F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Suggestions for Aimesh setup and questions

Suggestions for Aimesh setup and questions

Suggestions for Aimesh setup and questions

X
xImFizzy
Member
213
05-16-2016, 06:29 PM
#1
Hey everyone... my name is Jimmy, and I'm working on improving how I manage my ASUS and ROG Wi-Fi routers. My house is about 2200 sq ft and has a single level. The main router is in a bathroom media closet. I have fiber internet from CenturyLink at 960 Mbps, but the signal was weak on the other side, so I swapped it with a RT-AX86U. That helped a bit, but I discovered something interesting about Aimesh and found a ROG GS-AX5400 on Facebook for a lower price. I connected it wirelessly to the opposite side of the house. The setup got better, though download speeds remained slow throughout the house.

Recently, I got a RT-AX82U and a GT-AX11000 from a friend. I tried connecting the AX82U wirelessly in my garage, but it didn’t work very well—sometimes it wouldn’t even show as connected. Right now, I have the main router as the RT-AX86U, the GS-AX5400 wired into the 86u as a node, and the AX82U as a wireless one (which isn’t quite working). The GT-AX11000 hasn’t been added yet.

Now I’m wondering: with all these random routers, which should be my main one? I just finished hardwiring two new locations with Cat6 cabling, so I can add more routers later to cover the whole house. Should I sell the routers I bought and just use three of the same model for nodes? Would that make things more stable?

Thanks for your help!
X
xImFizzy
05-16-2016, 06:29 PM #1

Hey everyone... my name is Jimmy, and I'm working on improving how I manage my ASUS and ROG Wi-Fi routers. My house is about 2200 sq ft and has a single level. The main router is in a bathroom media closet. I have fiber internet from CenturyLink at 960 Mbps, but the signal was weak on the other side, so I swapped it with a RT-AX86U. That helped a bit, but I discovered something interesting about Aimesh and found a ROG GS-AX5400 on Facebook for a lower price. I connected it wirelessly to the opposite side of the house. The setup got better, though download speeds remained slow throughout the house.

Recently, I got a RT-AX82U and a GT-AX11000 from a friend. I tried connecting the AX82U wirelessly in my garage, but it didn’t work very well—sometimes it wouldn’t even show as connected. Right now, I have the main router as the RT-AX86U, the GS-AX5400 wired into the 86u as a node, and the AX82U as a wireless one (which isn’t quite working). The GT-AX11000 hasn’t been added yet.

Now I’m wondering: with all these random routers, which should be my main one? I just finished hardwiring two new locations with Cat6 cabling, so I can add more routers later to cover the whole house. Should I sell the routers I bought and just use three of the same model for nodes? Would that make things more stable?

Thanks for your help!

S
S3xyGam3r
Junior Member
3
05-17-2016, 05:32 AM
#2
You're likely positioning the wireless device near the edge of Wi-Fi range or too near another node. For best performance, I recommend using the AX11000 as the primary router. My brother uses three RT-AC59U units; his third node is in his bedroom but still connects to the main node (second floor) with a less stable connection shown as an orange/red line in the ASUS app. Sometimes it switches back to connecting to the second node, which is closer and has a green line. It seems AIMesh can't determine the optimal node automatically.
S
S3xyGam3r
05-17-2016, 05:32 AM #2

You're likely positioning the wireless device near the edge of Wi-Fi range or too near another node. For best performance, I recommend using the AX11000 as the primary router. My brother uses three RT-AC59U units; his third node is in his bedroom but still connects to the main node (second floor) with a less stable connection shown as an orange/red line in the ASUS app. Sometimes it switches back to connecting to the second node, which is closer and has a green line. It seems AIMesh can't determine the optimal node automatically.