelucaMar 28, 2022Guide
Thanks for the reply plemans, I thought that may be the case, I have a couple of days off work coming up so I will swap the two satellites to see if it's a location issue or a satellite issue but I have a feeling it's got a weak backhaul to the other satellite instead going direct to the router which is located in between the two satellites. Worse case scenario I will hardwire it to the router as it's only about 15m give or take from the router.
Matt- plemansMar 28, 2022Guru - Experienced User
hardwired is the way to go if you have that option. with the dual band mesh systems it has to use the same network to communicate router---satellites as it does satellites---devices. That cause a significant speed reduction (around 50%). If you're hardwired in, you don't take that speed hit and your latency is lower. That's why the tribands with their dedicated wireless backhaul perform so much better than the dual band mesh systems. but hardwired, the dual bands perform pretty much the same.
- mattdelucaMar 28, 2022Guide
plemans yeah I think I will end up hardwiring as they are not very far apart at all. The rest of my house devices, TV's, game consoles, CCTV, etc. are all hardwired going to a central network switch in a cabinet. Another two wires won't hurt đ€Ł
Cheers