Hi All,
I have a bit of an issue and I've been searching endlessly with no luck of a solution.
My ISP provides with 150 Mbps.
Amazon FireTV forces to use Channel 36 with 40MHz to get max speed of 70 to 80Mbps. Unfortunately with this setting all my other devices can only achieve 70 to 80Mbps max.
There are only a limited number of channels on 5GHz to connect Amazon FireTV. RADAR channels don't work and not even recognized by the box.
Channel Bandwidth 20/40/80MHz or 20MHz or 80MHz get about 2 to 10Mbps.
I disable beamforming but no luck.
I have no issues with Wired connection. I recently had to move my router to optimized WiFi reception.
Asuswrt-Merlin 380.67 firmware.
Does anyone have a solution?
Related
I wonder if anyone can advise how this problem might be fixed:
I have a fire-tv stick in my bedroom the latest version which has a voice remote and connects using WiFi direct instead of bluetooth. I'm using 2.4Ghz wifi (using a TalkTalk hg633 super router). I can't use 5Ghz because the signal to my bedroom isn't good enough on 5Ghz. On 2.4Ghz the link score from inSSIDer is 91 with the fire-tv stick unplugged, with a signal of -50dBm. With the fire-tv stick on a WiFi Direct AP appears on inSSIDer with a signal of -39dBm (ie stronger than my normal wifi signal). The link score drops to 71.
If I test download speeds and pings, then with WiFi direct off, i get decent downloads speeds (around 20Mbps) and 18ms pings in my bedroom, in the lounge its a little higher. With Wi-Fi direct on, download speeds drop below 7mbps, sometimes 1mbps, pings increase to 200ms (although I have seen 10,000ms) and the connection often disconnects so the download speed test or ping is unable to complete. (I get about 2 tests that work out of 6, the others fail due to connection issues).
The upshot of all this is that I can't get a reliable streaming service on my fire-tv stick. especially in the evening. The network often disconnects, or slows to a crawl so I get frequent buffering, inability to stream at all or a poor quality picture. In the lounge, I often find my PC disconnects when wifi direct is on though streaming is less of a problem (because there the wifi signal is about 5dBM greater than the WIfi-Direct signal
I contacted amazon, and they suggested changing the channel of my wifi so it isn't on the same channel a Wifi Direct. That doesn't work because the WiFi Direct signal follows my wifi onto the same channel.
I can't use a lan cable (no option for this on a fire-tv stick, and I shouldn't have to in any case). I don't want to add extra extenders / APs to my wifi network as that might just make things worse.
Does anyone know of any way to switch off WiFi direct and use bluetooth for the remote or the FireTV app on my phone instead? Or to decrease the power of the wifi direct signal, or any other solution?
I wonder about switching to an older fire-stick with bluetooth remote - but that I think would mean I lose the voice search facility?
If I swapped to a full Fire TV with voice remote - do they use bluetooth or Wifi Direct?
Same problem. Not as dire a situation because it's in my kid's bedroom and not mine. :silly: But it interferes with the WiFi signal in areas that are closer to her room than my home router.
Not sure why AMZ chose to use the same channel as the FireTV stick talks to your WiFi network on to do their communication to their remote. That seems like a really bad design - if it's messing the 2 of us up, it has to be doing the same for a whole lot of people.
I tried changing my home WiFi from channel 11 to 1 in troubleshooting and had the same experience as you - the FireTV stick's WiFi changed right along with it to continue to clobber my home WiFi signal. Been through the menus in FireTV stick - no way I can see to change its behavior. Google search led me here.
Hi,
Whilst I stand by everything I said, in attempting to get Amazon to replace my remote with one that used bluetooth instead of wifi-direct, they sent me exactly the same remote in replacement. It still uses wifi-direct. However, it has worked fine, despite being on the same channel. That suggests that some remotes are faulty and causing or exacerbating the problem. Exactly why that would be I don't know, but it's all working fine for me now.
Roku has been doing this for years Here is a link to there form maybe amazon will listen I just got a new one for another room but no network problems and is faster on menu loading so I can live with it.
You're always gonna have problems with a ton of stuff on 2.4ghz. If your router has 5ghz, I would recommend reorganizing if possible, or getting a stronger router. 5ghz means no headaches, no problems with other things, controllers\remote work fine, etc.
After updating to Android N my N5X won't find any 5GHz wifi network.
I have reflashed radio file, also tried different ROMs, etc. any ideas? I can confirm my 5GHz network is working as other devices can connect to it.
Thanks
EDIT: 5GHz wifi network
This can sometimes happen if the router chooses (or if you choose) a weird channel for the 5GHz band. I believe I had this problem when the 5 GHz band in my house was set to one of the channels towards the end of the spectrum, like channel 161 or 165. Let me know if this goes straight over your head but you're gonna have to log into your router and check things out.
