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Markboz

Regular Contributor
Hello

I have a question is anyone having a hard time keeping your HP printers connected to your network? I have a RT RC5300 router and have not been able to keep this printer connected to my network. I can’t even AirPrint from my Apple devices.

I have the printer hooked via wireless through my network

Any help please.
 
You don't say what model of printer you have. I have a M252dw connected to my router wirelessly and have no problems, but I don't have Apple devices.

You say it won't stay connected. So you see it disconnecting in the router's System Log > Wireless Log ?
 
You don't say what model of printer you have. I have a M252dw connected to my router wirelessly and have no problems, but I don't have Apple devices.

You say it won't stay connected. So you see it disconnecting in the router's System Log > Wireless Log ?

HP 8710 is what I have, and I do see it on my devices on the router list
 
HP 8710 is what I have, and I do see it on my devices on the router list
The Wireless Log shows the amount of time a client has been connected to the router. If the printer is disconnecting from your network you will see the time being reset to 00:00. If the printer isn't disconnecting that would suggest a client issue.
 
The Wireless Log shows the amount of time a client has been connected to the router. If the printer is disconnecting from your network you will see the time being reset to 00:00. If the printer isn't disconnecting that would suggest a client issue.


First of all thank you for your help it’s very much appreciated!

I am currently running the stock firmware for my router ( RT AC5300) when you use the Merlin firmware what’s all has to happen if I load this firmware, and how well do you like his firmware, and does it make a difference in the proformace ?

Thank you
 
First of all thank you for your help it’s very much appreciated!

I am currently running the stock firmware for my router ( RT AC5300) when you use the Merlin firmware what’s all has to happen if I load this firmware, and how well do you like his firmware, and does it make a difference in the proformace ?

Thank you


I have never done this before so it’s the first time for me
 
I am currently running the stock firmware for my router ( RT AC5300) when you use the Merlin firmware what’s all has to happen if I load this firmware, and how well do you like his firmware, and does it make a difference in the proformace ?
You can read about Merlin's firmware here. But the main thing is "The primary goals of this project are to fix bugs, add a few basic features and tweaks to the original firmware. This firmware will try to remain as close as possible to the original firmware."

I can't comment on how well it works on your particular router because I have a different model.
 
Based on my past experience - with many different routers...

On the HP Printer, go to the WebGUI on it, and assign it a static IP that is outside of the DHCP scope of your primary router, and disable IPv6 - Airprint should work fine then.

(this little tip was discovered over on the HP support forums)

FWIW - kicked the HP to the curb after it ate up a set of carts, and moved to Brother - they're pretty good with Airprint, Google Cloud Print, and the consumables are cheaper...
 
Based on my past experience - with many different routers...

On the HP Printer, go to the WebGUI on it, and assign it a static IP that is outside of the DHCP scope of your primary router, and disable IPv6 - Airprint should work fine then.

(this little tip was discovered over on the HP support forums)

FWIW - kicked the HP to the curb after it ate up a set of carts, and moved to Brother - they're pretty good with Airprint, Google Cloud Print, and the consumables are cheaper...

What static IP address should I use? And will it still work as a wireless printer for my other computers when I do this?

Thank you very much for your time and help
 
What static IP address should I use? And will it still work as a wireless printer for my other computers when I do this?

Thank you very much for your time and help

In the Printer WebGUI - if you're DHCP LAN side is 192.168.1.0/24 for example, the printer picks the highest address in the range, which would be 192.168.1.254 in the example range I mentioned above. And that generally works with any router as long as that address isn't used by anything else, or inside the DHCP scope of the primary router.

Alternately - you could try a DHCP reservation in the Router WebGUI and link the printer's MAC address to an IP address there.
 
I used to have issue with my hp m377dw printer staying connected on 2.4ghz. I after I turned off airtime fairness it’s been working perfectly.
 
What does airtime fairness do?

I did turn it off and now my phone will print by Airprint.

Thank you very much for your time and help


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
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What does airtime fairness do?

I did turn it off and now my phone will print by Airprint.

Thank you very much for your time and help


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


from : https://routerguide.net/generic-optimization-guides/


Airtime Fairness On or Off



Airtime Fairness is a fairly common option with the latest routers, however, there aren’t any really good explanations to when and how you should take advantage of the Airtime Fairness setting. With this simple to easy guide, we hope to shed some insight to help you make the right decision and setup for your home wifi network.

