wifi connect speed N 150mbps - Atrix 4G General

I Have Atrix with netrino rom 2.2ee. but general question anyone getting 150Mbps link speed thru there router? best i can get is 72Mbps and coworker has Atrix2 he gets 64Mbps.

Are you paying for 150mbps?! I don't even want to image THAT bill :O

Well, here's a question. Is anything else connected to the router while you're performing these speed tests?
dp28688 said:
I Have Atrix with netrino rom 2.2ee. but general question anyone getting 150Mbps link speed thru there router? best i can get is 72Mbps and coworker has Atrix2 he gets 64Mbps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

How are you performing your test?I can't imagine a reliable test could even be performed on the atrix.
Even for my phone the results vary. The results on the speedtest.net app will be much different then visiting speedtest.net on the browser (obviously not default I use opera)
Anyways what type of service do you have?

dp28688 said:
I Have Atrix with netrino rom 2.2ee. but general question anyone getting 150Mbps link speed thru there router? best i can get is 72Mbps and coworker has Atrix2 he gets 64Mbps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You talking about your actual internet speed dl, or file transfer speed within your network? I cannot get 150Mbps through my router with file transfers. I max out at 25Mbps with my internet speed, but that's all the bandwidth I get anyway.

The speed depends on what the hardware is capable of. The 802.11n standard supports up to 300Mbps in theory. In theory because hardware hasn't been made that is capable of transmitting at that speed. And he is no doubt talking about through a local network. If he is talking about internet bandwidth, I envy him lol.
Sent from my MB860 using XDA App

dp28688 said:
I Have Atrix with netrino rom 2.2ee. but general question anyone getting 150Mbps link speed thru there router? best i can get is 72Mbps and coworker has Atrix2 he gets 64Mbps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am assuming the OP is referring to the modulation rate his phone is connecting to the router with. I don't know a lot about the wireless adapter in the Atrix aside from it being able to do 802.11 a/b/g/n. However, I am pretty sure the N capability of the wireless adapter has the highest modulation rate of 72Mbps when running on 1 chain in a 20Mhz channel (to my knowledge the Atrix only has one Wi-Fi antenna in it). So assuming you have a great Wi-Fi signal to your wireless router and low noise, 72Mbps is the highest modulation rate your phone will achieve. In order to achieve 150Mbps, the wireless access point you connect would have to be running in 40Mhz channels before the phone could benefit from the router's 150Mbps capability.
Since the Atrix is 802.11a capable, I bought a dual band router and reap the benefits of being the only one in my neighborhood using a 5Ghz capable router. While I only connect at best with 54Mbps, I can still gobble up 11Mbps down. Not too shabby.
jadwv2210 said:
The speed depends on what the hardware is capable of. The 802.11n standard supports up to 300Mbps in theory. In theory because hardware hasn't been made that is capable of transmitting at that speed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you want to shell out some cash you can get a router that in theory can reach 450Mbps with the matching adapter. I don't know of a laptop or other device that comes on the shelf with that type of adapter. The routers and adapters have a 3x3 setup, so if all three chains are enabled, and you live in a Faraday cage, you could theoretically get 450Mbps out of it. A bit extreme right now, as most people don't have a clue about the benefits of 5Ghz and using that for media like set top boxes home media streaming. LinkSys actually have a nice 4 port Wi-Fi adapter specifically for that. Plus in your PS3, XBox, satellite receiver and Popcorn Hour and you are good to go! No wires needed with the exception of the cables to the adapter.

jadwv2210 said:
The speed depends on what the hardware is capable of. The 802.11n standard supports up to 300Mbps in theory. In theory because hardware hasn't been made that is capable of transmitting at that speed. And he is no doubt talking about through a local network. If he is talking about internet bandwidth, I envy him lol.
Sent from my MB860 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Worlds fastest wireless network - 1.2Tbps.
But yeah, you're right............traditional wireless won't do it.

yea its plenty fast at the 72 i connect was just curious because the laptop connects at different speed. I have samba share installed so have a network drive from phone so just seeing if had any input. I did notice when looking in my router lastnight that when i connected at my 72 that it actually does go faster in burst. my router has dd-wrt so shows connected devices and stats i saw it change connection speeds up to like 110 briefly. so it should be good.

