@ww
Correct, I do understand the issues with the Wi-Fi spectrum. My thoughts on the AP situation is that an AP, still, is just an Access Point to the LAN just like Access Switches - each switch has at MOST 48 ports that each support up to 1Gbps.
Currently, the ideal uplink for a physical switch is the SFP ports that can transmit up to 10Gbps of aggregated data per port.
Since a Wi-Fi AP is nothing but a wireless access switch, and today's standards of Wireless connectivity can theoretically reach speeds over 1Gbps - even if those end devices does not reach those speeds - the data transmitted to and from multiple devices can definitely add up; the trunk (or uplink) from a Wi-Fi AP, just like any physical switch, should be able to handle an aggregated amount of speed above the theoretical max.
This is why this is concerning to me - I often tend to see in other businesses there is something causing slowness on the network (Gig switches uplinked via one CAT5 or CAT6 cable), and in some cases the bottleneck is more than likely the uplink of the switches; Just think the same goes for a lot of Wi-Fi setups as well.