How does Airtime Fairness Work
Most of the router brand tout that how Airtime can improve the overall network performance, however they do not really go into details about its meaning and how it is done, or they go over very little details about its effects on your network.

Airtime Fairness is a feature that boost the overall network performance by sacrifice a little bit of network time on your slowest devices. Note: The relatively “slow” wifi speed devices can be slow from either long physical distance, weak signal strength, or simply being a legacy device with older technology.

Airtime Fairness Example
Below is a very general example on how Airtime Fairness can improve the overall performance of wireless network.

Imagine there are two difference devices, A functioning at 1 mb / second and a faster device B that transmits at 5 mb / second. If A needs to transmit a 10 mb data, it will take A 10 seconds. This means that for B to start data transmission after A, it may need to wait the full 10 seconds before A finish their transmission.

With Airtime Fairness enabled, theoretically half of the network time will be dedicated to both of the devices A and B. This means that during the 10 seconds of network time, 5 seconds are dedicated evenly. So you have 1 mb x 5 seconds plus 5 mb x 5 seconds which result a total network performance of 30 mb / second. This is significantly higher than the original 10 mb / second possible without the Air Time Fairness. However, if you look more closely, you will notice that the slower device A achieved lower performance because some of that time is dedicated to B.

Now add another parameter to the previous example, the device B now needs to transmit 10 mb of data only. With 5 mb / second speed it can finish the wifi transmission with 2 seconds. This leaves 8 seconds of network time left for the slower device. So you have 1 mb x 8 second + 5 mb x 2 second which equals to a total of 18 mb. For granted that your slower device didn’t finish the entire transmission within the same amount of time, but your faster device is able to use some of that bandwidth first without waiting.

Airtime Fairness Conclusion
The setting takes away the monopoly in network time by the slower device (making the slower device even slower), dedicate and shift those processing time to the faster device to achieve better overall network performance.

When to use Airtime Fairness
When to Enable Airtime Fairness On?
You should generally enable Airtime Fairness when you have several devices connected to the network, especially so if you have connected legacy devices along with faster wifi devices.

Second, you should generally enable Airtime Fairness when you are offering public wifi like in a cafe or retail shop kind of scenario. You want to make sure that every customer connected to your Wifi gets their fair share of wifi data. Instead of one really slow devices that monopolize the entire network traffic.

Third, enable Airtime Fairness when you wish sacrifice some of the networking time from the slow devices, so that your faster devices can achieve better quality of service. This is similar in idea on why you should separate different technology of devices similar to the recommendation of “N Support Only” type of settings.

Based on this, here is a real life situation where you may want to enable Airtime Fairness is that you know you have a device that is fast, and you want it to be optimized “faster”.

For example, imagine you have a gaming computer located in the living room next to the router, and you have a slower family computer running bittorrent upstairs, or maybe a mobile devices like iphone, ipad, or samsung android. You want to ENABLE the airtime fairness so that your gaming computer can perform as optimally as it allowed.

When to Disable Airtime Fairness Off?
First off, not all the devices support Airtime Fairness completely. They can sometimes get confused by the reduced amount of data, this can cause fluctuating signals and occasionally dropped connection. So do disable Airtime Fairness when your devices do not play well together with the router. And hope that with better firmware and applications they can take advantage of the router configuration.

Second, you should disable Airtime Fairness when you actually want better performance on the slower device. Imagine this scenario that is opposite of the one mentioned earlier: You have a gaming computer located in your bedroom far away from the router in the living room, however there is a family computer located in the living room that is running bittorrent uncapped.

In this situation, your online gaming computer in your bedroom upstairs is time critical and important. You actually want as many network resource dedicated to that. You DO NOT want to turn on Airtime Fairness in this case. The router will dedicate more resources to the family computer (because it is faster by being closer to the router), which results in worse connection and lag for your personal gaming purposes.

The only exception to this rule is that some advanced routers allow you to specify the device that you wish to prioritize.


 
Wow if wasn't confused enough! Lol[emoji2]

I have it turned off for Joe and my iPhone and iPad are able to Airprint now.

Only device upstairs is is my IMac and it's still working like it was before I turned this function off.

I hope it continues to function properly.

Thank you very much for your time and help on this![emoji3]


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
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