It may interest you that in the UK the government agency that polices advertising made the Wifi people take the speeds off their ads*. IRL none of the G access points ever made 54 MBps nor the B 11mbs. It is always the same, people quoting perfect condition maximums which are never achievable.
* Try going to linksys dot co dot uk and have a look at their ads (can't post links yet)

grenefroggie said:
I am assuming the OP is referring to the modulation rate his phone is connecting to the router with. I don't know a lot about the wireless adapter in the Atrix aside from it being able to do 802.11 a/b/g/n. However, I am pretty sure the N capability of the wireless adapter has the highest modulation rate of 72Mbps when running on 1 chain in a 20Mhz channel (to my knowledge the Atrix only has one Wi-Fi antenna in it). So assuming you have a great Wi-Fi signal to your wireless router and low noise, 72Mbps is the highest modulation rate your phone will achieve. In order to achieve 150Mbps, the wireless access point you connect would have to be running in 40Mhz channels before the phone could benefit from the router's 150Mbps capability.
Since the Atrix is 802.11a capable, I bought a dual band router and reap the benefits of being the only one in my neighborhood using a 5Ghz capable router. While I only connect at best with 54Mbps, I can still gobble up 11Mbps down. Not too shabby.
If you want to shell out some cash you can get a router that in theory can reach 450Mbps with the matching adapter. I don't know of a laptop or other device that comes on the shelf with that type of adapter. The routers and adapters have a 3x3 setup, so if all three chains are enabled, and you live in a Faraday cage, you could theoretically get 450Mbps out of it. A bit extreme right now, as most people don't have a clue about the benefits of 5Ghz and using that for media like set top boxes home media streaming. LinkSys actually have a nice 4 port Wi-Fi adapter specifically for that. Plus in your PS3, XBox, satellite receiver and Popcorn Hour and you are good to go! No wires needed with the exception of the cables to the adapter.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So the Atrix is 5Ghz capable? You said 802.11a.. It won't work at 802.11n in that frequency? It's so noisy in this area in the 2.4 range when I do a spectrum sweep there is no clean frequency. Im thinking of grabbing a 2.4 CPE with 36 dBm transmit power and place it on my kitchen counter. I'll blast every router in range out haha

Mine too. Both Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime and SE Xperia Ray are all max out at 72 Mbps.

I connect to the 5Ghz frequency at my home everyday. Seems faster than the 2.4 connection. I can't comment on battery savings though.
MB860, CM7.2.0, Faux 026b1 1Ghz

Related

Wifi Speed

Is the Wifi speed for the TF a maximum of 72mb/s? My wireless router supports 300mb/s and my laptops can make use of that but the TF will not go past 72.
So when I'm streaming or copying hd videos over from my server its transferring at speeds slower then my internet connection it self!
my router is a an ASUS RT-N16 with Tomato firmware on it. Using WPA/WPA2 AES encryption. On channel 7 on lower sideband and 40mhz channel width.
The max on the Transformer is a 72.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1185938
Sent from my Transformer TF101 using XDA Premium App
WiFi speed is one of those marketing things like the way glass CRT TV sets were sized - the marketeers use an unrealistic perspective that never manifests in the real world for real people and real devices. Sure, my laptops claim they are connected at 300 Mbps. However, if you actually test that, you find it's well under 100 Mbps. Hard wired network connection speeds seem pretty real.
If the TF claims 72 Mbps, it's probably telling you what it really is, not what some marketeer says it is. And then, like the other fellow says, the TF doesn't support the faster speeds. The question is whether the TF can stream HD smoothly. Generally, mine does.
Bye.
ludester said:
Is the Wifi speed for the TF a maximum of 72mb/s? My wireless router supports 300mb/s and my laptops can make use of that but the TF will not go past 72.
So when I'm streaming or copying hd videos over from my server its transferring at speeds slower then my internet connection it self!
my router is a an ASUS RT-N16 with Tomato firmware on it. Using WPA/WPA2 AES encryption. On channel 7 on lower sideband and 40mhz channel width.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

Wireless-N router recommendations?

