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mag2001

macrumors 6502
Original poster
May 24, 2007
268
70
San Antonio, TX
Which one do i use i had it on 2.4 but my cordless phones are 2.4 so is it ok to switch it to 5ghz? when the phone rings my wireless signal goes out sometimes
 
you can change the channel that it uses there are 11 channels on 2.4 ghz or just keep using the 5 ghz
 
Hey, how do you check what channel a wireless phone is on? We have a couple in the house and have been having a lot of trouble with the signal dropping out frequently. I tried to check everything but had no idea how to figure out if the wireless phones were possible interfering.
 
Is there any difference in range between 2.4 and 5? Any other differences? Performance?
 
leave it on 2.4ghz, channel 11, and turn on interfearance robustness..

or go 5ghz and loose the reach but gain a tad but of speed..

really depends what u want
 
The range should not be a worry, since going into the 5Ghz range would give you less chance of interference and faster speeds, if you configure your router to run ONLY in N mode. Of course, your internet experience is not going to go any faster than it is capped at, but you can transfer files over your LAN at faster speeds.
However, do not run in 5Ghz if you want backwards compatibility for b/g wireless cards. Examples can include friends or relatives coming over and they do not have the new N cards in their systems, etc.
 
I have my B/G Extreme a yard or so from my N Extreme (set to 5GHz 802.11n-only) and the range of the 5GHz n-only network exceeds the G network. Maybe it's the lack of interference on the 5GHz freq? :confused:
 
FWIW: My experience is that using 802.11a (5GHz) drains the battery in laptops faster than when using 802.11b/g (2.4GHz). This is with my work laptop (a PC) and I'm not sure if acts in the same way when using 802.11n.
 
Hey, how do you check what channel a wireless phone is on? We have a couple in the house and have been having a lot of trouble with the signal dropping out frequently. I tried to check everything but had no idea how to figure out if the wireless phones were possible interfering.

Check the manufacturer's web site or the paperwork that came with it if you still have it? The average wireless phone these days is probably 2.4GHz, except for the really cheap ones that are still 900MHz or the more expensive ones that are 5GHz.
 
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