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BE88 and BE92U aimesh

northumberland

Regular Contributor
Using the BE92U as the main router and the 92U as a node..

WiFi 6ghz - how to configure?

Thanks
 
Using the BE92U as the main router and the 92U as a node..

WiFi 6ghz - how to configure?

Thanks
With that username would you be in the uk? No 6GHz here.
 
What is your ISP service speed? If 2.5 Gbps (or lower) you can run the RT-BE92U as primary router and RT-BE88U as node.

I have a GT-BE98 Pro (dual 6 GHz) and for a while a GT-AXE16000 (dual 5 GHz) as node, then realized no control nor access to 5 GHz-2. So ended up placing it in AP mode (with static IP).
 
???
It's running on my RT-BE92U.
You suggesting you have 6GHz wifi running on a router in the uk? Don't be telling everyone - we're still limited to the U-NII-4 (upper 5GHz) band.
 
That didn't answer my question.
Do you have the 6GHz band available on your router? This question is for the uk on an Asus router that's currently available - your RT-BE92U specifically. Proof?
My RT-BE88U will only ever go to 177 on 5GHz.
The BE88U is dual band but the BE92U is tri-band.

EDIT- More specifically the BE88U is limited to 2.4 and 5 GHz, while the BE92U has the 6 GHz as third band. (So far limited to low power indoor use of the lower half of the 6 GHz spectrum).
 
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I'm still not seeing a reply to my question. I'll drop it and re-add you to my ignore list, as you are clearly ignoring me.
 
I'm still not seeing a reply to my question. I'll drop it and re-add you to my ignore list, as you are clearly ignoring me.
I'm sorry but your router does not have 6 GHz capability. That is the reason you aren't able to use it...
 
That didn't answer my question.
Do you have the 6GHz band available on your router? This question is for the uk on an Asus router that's currently available - your RT-BE92U specifically. Proof?
My RT-BE88U will only ever go to 177 on 5GHz.
Yes.

I also have a laptop that connected to it in the 6GHz band.

Although in the end I switched it off for client connexions and reserved it for the AIMesh backhaul, as I have an older node (RT-AC86U) which doesn't run 6GHz and it seemed to cause problems when a client using 6GHz switched to it.
I don't really need it for clients.
 

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Yes.

I also have a laptop that connected to it in the 6GHz band.

Although in the end I switched it off for client connexions and reserved it for the AIMesh backhaul, as I have an older node (RT-AC86U) which doesn't run 6GHz and it seemed to cause problems when a client using 6GHz switched to it.
I don't really need it for clients.
You may consider separating AXE/AC to Access Point mode as I mentioned in this thread somewhere. Not quite AiMesh but works reasonably with WAM enabled on all bands. (I am not sure WAM is available on AC routers, because currently my AC68U is a node on an AXE mesh)...
 
But yes as you experienced mesh works same band to same band, same channel to same channel, and same bandwidth to same bandwidth. It does not hop from one to another...
 
Yes.

I also have a laptop that connected to it in the 6GHz band.

Although in the end I switched it off for client connexions and reserved it for the AIMesh backhaul, as I have an older node (RT-AC86U) which doesn't run 6GHz and it seemed to cause problems when a client using 6GHz switched to it.
I don't really need it for clients.
What bugs me is that 6 GHz shows "20/40/80/160/320 MHz". The 6 GHz radio is 2x2 and supports a maximum 5764 Mbps, which is up to 160 MHz only. Why is 320 even there?....
 
Sorry I'm late to this thread... but just to make sure I understand correctly, if the BE88U (dual band) is the main router, and the BE92U (tri-band) is an AI Mesh Node connected via wired backhaul, the BE92U will just operate in dual band mode? Is that correct?

I have a BE88U as my router, but I need coverage near my back deck for when I sit out there, was thinking of a BE92U since its a little less expensive than a getting another BE88U
 
@KidJoe Yes there would be no way to control 6 GHz properly.

My question was not answered though. If your ISP service is 2.5 Gbps or less, the RT-BE92U can handle passing through full ISP speeds to the RT-BE88U via Ethernet backhaul.
 

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