I'm in the market for a new wireless-N router, since my current piece-of-$h1t 2Wire router (provided by AT&T with my U-Verse service) is only G. I'll be using it for my laptop (gaming laptop), as well as wifi for my xbox, which I use for streaming Netflix. I'm also planning on getting a new android tablet (probably the new Asus MeMO 370T whenever it comes out). So because of the 360 and tablet, I would like something with decent range, and because of streaming, and the potential of using at least two, possibly three wireless devices simultaneously, I would like something with decent bandwidth and throughput.
Right now I'm looking at the following routers, but I'm by no means decided, hence this post.
D-Link DIR-655: http://www.amazon.com/D-Link-DIR-655-Extreme-N-Gigabit-Wireless/dp/B000LIFB7S
Linksys E4200 V2: http://www.amazon.com/Linksys-Perfo...2?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1327071829&sr=1-2
Linksys E4200: http://www.amazon.com/Cisco-Linksys...1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1327071829&sr=1-1
Any opinions on these three, or any other recommendations?
sfreemanoh said:
I'm in the market for a new wireless-N router, since my current piece-of-$h1t 2Wire router (provided by AT&T with my U-Verse service) is only G. I'll be using it for my laptop (gaming laptop), as well as wifi for my xbox, which I use for streaming Netflix. I'm also planning on getting a new android tablet (probably the new Asus MeMO 370T whenever it comes out). So because of the 360 and tablet, I would like something with decent range, and because of streaming, and the potential of using at least two, possibly three wireless devices simultaneously, I would like something with decent bandwidth and throughput.
Right now I'm looking at the following routers, but I'm by no means decided, hence this post.
D-Link DIR-655: http://www.amazon.com/D-Link-DIR-655-Extreme-N-Gigabit-Wireless/dp/B000LIFB7S
Linksys E4200 V2: http://www.amazon.com/Linksys-Perfo...2?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1327071829&sr=1-2
Linksys E4200: http://www.amazon.com/Cisco-Linksys...1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1327071829&sr=1-1
Any opinions on these three, or any other recommendations?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The only benefit you'll get from wireless-N is range depending on which internet package you have. I taught my dad that the other night, lol.
ASUS is BOSS
sfreemanoh said:
I'm in the market for a new wireless-N router, since my current piece-of-$h1t 2Wire router (provided by AT&T with my U-Verse service) is only G. I'll be using it for my laptop (gaming laptop), as well as wifi for my xbox, which I use for streaming Netflix. I'm also planning on getting a new android tablet (probably the new Asus MeMO 370T whenever it comes out). So because of the 360 and tablet, I would like something with decent range, and because of streaming, and the potential of using at least two, possibly three wireless devices simultaneously, I would like something with decent bandwidth and throughput.
Right now I'm looking at the following routers, but I'm by no means decided, hence this post.
D-Link DIR-655: http://www.amazon.com/D-Link-DIR-655-Extreme-N-Gigabit-Wireless/dp/B000LIFB7S
Linksys E4200 V2: http://www.amazon.com/Linksys-Perfo...2?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1327071829&sr=1-2
Linksys E4200: http://www.amazon.com/Cisco-Linksys...1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1327071829&sr=1-1
Any opinions on these three, or any other recommendations?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Without question the best dual-band wireless router with a management interface is the ASUS RT-N56U. I own one and it blows the doors of my fourth generation apple airport extreme. It handles Double NAT, VPN pass-through, and all of the other features that have become normal in a professional sense.
http://www.asus.com/Networks/Wireless_Routers/RTN56U/
http://forum.xda-developers.com/[ur...img]http://testmy.net/Ni5Y0MB.png[/img][/url]
HTML:
:::.. Download Test Results ..:::
Download Connection:: 32115 Kbps or 31.4 Mbps
Download Test Size:: 12 MB or 12288 kB or 12582912 bytes
Download Speed:: 4014 kB/s or 3.9 MB/s
Tested At:: http://TestMy.net version:12
Validation Link:: http://testmy.net/db/Ni5Y0MB
Test Time:: 2012-01-21 15:49:07 Local Time
1MB Download in 0.26 Seconds - 1GB Download in ~4 Minutes - 573X faster than 56K
This test of exactly 12288 kB took 3.061 seconds to complete
Running at 253% of hosts average (Comcast Cable)
User Agent:: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:9.0.1) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/9.0.1 [!]
Also, I have that d link router, but like i said, the only benefit i'm getting atm is the range.
In my experience d-link is terrible.
bdawg31 said:
In my experience d-link is terrible.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Mine is ok. It's just a pain to set up.
Go to small net builder => http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/lanwan/router-charts/bar/76-total-simul it has plenty of info
Yeah that ASUS router is good. I own the netgear wndr3700v2. It has good range too but not as fast as the ASUS router.
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA App

