I don’t know too much about routers and how wifi works, but my parents bought a “gaming” router a year back or so and it’s been absolutely amazing, even all the way from my room which is at the opposite end of the house. Thing is, when I’d take some time off from college to hop on my Playstation, the TV in the living room would lag when they tried to watch football or movies so, one day they messed with it somehow. They made two wi-fi networks to connect to: “Template” and “Template5G” and they said they’re moving the “better wifi” to 5G and only the TV could use it. It worked for a while but now… goddamn. A 10GB update for a game I have takes 3 hours or so now. Even the TV doesn’t work and the wifi is just super slow and sometimes will spike and completely not work from time to time. I even recommended to my dad that maybe if we put the router higher in the room, we’d get better connection? So, they taped/nailed it behind the top of the TV and called it a day. Anyways, I need some help… I don’t even mind if ya’ll use words I don’t understand, I’ll learn. Thanks for reading ;
Edit: I don’t know if this is important but it also sttes we have “weak security” under our wifi networks.
TL;DR my parents messed with some wifi settings and now it doesn’t act right/it’s slower for everyone
On a modern router like that, it would have a smart connect feature which would automatically connect you to the router speed with the fastest signal that your device supports (either 2.4ghz or 5ghz). Once your parents created two different networks to connect to and each network only broadcasts one signal and said only they can use the 5g signal, they took away the faster signal from you and making you use the much slower 2.4ghz network speed.
Also, if simply playing on your playstation online but not downloading anything caused their tv to lag, you probably have a slow internet connection to begin with. Nothing you can do about that besides calling your isp and upgrading your plan.
I’m yet to see any of those so-called smart connect actually put 5GHz devices on the 5GHz network.
Roaming is ultimately up to the client, and SO many things implement “stay on the first one it sees until there’s better signal” which usually means it goes for 2.4GHz.
Far better to split them and have one SSID for 5GHz, connect EVERYTHING that supports 5GHz to that network (there’s more bandwidth, more non-overlapping channels, fewer things to interfere) and only use 2.4GHz for things that don’t support 5GHz (usually lower end IoT)
Older/cheaper smart connect devices are less efficient. If you are on a newer, powerful broadcasting signal gaming type router, it’s far more effective.
But I agree about splitting them. I have a cheap router and have them split into two seperate SSID’s
Not necessarily, TVs don’t tend to have the best network adapters.
Ehh, playing a game online uses such a small amount of data though.