- May 6, 2017
- 4,199
- 7,067
All of my WiFi has gone down hill in a big way lately. It's not been an overnight thing but say over the last several months. I thought at first it was because I'd recently changed the Asus router that I was using to AP-only duty and it was just something flaky about that but I'm seeing the same across multiple APs that I've tried. My phone constantly switches back and forth between WiFI and 5G inside the house and some indoor WiFi cams and other WiFI devices are dropping off the network all the time.
The Asus used to be great. I could get strong service anywhere in the house and extending a good way out into the yard. Now I have pitiful RSSI a couple of rooms away.
I have three outdoor APs, a pair of TP-Link CPE210 2.4 that I use for point-to-point to a shed/workshop and an oddball Netix AP.
The TP-Link is a more recent addition within the same time period and I've never been all that impressed with it. But it worked well enough for the purpose/price and I wanted switched ports in the shed for a couple of cams. It also seems to have deteriorated since I first got it. Trying to get it to work better I eventually turned on a proprietary TDMA mode that it can use and that does seem to have helped it.
I'd used the Netix previously for that purpose and general coverage outside. That thing could blast out signal that I could pick up many streets away in the direction pointed if I turned it up. So I broke it out again to see if I could use it. Now I'm doing good just to get signal from it across half of my typical suburban yard.
I also have a Ubiquiti AC Pro that I wasn't using since the Asus was much better as far as signal and I didn't need it. It was never all that great but OK. It also doesn't work worth a damn now.
I've tried various channels and assigned channels so as to avoid interference among these various devices. Only two are actually working at the same time normally, I've just been testing among these to try to see some improvement.
Seems to have affected the 2.4 side much more than 5. My 5 signal now typically is better than the 2.4 side.
Single-family home neighborhood without much interference (that I can detect) from neighbors or wider-area services. Some signals detected but all fairly minimal. Nothing strong that comes up using various signal surveying software/apps that I've tried. Everything seems to be normal background noise. (Kind of including my own WiFi. lol)
I've not added anything else to the house that I can think of that would cause interference. No radio antennas, 2.4 phone system, or anything like that.
It's not a case where it's good and then gets lousy at times and comes and goes. It's never very good and just drops to terrible often.
Any ideas? How can I better diagnose this?
The Asus used to be great. I could get strong service anywhere in the house and extending a good way out into the yard. Now I have pitiful RSSI a couple of rooms away.
I have three outdoor APs, a pair of TP-Link CPE210 2.4 that I use for point-to-point to a shed/workshop and an oddball Netix AP.
The TP-Link is a more recent addition within the same time period and I've never been all that impressed with it. But it worked well enough for the purpose/price and I wanted switched ports in the shed for a couple of cams. It also seems to have deteriorated since I first got it. Trying to get it to work better I eventually turned on a proprietary TDMA mode that it can use and that does seem to have helped it.
I'd used the Netix previously for that purpose and general coverage outside. That thing could blast out signal that I could pick up many streets away in the direction pointed if I turned it up. So I broke it out again to see if I could use it. Now I'm doing good just to get signal from it across half of my typical suburban yard.
I also have a Ubiquiti AC Pro that I wasn't using since the Asus was much better as far as signal and I didn't need it. It was never all that great but OK. It also doesn't work worth a damn now.
I've tried various channels and assigned channels so as to avoid interference among these various devices. Only two are actually working at the same time normally, I've just been testing among these to try to see some improvement.
Seems to have affected the 2.4 side much more than 5. My 5 signal now typically is better than the 2.4 side.
Single-family home neighborhood without much interference (that I can detect) from neighbors or wider-area services. Some signals detected but all fairly minimal. Nothing strong that comes up using various signal surveying software/apps that I've tried. Everything seems to be normal background noise. (Kind of including my own WiFi. lol)
I've not added anything else to the house that I can think of that would cause interference. No radio antennas, 2.4 phone system, or anything like that.
It's not a case where it's good and then gets lousy at times and comes and goes. It's never very good and just drops to terrible often.
Any ideas? How can I better diagnose this?