802.11a (5GHz): yes or not?

I'm reading in lots of places that the nexus 10 supports 802.11a. But in http://www.google.com/nexus/10/specs/ shows its not supported. What's up with it??
Why would you want to use a? It is the oldest spec and very very slow.
Possibly referring to 802.11ac?
EniGmA1987 said:
Why would you want to use a? It is the oldest spec and very very slow.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's not the oldest spec. It has the same speed as 802.11g, and its actually faster as it works in the 5GHz band, which is usually not as congested as the 2.4GHz band.
tirantloblanc said:
I'm reading in lots of places that the nexus 10 supports 802.11a. But in http://www.google.com/nexus/10/specs/ shows its not supported. What's up with it??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi,
In short yes.
Used my Asus RT-N66U and set it to "Legacy" instead of N.
Link speed shows as 54Mhz in INSSIDER and network properties on my laptop.
N10 connects to 5GHz network and "Network Signal Info" shows also 54Mhz on channel 48.
Cheers
RobRoy said:
Hi,
In short yes.
Used my Asus RT-N66U and set it to "Legacy" instead of N.
Link speed shows as 54Mhz in INSSIDER and network properties on my laptop.
N10 connects to 5GHz network and "Network Signal Info" shows also 54Mhz on channel 48.
Cheers
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
5GHz for better speed or range ?
It suports wifi 802.11n in both 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz;
That means it is also compatible with 802.11a and 802.11b/g;
If you have a 802.11n capable of 5Ghz, you can even enjoy wide channel support, getting a connection of 300Mbps instead of 144Mbps which is the maximum supported through 2.4Ghz 802.11n.
You can get better speed with 5Ghz, but that does not take the fact that 2.4Ghz gives better range...
kieu96 said:
5GHz for better speed or range ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
5Ghz for better speed, at closer range.
If you need to push the range, it will probably give you worse speed compared to 2.4.
I live in a crowded 2.4Ghz area, at close range, 5Ghz is faster, but as I get away, 2.4Ghz is a far more reliable choice despite the fight with other networks around...
About selecting legacy and disabling N entirely, I do not think it is a very good idea unless there is something truly wrong with your WiFi network or you suffer some weird incompatibility with an old device (I have not come across anything like that).
tirantloblanc said:
It's not the oldest spec. It has the same speed as 802.11g, and its actually faster as it works in the 5GHz band, which is usually not as congested as the 2.4GHz band.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wireless A and B were the first two lettered specs to come out. A was the 5GHz higher speed spec and B was the 2.4GHz longer range one. Wireless G came out years later, and Wireless N after that.
Here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11
EniGmA1987 said:
Wireless A and B were the first two specs to come out. A was the 5GHz higher speed spec and B was the 2.4GHz longer range one. Wireless G came out years later, and Wireless N after that.
Here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should read the links you post 802.11-1997 came out before b and a. I still have some equipment with that spec. 5ghz came later. it was very fast but expensive as hell, so b became more common.
RobRoy said:
Hi,
In short yes.
Used my Asus RT-N66U and set it to "Legacy" instead of N.
Link speed shows as 54Mhz in INSSIDER and network properties on my laptop.
N10 connects to 5GHz network and "Network Signal Info" shows also 54Mhz on channel 48.
Cheers
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. I don't have any A equipment at home, so I couldn't test it.
runaway64 said:
5Ghz for better speed, at closer range.
If you need to push the range, it will probably give you worse speed compared to 2.4.
