fatspirit
Regular Contributor
It actually is But doesn't at least on Quad Security.Works for me. Cloudflare DoT
It actually is But doesn't at least on Quad Security.Works for me. Cloudflare DoT
I had all kinds of issues with quad9, dumped it and has been smooth since.It actually is But doesn't at least on Quad Security.
Merlin and John have no control over WiFi drivers, they just use pre-compiled binaries from Asus. DD-WRT has a deal with Broadcom, so they get newest drivers.Am I the only one with WiFi issues on 2.4 and 5 ghz with the latest release on a RT-AC66U (no B1)? If i check my ISP speed with ookla connected to the router with your latest LTS version I only get about 2.5 MB/s and with an older WDR4300 (N750) with DDWRT I get about 5.8 MB/s. Didn't yet tested any other of your releases since I switched back to the latest Merlin release 380.70 which is currently more or less stable for me. With Merlin I reach at least the same speed as I can get with the older WDR4300. Same Spots for testing, repeated it several times with only 1 active device in the network
Looks like you do. What is your nominal Internet speed? What is your Wi-Fi channel width?Am I the only one with WiFi issues on 2.4 and 5 ghz with the latest release on a RT-AC66U (no B1)?
I don't chase the 'latest' wireless drivers for the fork. Haven't touched the wireless in almost a year since the KRACK fix integration.Am I the only one with WiFi issues on 2.4 and 5 ghz with the latest release on a RT-AC66U (no B1)?
I had a problem with the Oneplus 6 WIFI causes my RT66U router to reboot.
On Reddit i found a solution to turn off HW acceleration.
https://www.reddit.com/r/OnePlus6/comments/8suqm8/oneplus_6_wifi_reboots_asus_rtn66u_router/
After that i didn't had any reboots issues.
That's interesting.....802.11d (handles power level negotiation) has been deprecated. So, newer devices may get upset, although they should probably just ignore it. Older devices may require it. I have a Linksys WUMC710 Media Bridge which refuses to connect if it's not set.I had the same issue with my OP6. Disabling NAT acceleration solves the issue, but you get a significantly slower router with that solution. I found that you don't have to disable NAT acceleration, just change regulation mode from 802.11d+h to 802.11h on the 5ghz network.
That's interesting.....802.11d (handles power level negotiation) has been deprecated. So, newer devices may get upset, although they should probably just ignore it. Older devices may require it. I have a Linksys WUMC710 Media Bridge which refuses to connect if it's not set.
You reported a similar problem earlier in the year with PS3's.
If you have Universal Beamforming turned on you should disable it.
Interesting. Quite plausible IMHO because, 1) smart TV's have an annoying tendency nowadays to have WiFi-Direct enabled effectively turning them into access points (on the same channel), and b) TV's tend to be placed right next to your games console - ideal for interference.However I think that turning on my Hisense smart TV might have been the thing that was killing the PS4 connections.
Is there anything suspicious in the system log?Any thoughts?
Is there anything suspicious in the system log?
Your screenshot is too small to read.Just before it shows up in the log, the Gear S3 was stuck at "connecting...", I rebooted it, then forgot the network and signed in. I don't see anything before it joined then. On an unrelated note, the device @ .103 is my Obi 202 voip adapter, it seems very busy. The phone is sitting idle, is that normal activity?
Use the snipping tool in windows 10...just search for snipping. Your image text is too smallJust before it shows up in the log, the Gear S3 was stuck at "connecting...", I rebooted it, then forgot the network and signed in. I don't see anything before it joined then. On an unrelated note, the device @ .103 is my Obi 202 voip adapter, it seems very busy. The phone is sitting idle, is that normal activity?
(Default Build - All supported routers)
609b98530bcd7eee66801de92371c5dccec20016abb01b36aac1ff98c2fa2140 RT-N16_374.43_37E4j9527.trx
5fbd3ba7d27883be30c46ae57f4bb7131eab8665c225eb91f73b269b5a2d51a0 RT-AC66U_374.43_37E4j9527.trx
3a34ea8385b9a4fb34acae73b8994a0ec27c11221103c02f7d430fbd4b1c40db RT-N66U_374.43_37E4j9527.trx
396df043cf7ff99af2a164e431377038281b6fd1c4d749761bc4a3d340912bd4 RT-AC68U_374.43_37E4j9527.trx
37ac3069c688e08f071ed9e841576f5b625fd7bc26b1b78842efa788549071ae RT-AC56U_374.43_37E4j9527.trx
(Legacy Only Builds)
9d31c752d33488ab619155d0bb6e5326e6c273137b3c5407ef1c45cf3008180a RT-AC68U_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-37L4j9527.trx
f6b9ad8d9e96d5773ce13f53c03991ca636ab1eb3567bb301f07af66341bbb13 RT-AC56U_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-37L4j9527.trx
516d9161ded42d679d677ce9ac76b28d86d42fd3714d89515479aafee8202756 RT-N16_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-37L4j9527.trx
6914a88daa6e11bf7b7cf73d714a0899acdc22621d203cf9de4a35712dbbe20c RT-AC66U_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-37L4j9527.trx
9101a8617ebf0d22743188f1f193c960715bbb3530249ab4f5ec013bfeaf3ef6 RT-N66U_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-37L4j9527.trx
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