The IP is usually something like 192.168.1.1, but you can check by running command prompt and typing ipconfig and looking for "default gateway". That IP address if your router's IP. Type that IP into your browser. God willing you have a separate router from your cable modem, go ahead and log into your router. If you don't know the username and password, ask someone who does. Flip over to the wireless section so you can play with the 5 GHz settings. If you live in a congested area like a city or a neighborhood, you should set your 5 GHz band to a channel width of either 40 MHz or 20 MHz. 80 will get you the best speeds but interference will step all over your performance, so if you have a lot of neighboring wifi networks, you won't see any gains. As for choosing a channel, you can choose one yourself (which is what I usually do after taking a survey of my house to find the best channel) or leave it on auto. Auto will select what it thinks the best channel is and sometimes it might select a channel that makes some devices unhappy. Again, this tends to be the higher channels like 153-165 in my house with some devices.
Hope this helps.
Turn the GPS on and scan for wifi networks.
Alcolawl said:
This can sometimes happen if the router chooses (or if you choose) a weird channel for the 5GHz band. I believe I had this problem when the 5 GHz band in my house was set to one of the channels towards the end of the spectrum, like channel 161 or 165. Let me know if this goes straight over your head but you're gonna have to log into your router and check things out.
The IP is usually something like 192.168.1.1, but you can check by running command prompt and typing ipconfig and looking for "default gateway". That IP address if your router's IP. Type that IP into your browser. God willing you have a separate router from your cable modem, go ahead and log into your router. If you don't know the username and password, ask someone who does. Flip over to the wireless section so you can play with the 5 GHz settings. If you live in a congested area like a city or a neighborhood, you should set your 5 GHz band to a channel width of either 40 MHz or 20 MHz. 80 will get you the best speeds but interference will step all over your performance, so if you have a lot of neighboring wifi networks, you won't see any gains. As for choosing a channel, you can choose one yourself (which is what I usually do after taking a survey of my house to find the best channel) or leave it on auto. Auto will select what it thinks the best channel is and sometimes it might select a channel that makes some devices unhappy. Again, this tends to be the higher channels like 153-165 in my house with some devices.
Hope this helps.
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Click to collapse
available channels on my router 36, 40, 44 and 48. none does the charm, also programs like wifi analyser won't detect any 5GHz network. Thanks anyways, any other ideas?
sumanth28 said:
Turn the GPS on and scan for wifi networks.
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Click to collapse
didn't make any difference, thanks!
Cant figure this out. I have a Fire TV Stick with Alexa. I have an 80mb connection. Over wifi, my laptop gets 70mb download on 5GHZ. The Firetv stick on 5ghz floats around 10-15mb, and that's 3 meters from the router. Its the closest device to the router.
HD Buffers constantly. Anyone any ideas?
I experienced similar on 5G WiFi where phone showed excellent speed but Fire TV showed terrible speed. However the problem was a useless speed test app on the Fire TV. I tested it with a few internet based speed tests and test results were fine.
--
Hammy
Hello everyone I have an LG G7 ThinQ model number LM-G710EMW,
Now my phone started doing this thing where it wont detect and if it detects it wont connect to SOME 5Ghz AP's.
At first I noticed this on my Home Router, a TP-Link Archer C20 AC, and I thought it was the router so I factory reset it, to no dice.
Then I thought It was the network settings in my phone and I did a reset on those, to still no dice, finally I was like it must be the phone, and I factory reseted my phone, and YET IT DIDNT CONNECT.
A few days later I was visiting my parents house and they have this CHEAP NEXT 5Ghz Router, and it did connect to that one, I was like AHA, IT IS MY ROUTER. That same day I configured a UniFi AC LR AP (a $100 AP) and on that one IT DID NOT CONNECT NOR DISCOVERED THE 5GHZ SSID.
So its not my router.
I have no issues with 2.4Ghz Routers or AP's.
Any ideas?
Could be a channel issue. I've run into this in the past with other phones, where my router would select certain channels depending on the surrounding wireless neighborhood. Turns out it didn't like some channels, especially ones towards the higher end of the spectrum (Channels 161, 165). Perhaps that's the problem. If you're comfortable, log into your router at home and see what the channel width is set to (20, 40, or 80 MHz) and then take a look at which channel (or channel range, depending on the width of said channel) it's set to (most likely Auto). The router chooses channels based on how busy the the neighborhood is. So if you have a lot of neighbors with WiFi networks of their own, it'll try to choose a channel that they aren't using to mitigate interference. Select a channel or channel range that's highlighted in this picture. And I know it says North America, but I believe Europe and Japan use the same channels.