I live in a crowded 2.4Ghz area, at close range, 5Ghz is faster, but as I get away, 2.4Ghz is a far more reliable choice despite the fight with other networks around...
About selecting legacy and disabling N entirely, I do not think it is a very good idea unless there is something truly wrong with your WiFi network or you suffer some weird incompatibility with an old device (I have not come across anything like that).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Also keep in mind that the N10 only supports single channel N (20Mhz) on 2.4 but dual channel on 5Ghz.
I get quite good range and because of a lot of neighbouring networks actually use it in the 5Ghz band.
No issues for me.
But it really depends on individual circumstances
RobRoy said:
Also keep in mind that the N10 only supports single channel N (20Mhz) on 2.4 but dual channel on 5Ghz.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In my first reply I already pointed at that:
RobRoy said:
If you have a 802.11n capable of 5Ghz, you can even enjoy wide channel support, getting a connection of 300Mbps instead of 144Mbps which is the maximum supported through 2.4Ghz 802.11n.
You can get better speed with 5Ghz, but that does not take the fact that 2.4Ghz gives better range...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I referred to that in the resulting link speed, since it is easier to identify in the tablet itself with little knowledge.
EDIT: The second quote is mine, should point to this comment
I am keeping the mistake to keep the coherence on the following comments.
runaway64 said:
RobRoy said:
If you have a 802.11n capable of 5Ghz, you can even enjoy wide channel support, getting a connection of 300Mbps instead of 144Mbps which is the maximum supported through 2.4Ghz 802.11n.
You can get better speed with 5Ghz, but that does not take the fact that 2.4Ghz gives better range...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I referred to that in the resulting link speed, since it is easier to identify in the tablet itself with little knowledge.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Im confused... You are the one who said that, then quoted yourself but stuck Roy's name in place and made a comment about how you said it first? Here, ill link you to your post:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=37247705&postcount=7
runaway64 said:
It suports wifi 802.11n in both 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz;
That means it is also compatible with 802.11a and 802.11b/g;
If you have a 802.11n capable of 5Ghz, you can even enjoy wide channel support, getting a connection of 300Mbps instead of 144Mbps which is the maximum supported through 2.4Ghz 802.11n.
You can get better speed with 5Ghz, but that does not take the fact that 2.4Ghz gives better range...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
EniGmA1987 said:
Im confused... You are the one who said that, then quoted yourself but stuck Roy's name in place and made a comment about how you said it first? Here, ill link you to your post:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=37247705&postcount=7
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think we both came up with the result.
My original post is here for reference
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1962523&page=3.
At the end we all contribute to the common knowledge we share
EniGmA1987 said:
Im confused... You are the one who said that, then quoted yourself but stuck Roy's name in place and made a comment about how you said it first? Here, ill link you to your post:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=37247705&postcount=7
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am sorry, I added the quoting code and I did not notice the wrong quote for my own words.
I guess reading my comment is clear I had not any wrong intentions...

