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Forum Discussion
kevanp
Mar 08, 2018Tutor
Combine 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands under a single SSID
Just installed a new R7800. I am surprised to discover that it creates separate WiFi networks, one in the 2.4GHz band, the other in the 5GHz band. My previous wireless access point combined both band...
- Mar 08, 2018
The R7800 doesn't support Smart Connect.
You can give same name SSIDs across each radio, however the router isn't capable of handling auto connections and handshaking behaviors like Smart Connect does so It's recommended to keep each radio as separate SSIDs for best operation and performances.
kevanpwrote:Just installed a new R7800. I am surprised to discover that it creates separate WiFi networks, one in the 2.4GHz band, the other in the 5GHz band. My previous wireless access point combined both bands under one SSID, and automatically selected the optimum frequency depending on the connected device and the signal strength. There seems to be no way of combining the two bands this way on the R7800.
Or am I missing something?
kevanp
Mar 08, 2018Tutor
Hi schumaku
I don't think I'm in the right paygrade to understand what you are saying. What is an STA?
Thanks all the same
schumaku
Mar 08, 2018Guru - Experienced User
Sorry, every computer, mobile phone, access point radio is designated STA (Station).
Well possible your old router did not had any kind of "Smart Connect" functionality - and you had the same name on the 2.4 and the 5 GHz radio up in the air regardless. There was a time where Netgear had not allowed the same SSID on more than one radio config. This limitation was removed from Genie (ie. the Web UI) a longer time ago.
Unless you are a network admin who want to hard code each client to a defined radio there can't be any reason for having radio specific names. Something more for the elderly - and hey I'm 56. 8-) Here at home I'm operating now ten dedicated wireless access points, most on low or medium power to limit reach and interference. One is a R9000, six are Insight managed WAC, and the others are some average or early 802.11ac 2x2 or 3x3 units. And everything is on one wireless name. Why? Well, almost all my wireless devices are highly portable, very few are bound so some fixed locations (printers, media players, and some IP cameras). And if a wireless access point goes down, does select a new 5 GHz channel due to radar interference, or gets a new software all clients can retain the connectivity.