So here’s the setup. I’ve built myself a “smart” home. Light switches, door locks, fans, TVs, stereo, heated floors, kitchen appliances, Roomba, automated lawn mower, sprinklers, holiday lights, security system, thermostats, etc., are all hooked up and run through our internet. This is on top of the standard computers, phones, and game systems. Overall, approximately 70-80 items are on the same network.

I am utilizing a 1 gig fiber optic service through AT&T with their equipment (all in one modem/router) BGW210. Most of the automated systems are on the 2.4GHz network while the more important stuff is on the 5GHz network. At times, everything works great and I can get 250-300Mbs on wireless devices. But more often than not, it seems as though the myriad of devices are causing the network to bog down and when I want to stream something, it can’t do so properly due to lack of speed. On regular occasion our computer will even bog down and read at 1-5 Mbs for 5-10 mins before going back to normal. (wired connection to the work computer and game systems are fine).

So this leads to my questions-

  1. Is the network divided up equally among each device? If so, is there something I can do with my current set up that will limit speeds to everything except items of my choosing (computers and streaming devices)?

  2. Would buying a router and setting it up as an access point solely for all of the automated devices allow me to accomplish what I’m trying to do (ie- can I throttle just the secondary router)?

  3. Other ideas?

  4. What is causing the sudden drops in my internet speed? Is that simply due to the large amount of devices on my network or is it an issue with my service? I understand slow speeds when multiple devices are actively using bandwidth, but when nothing is being actively used other than a single device, why would I get a drop to 1Mb?

  • bald2718281828@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    The root-cause may be that you have locked client devices to the 5Ghz radio when they really need to use the 2.4Ghz radio sometimes, like on rainy days.

    Possibly consider to put the boggy devices onto the 2.4Ghz not the 5Ghz, as a test ?

    Also consider to let the clients decide which radio to use, 2.4Ghz or 5Ghz, as another test?

    Your router/wifi/hub thang may provide visibility into TX/RX error counters per client to give you an idea if you are trying to get too much distance out of 5Ghz vis-a-vis these tests or your baseline setup.