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Strange issue with RT-AC5300 on 2.4GHz

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So, the problem has returned. The client is .10 now. And when it plugged in via ethernet, the 2.4ghz band becomes unusable once again. Juat to see,i went back to .50, and that one still doesn't work. I made it something that is not .10 or .50, and it works again. Somehow this client is poisoning IP addresses, and I dont understand underlying process here. I even reimaged the client, when it came back up, if I give it either of those 2 addresses, its a no go. Its obviously not practical to keep changing the IP every week, im going to run out of viable addresses. I've never seen anything like this. I mean, i wish i could do away completely with the 2.4ghz band, but I have devices all over the house that can only use it (thermostats, wyzecam, rokus ..ect). Im starting to think maybe other devices are looking for it and gumming up the network somehow. I'm getting desperate for ideas at this point.
 
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the oddest thing I've ever heard of... something is poisoning the well and as others have said since I last commented, they have had similar issues... doubtful it's the original .50 box at this point... past that, I'd seriously look at your assorted low-end iot clients, their possible interaction with win10 (msoft is always a bag-of-crap, full of surprises)- thinking registry seeding from iot(s)... as well, those iot clients may be individually shoveling tcp/udp nonsense... do you have a wireshark/802 client sniffer?... of course this all started with an aimesh build out (wth?)... now I'm damn curious to find out what the issue is, eventually...
 
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Do you have any mods or scripts that mess with arp cache ? Any possibility one of the devices is mimicking the MAC address of the 2.4g radio ?
 
I know it's been a few weeks, but I think I identified the culprit of this strange problem in case anyone is interested. To reiterate, the home server I have configured has a couple purposes. It's a plex media server, a backup server and I also have iSpy agent on there to record video on a couple of my security cameras (of various makes and models). When I originally thought the media server was the problem, it was because it would go away if I unplugged it from the network. However, I have been been investigating if there were specific services that might be the problem. I came to discover that the issue would go away if I stopped the iSpy agent server that watched the cameras. Aha! So this thing watches 5 Cams, 2 are PoE connected ethernet, the other 3 are wyzecams that use the 2.4ghz band to connect. I also didn't start using iSpy agent until about a week before I attempted the AImesh that started this whole thing (the timing of which seems to have all been a coincidence at this point).

To continue, in order to get the Wyzecams to show up in the iSpy software, you need to install special RTSP firmware from Wyze as this ability isn't available on stock firmware. After looking specifically at issues with RTSP on Wyzecams, I've seen many threads complaining about how the RTSP firmware kills WiFi networks, even though the bandwidth they actually use when streaming isn't even close to taxing the network in any significant way. Wyze has also said they don't put many resources into maintaining this firmware. So, now that I'm fairly confident I have found what device/s are causing this, I started to think of some solutions. Preferably that don't involve throwing out the cameras (though Wyze cams are pretty inexpensive).

First what I did was bust out my old router again (AC66U), and add it as an AP in the network. I connected the Wyzecams to that with a unique SSID so they have a dedicated 2.4g radio for themselves. Oddly enough, when I turned the iSpy agent service back on, the 2.4ghz network plunged once again. So, ok, there must be something these Cameras are doing that is pinging everything in the subnet, some protocol I'm not familiar with. So my last idea was to configure my old router as a router, give it its own subnet (192.168.2.0), and connect the wyzecams to that. That way, whatever junk they're sending out (if it is indeed isolated to the subnet) shouldn't effect all my other 2.4g devices. I went ahead and flipped the Agent service back on, watched the Cams come back up, measured the speed of the 2.4g network..... No drop. In the past I would have needed to change the IP of the server to get it to work temporarily with everything turned on.

I wanted to post this update in case anyone has a similar issue, as niche as it probably is. I still don't know what those cams are doing that causes it, but isolating them on their own subnet has saved me the trouble of replacing with another brand. Thanks to everyone that tried to help.
 
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I can report that with the 386 (beta) on both the GT-AC5300 main + AC1900 mesh node with wireless backhaul - things have been VERY stable - it has not gone down at all. I also had the mesh as .10 static IP - now removed that. I moved about 16 of my IoT/always on devices to a 2.4GHz guest network (that is also synced to all nodes). So far good (been 2-3 weeks I think)... Cheers!
 

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