Thank you very much for the reply and a fast one,
I will try to do that then, what do you mean by highlighted?
I usually leave 2.4Ghz to 20Mhz and 5Ghz to 40Mhz.. is this ok?
Is there any better config?
Thanks,
Alcolawl said:
Could be a channel issue. I've run into this in the past with other phones, where my router would select certain channels depending on the surrounding wireless neighborhood. Turns out it didn't like some channels, especially ones towards the higher end of the spectrum (Channels 161, 165). Perhaps that's the problem. If you're comfortable, log into your router at home and see what the channel width is set to (20, 40, or 80 MHz) and then take a look at which channel (or channel range, depending on the width of said channel) it's set to (most likely Auto). The router chooses channels based on how busy the the neighborhood is. So if you have a lot of neighbors with WiFi networks of their own, it'll try to choose a channel that they aren't using to mitigate interference. Select a channel or channel range that's highlighted in this picture. And I know it says North America, but I believe Europe and Japan use the same channels.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
rmartinezdl said:
I will try to do that then, what do you mean by highlighted?
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Click to collapse
The channels that are colored green in the picture. 36,40,44,48 and 149,153,157,161,165.
rmartinezdl said:
I usually leave 2.4Ghz to 20Mhz and 5Ghz to 40Mhz.. is this ok,
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is optimal in my experience. The 2.4 GHz band is super crowded, so having it set to a channel width of 20 MHz is the only real option. 5 GHz at 40 MHz is good, if you have a lot of neighbors that also have WiFi, this is the best channel width to select for for performance without your bandwidth being stepped on by nearby 5 GHz networks on the same channel.
Because you're using a 40 MHz channel width on your 5 GHz SSID, it takes up two channels, as illustrated in the picture I posted in my previous comment. Some routers don't go up to channel 165, so your only real choices here are 36-40, 44-48, 149-153, and 157,161. You want to try to select a channel that isn't in use by neighboring WiFi networks. two WiFi networks on the same channel can lead to worse wireless performance. The router tries to do this automatically but sometimes will select channels that certain devices are fussy about. Some routers can give you a site survey and show you the other channels in use in the area of your home. If yours doesn't do this, you can download any number of apps to survey the wireless networks in your area instead. Basically, try changing the channel selection to a different choice and see if your phone can connect.
rmartinezdl said:
Thank you very much for the reply and a fast one,
I will try to do that then, what do you mean by highlighted?
I usually leave 2.4Ghz to 20Mhz and 5Ghz to 40Mhz.. is this ok?
Is there any better config?
Thanks,
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Samen issue heren with g7
Howto fix this?
You need to dial *#546368#*710# in order to enter into engineering menu.
After this follow Field Test-WiFi Test-Ota Settings. Press Disable then Enable.
Now switch on wifi and 5ghz should be available.
Brilliant tip by valyunin. Solved my issue on lg g7 thinq. now my wifi speeds is 800 Mbps and more
My phone cannot see my 5ghz Wi-Fi network. It is connected to the 2.4ghz network ok, and I have other devices connected to the 5ghz network.
I have an Orbi Mesh system, and it only gives me 4 5ghz channels to set, 36, 40, 44 and 46. Could this be the problem? My Note 10 can't see those channels?
Mine runs fine on 5GHz, channel 149. Couple yrs ago my phone wouldn't connect to my wifi, I found out wifi router was not set for auto updates, after I switched to auto, it updated and all was fine. I would suggest you check your router settings and make sure is updated. There are programs on google that check wifi signal and show which channels your phone can see and that would be my second step. Program is called wifi analyzer.
pete4k said:
Mine runs fine on 5GHz, channel 149. Couple yrs ago my phone wouldn't connect to my wifi, I found out wifi router was not set for auto updates, after I switched to auto, it updated and all was fine. I would suggest you check your router settings and make sure is updated. There are programs on google that check wifi signal and show which channels your phone can see and that would be my second step. Program is called wifi analyzer.
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Click to collapse
The problem is Orbi only has channels 36, 40, 44 and 48 to selct. You cannot select a higher channel, as Orbi Mesh systems use the higher channels for their wireless backhaul. Wi-Fi analyzer can see the higher channels (153) in use (by the Orbi) but cannot any signal on the lower channels, even though my router is broadcasting on them, and I have laptops connect at 5ghz to the router. It's just my phone that can't see the 5ghz network.
I just noticed you're from Indonesia and there are some restrictions on some channels in certain countries for example look here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_WLAN_channels.
Sorry doesn't list your country but gives an idea how that works.
Is your phone specific for your country? If not it may have some software restrictions on those channels and could be fixed with different FW or root. If that's not the case, I'm out of ideas.