Wifi Channel
#1
Posted 02 July 2010 - 11:24 PM
Someone at work told me I should try changing the channel my router operates on to improve performance. Channel refers to the frequency slice being used. My router was at 1, which might well be a default. So I changed it to 10. Now I'm getting much better transfer speeds (~500KB/s instead of < 100) and more importantly to me, much better netplay performance. It seemed to be missing a lot of packets before, which is relative murder on synchronous streaming via TCP.
So if your wifi performance isn't that great I recommend experimenting with this. The options, if there at all, should be accessible via your router's web-based configuration. If this helps you please post in this thread about it.
One more tip - my coworker told me that channel 11 is reserved for Japan and not an option on all routers. It is an option on mine, so if it is on yours and all else fails you might want to give it a try, since it's much less likely that others in the vicinity will be using it.
#2
Posted 02 July 2010 - 11:34 PM
#3
Posted 02 July 2010 - 11:41 PM
#4
Posted 02 July 2010 - 11:51 PM
i'm a noob on that, but changing channel could improve speeds where you have other access points operating in the same channel, causing interferences and packet dropping.
Yes, but of course unless you live out in the country you could have other wireless hot spots all around you, and other protocols in the 2.4GHz range.
#5
Posted 02 July 2010 - 11:56 PM
these are things i've heard, i never tested it exhaustively though
Edited by Alerino, 02 July 2010 - 11:56 PM.
#6
Posted 03 July 2010 - 12:18 AM
#7
Posted 03 July 2010 - 12:30 AM
and that's what exophase meant, i think,
when you are outside, you can't always pick the channel you want, only at home
Edited by Alerino, 03 July 2010 - 12:32 AM.
#8
Posted 03 July 2010 - 12:42 AM
BTW, I was always under the impression that channels 1-11 were available in the US, and 1-14 in Japan. Wikipedia says so, and that 1-13 are available in most of Europe.
#9
Posted 03 July 2010 - 12:55 AM
#10
Posted 03 July 2010 - 01:28 AM
#11
Posted 03 July 2010 - 01:51 AM
Brilliant! It's best to use non-overlapping channels whenever possible: 1, 6, and 11. 11 has been the default on every device I think I've owned, with a few third party routers being channel 6.
In a terminal window, type "iwconfig" and find the line that reads "Frequency=2.4XX" and match that number to this
It wouldn't surprise me if the Pandora were on channel 11 (2.462) by default, and anyone using a different channel was getting poor connection quality.
Although technically, if your router is 1 and the Pandora 11, there should be no overlap at all and they shouldn't even be seeing each other. Unless the Pandora's wifi does some kind of channel surfing that my wifi stick doesn't do. Is that a normal feature now?
#12
Posted 03 July 2010 - 01:55 AM
The 2.4Ghz spectrum is saturated. Wireless headphones, cordless phones, cellphones, wireless cameras, remote control cars. Each one can take a tiny slice of the 2.4Ghz pie, but it adds up, and if your router happens to be broadcasting on the same channel as your cordless phone, for example, you're going to lose signal every time the phone rings. I imagine there are more things at the low end of the 2.4Ghz spectrum than in the middle or upper end of it.Do you know why changing the channel improves performance? Is the Pandora currently bad at connecting on low channels, or is there simply more interference from other APs on those channels in the places this has been experimented with?
#13
Posted 03 July 2010 - 01:57 AM
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Brilliant! It's best to use non-overlapping channels whenever possible: 1, 6, and 11. 11 has been the default on every device I think I've owned, with a few third party routers being channel 6.
In a terminal window, type "iwconfig" and find the line that reads "Frequency=2.4XX" and match that number to this
It wouldn't surprise me if the Pandora were on channel 11 (2.462) by default, and anyone using a different channel was getting poor connection quality.
Although technically, if your router is 1 and the Pandora 11, there should be no overlap at all and they shouldn't even be seeing each other. Unless the Pandora's wifi does some kind of channel surfing that my wifi stick doesn't do. Is that a normal feature now?
I think its standard that a wifi chip checks all channels for networks, and then sets its own channel when you connect, same for the pandora.
#14
Posted 03 July 2010 - 02:06 AM
Yeah, I thought my wifi stick was doing something it wasn't supposed to. I'm going to have to kick it now. My Wii and laptop have no problem changing channels to match my router. Why my USB stick doesn't is probably a driver issue that I will sort out later. I'll imagine the Pandora is doing it right.I think its standard that a wifi chip checks all channels for networks, and then sets its own channel when you connect, same for the pandora.
#15
Posted 03 July 2010 - 02:07 AM
The 2.4Ghz spectrum is saturated. Wireless headphones, cordless phones, cellphones, wireless cameras, remote control cars. Each one can take a tiny slice of the 2.4Ghz pie, but it adds up, and if your router happens to be broadcasting on the same channel as your cordless phone, for example, you're going to lose signal every time the phone rings. I imagine there are more things at the low end of the 2.4Ghz spectrum than in the middle or upper end of it.
Do you know why changing the channel improves performance? Is the Pandora currently bad at connecting on low channels, or is there simply more interference from other APs on those channels in the places this has been experimented with?
Spectral assignment differs by country though. I know it's different here in the UK to the US.











