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Data Rates of clients connected via MR36's
All our clients connected to the MR36's show a low Data Rate as % of client max:
The above is for one client I selected at random. I have never seen any above 50%
In Wireless>Access Control, I have the following settings:
All the clients are Windows 10.
Is this normal? I am curious as to why this is not closer to 100% of the client max.
Thanks in advance
Steve
Solved! Go to solution.
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>Would that then allow the clients to operate at Data Rates >50% of the client max?
Let me make up some numbers to illustrate the point.
Lets say a client has 100MB of data to send. There is a fixed amount of RF airtime. If they send that data at 11Mb/s it will take twice as much airtime as sending it at 22Mb/s. The airtime can only be used by one client at a time. So by consuming such a large chunk of airtime, it leaves a lot less for everyone else to use, causing their throughput to be much lower, even though they might have a high connection speed.
Even one single client with a low-speed connection transferring data hurts the performance of every other client. Worse still - they don't even have to be on your WiFi network. They could be on your neighbours.
So typically you don't want to allow low-speed clients. A minimum bit rate of 12Mb/s is pretty standard these days.
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Change the minimum data rate to 12Mb/s. This disables all the slow legacy protocols.
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Thanks for the reply Philip.
I will change that as soon as I get the chance.
Would that then allow the clients to operate at Data Rates >50% of the client max?
I'm interested to understand how changing the minimum support would cause the others to run at a higher rate?
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>Would that then allow the clients to operate at Data Rates >50% of the client max?
Let me make up some numbers to illustrate the point.
Lets say a client has 100MB of data to send. There is a fixed amount of RF airtime. If they send that data at 11Mb/s it will take twice as much airtime as sending it at 22Mb/s. The airtime can only be used by one client at a time. So by consuming such a large chunk of airtime, it leaves a lot less for everyone else to use, causing their throughput to be much lower, even though they might have a high connection speed.
Even one single client with a low-speed connection transferring data hurts the performance of every other client. Worse still - they don't even have to be on your WiFi network. They could be on your neighbours.
So typically you don't want to allow low-speed clients. A minimum bit rate of 12Mb/s is pretty standard these days.
