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Forum Discussion
AmitR
Jan 04, 2018NETGEAR Employee Retired
OrbiOS 2.1.1
The Orbi team at NETGEAR is aware that some users are experiencing higher than expected Orbi Router reboots, special characters in WiFi Passwords and WiFi / Internet disconnects. We believe these is...
- Jan 17, 2018
Let me give you a quick update on where NETGEAR is with the OrbiOS.
Just before Christmas break, we paused the distribution of OrbiOS 2.1. Very soon, we're about to restart the distribution of a slightly updated version of the beta (2.1.2). In addition to the major new features introduced in 2.1 (e.g. Circle, Ethernet Backhaul), this firmware is expected to address the high CPU issue, as well as the special character in PSK issue as well as support for the Outdoor Orbi. Check Release Notes for complete list.
We are continuing to work on the issues with Google devices that have been documented in the press (several users have provided links here).
My recommendation is that you should either use the Orbi Mobile App (if you haven't seen it recently, check it out, we've made some major improvements) or the Web UI to check for new firmware or wait until your system gets auto-upgraded.
To answer your question, Stars_fan. When Orbi are connected over Ethernet backhaul, the 5GHz band becomes hot standby.
Orbi Product Management
madbrain
Jan 14, 2018Luminary
wase4711 wrote:I have 1 gig cox service, and my faster wifi speeds are never more than 500 megs up or down with the orbi or orbi pro; any way to improve this, or is this the best you can expect?
using AP mode or router mode, plugged into the cox netgear ac1750 router they provide
Depending on distance from your device to the AP, 500 mbit is probably close to the best you can expect. Have you tried software that uses multiple streams, or doing transfers from more than one wifi device at once to measure speed ?
guzzijason
Jan 14, 2018Apprentice
Yeah, the Orbi uses 2x2 radios for the 5 GHz fronthaul connections, which has a theoretical limit of ~866 Mbps. You are unlikely to ever see anything close to that limit in real-world usage. 500-550 Mbps should be pretty typical.