pete y testing
Very Senior Member
bypass the active antennas for the MU-MIMO test.
just a question have you actually tested the difference between these active antennas and and equivalent non active antenna set and if so what where the results
pete
bypass the active antennas for the MU-MIMO test.
just a question have you actually tested the difference between these active antennas and and equivalent non active antenna set and if so what where the results
pete
No. They are part of the design. NETGEAR Ok's MU-MIMO testing without them because I directly cable for that test so signal level isn't a problem. It actually has to be attenuated to not overload the Veriwave.just a question have you actually tested the difference between these active antennas and and equivalent non active antenna set and if so what where the results
you could see there could be a slight performance gain by having the amplifiers right at the antenna.
The theory behind Netgear's design is indeed quite sound.
The theory behind Netgear's design is indeed quite sound. My only personal concern is if the unamplified signal going up the antenna might be more susceptible to noise, which means the amplifier at the end of the circuit might end up increasing the amount of noise while amplifying it, versus amplifying it right at the output of the radio. That means the line going from the radio to the end of the antenna will need to be very well shielded, or the amp's filter to be very well finetuned.
plz explain that , they are claiming that the routers are getting more powerful and that causes reduced speed and range ?
while the benefit to inbound is a net plus.
I can't offer an OTA comparison. But the charts provide some idea of relative performance.i guess what im asking is if you sit and test the r8500 against say the asus rt-ac5300 is there a real world difference coverage wise at distance between the two with the same client as this i havnt seen compared
i guess what im asking is if you sit and test the r8500 against say the asus rt-ac5300 is there a real world difference coverage wise at distance between the two with the same client as this i havnt seen compared
(unless the marketing department took over at that point and was satisfied with just the theory)
Could be interference from neighboring WiFi systems. Is the problem on both 2.4 and 5 GHz?
Haven't tested on 2.4Ghz, only on 5Ghz. It's only been an issue for the past few weeks sadly, so it might not be the hardware itself. Will look into if the upstairs neighbors changed anything on their wireless.

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