[Q] Wireless speeds (g/n not LTE)

I have a Canadian GS4 (SGH-1337M) and have noticed the wireless speeds are not great. I am an on site computer technician and I use the speedtest.net app to quickly and easily test wireless network speeds when troubleshooting wireless or slow speed issues with peoples computers and wifi networks. In doing so I've noticed there seems to be a cap of about 25mbps down speed with the GS4. Doesnt seem to matter the router or provider I can never break 25mbps down.
I previously had an iphone 4 before I replaced it with my GS4. It has identical wireless performance, this invisible cap of 25mbps down. I personally have 100mbps shaw cable at home, it speed tests over 100mbps down and over 5mbps up on a wired connection and over 95mbps down 5mbps up on a wireless connection on a PC.
I've tested both the 2.4 G and 5ghz wireless N on my dual band router, made no difference. Do these phones only have 54g support? I'm disappointed that a new device with other high speed features such has USB 3.0, LTE and apparent wireless N 5ghz support still cant take advantage of real high speed wifi connections.
any thoughts?
I don't notice any cap on the GT-I9505. I have 120mb down line here at home and the phone, on stock firmware, connected on 5ghz rather than 2.4ghz, with the same speedtest.net app, shows usually around 110mb consistently. Doubt that different variants of the S4 should be so different in this sense unless there is some software fault on your end maybe, though I could be wrong ofc.
jamieridler said:
I don't notice any cap on the GT-I9505. I have 120mb down line here at home and the phone, on stock firmware, connected on 5ghz rather than 2.4ghz, with the same speedtest.net app, shows usually around 110mb consistently. Doubt that different variants of the S4 should be so different in this sense unless there is some software fault on your end maybe, though I could be wrong ofc.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi,
Try asking HERE as well

[Q] Wifi connection super slow on Nexus6P

Hi guys, I'm having a really weird problem with my phone. The wifi connection is super slow on my Nexus6P, but on my macbook it is fine as it should be. I tested on two more phones, one iPhone and my OnePlus one, wifi works fine on both of them.
I tried restarting my phone and nothing, I did a factory reset on my phone and the same problem still happens.
When I did turned of my router for like 2 minutes and then turned it on again, the wifi connection on my nexus6p worked fine for some minutes and then got slower again. Can someone help me please? Or someone having the same issue?
Make sure your router firmware is up to date.
Sent from a 128th Legion Stormtrooper 6P
I can run my broadband from the 6P flat out at 72Mb/s so its more than capable. Are you running 2Ghz or 5Ghz wifi?
Exactly what 400ixl asks. On the 2.4 Ghz band, I get full speeds of a little less than 72 Mbps. On the 5 GHZ band, I get about 1/3 less speed, even though I'm sitting in the same exact spot, with the 6P in the exact spot.
My laptop experiences the exact same scenario as well. But on my laptop, I can see the actual connect speed, not just the data transfer speed, but the connection speed to the router. The connection speed (that always varies while sitting still) is always greater on the 2.4 Ghz band than it is on the 5 Ghz band. The transfer speeds always coincide with the band I'm connected to. The lower the band connection, the greater connection speeds & transfer rates. The higher the band connection, the slower the connection speeds & data transfer rates.
And I have an older Netgear WNDR3600 running DD-WRT so it's pretty much tweaked to the max!
I have opposite effect as above people with 5ghz being faster for me and 2.4 being about 1/2 to 2/3 the speed of the 5ghz, but I live in a town house so it could be related to the many neighbouring wifis on 2.4ghz. Here's my 5ghz speed.
I get full on both, but I don't have congested channels where I live. Test it on both, also check for congested channels where you are.
400ixl said:
I get full on both, but I don't have congested channels where I live. Test it on both, also check for congested channels where you are.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good point that I missed completely! I also live in a townhouse (as does frigidazzi) with many, many neighbors that are using FIOS. The 2.4 band is packed with at least 20 signals I can see with inSSIDer. The 5 Ghz band is completely open though.
I use channel 8 because most every FIOS user around here uses channels 1,6 & 11 so I try to keep away from cross channel interference by finding the weakest broadcast channels, which is channel 8.
My router is upstairs & my devices are on the main floor. The higher the frequency, the less penetration through walls, floors & such. It explains my situation with slower speeds at higher frequencies.
I have this problem too. I cannot get above 30mbps on my 6p, but my HTC One m8, sitting g right next to it will get 120mbps. I've tried everything I can think of to fix it but I get it on both 2.4 and 5 ghz bands.

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