NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.

Forum Discussion

schilea's avatar
schilea
Aspirant
Nov 15, 2020

Channels selection for Extender EX7700 working as Access Point

Hi, I am having the next configuration:

- front entrance R7800 X4S. Not possible to move it centrally as I am having Cat5E cables between the entrance (via a niche in the wall) and each room. 

- Cat5E cable to the EX7700 upstairs

- EX7700 working as an access point, but same SSID as the router.

 

How to choose/select the channels for EX7700 for best performance and mesh network?

 

Option one, as it is now: same SSID, but different channels than R7800. Probably less interference, but I have noticed that this is not a true mesh as there are small drops when moving around the house.

or

Option two, as I am thinking next: same SSID, same channnels both on X4S R7800 and EX7700. This is the case for a true mesh network, but it is really working? Or there will be a lot of interferece in the network?

 

Also I noticed that Smart Connect it is not working properly so I am thinking on having 2 separate networks 2.4/5.

 

In the Netgear documentation there is nothing about setting the channels https://kb.netgear.com/000045827/How-do-I-set-up-my-Nighthawk-Tri-Band-WiFi-Mesh-Range-Extender-in-access-point-AP-mode

 

Thanks,

 

Silviu

 

 

7 Replies

  • plemans's avatar
    plemans
    Guru - Experienced User

    When the EX7700 is running in ap mode, it doesn't function as a mesh device. Its why you're getting drops. it only functions as a mesh device when running in extender mode. 

    You can use the same ssid as the primary router but devices will tend to be sticky and not roam properly. they stay connected to 1 device until their signal becauses unusable/drop entirely. 

     

    So if you want it to function as a mesh setup, connect it using extender mode without the hardwired backhaul. 

     

    If you'd rather have it in ap mode, i'd recommend using different ssids between the 2 devices. Also make sure they're (router/extender) on different wireless channels so they don't interfere with each other. 

    • schilea's avatar
      schilea
      Aspirant

      Thanks, this what I was initially thinking of, but I have seen some posts not confirming this approach.

       

      Also, this is beyond my understanding, Netgear is implementing mesh using a less reliable 5G band and is not using for this the more reliable ethernet connectivity.

       

      • plemans's avatar
        plemans
        Guru - Experienced User

        The only system that supports wired backhaul (currently anyway) with mesh is the orbi mesh systems. 

        the extenders have to use a different setup  since they're designed to operate with all routers, not just orbi routers. 

        If you want a wired backhaul, then you'd need a full mesh system and not just a mesh extender.