cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Loss of speed when 160 or 80+80 enabled on R720

currancchs
New Contributor

Just finished setting up some new APs (2xRuckus R720s) and am having some trouble with WiFi throughput when 160Mhz channels are enabled on my 5Ghz band. I am in a rural area on a 2 acre lot and there is very little to no interference on any channel (although I do have three Rokus, two of which insist on using the same channel as my router to connect to their remote - I have wired the one that doesn't behave this way and unplugged the rest for testing with no change).

When running 5Ghz VHT (i.e. 80Mhz channels), I see about 400-600mbps, averaging about 450mbps using iPerf3 back to the router ("iperf -c ipaddress -n 1024m"). PHY reads as 866/866 using WiFiMan app from a Pixel 7 Pro running Android 14. This is what I expect and I am very happy with this. I see very similar speeds when running iPerf tests to other wired devices and see a very consistent 950mbps when running tests between the router and wired devices.

When i change the 5Ghz band to use 160Mhz channels, however, I see PHY rates drop, especially PHY down. iPerf speed tests also show reduced throughput on download (e.g. anywhere from 300mbps to 30mbps, it is very inconsistent). Upload speeds, however (iperf -c ipaddress -n 1024m -R) are better than when at 80Mhz (e.g. 600-900mbps). Interestingly, testing through the Ruckus unleashed app shows nearly 650mbps both up and down.

Changing back to 80Mhz channels does NOT resolve the issue. Even a reboot of the APs fails to make any difference. What DOES make a difference is changing the "Channel Optimization" setting (Country code on the APs is set to USA). I have found that it does not matter what you change it to, just that you change it (i.e. the problem presents itself whether you choose compatibility, interoperability, or performance mode and 160Mhz or 80+80 channels on 5Ghz and the problem is resolved by going back to 80Mhz channels and then changing the channel optimization setting to anything other than the current selection). It took me quite a while to figure this out, mostly through trial and error.

Now a bit about my network overall, I am using a Dell Poweredge R210 ii with 16gb of ECC ram and a Xeon 3.2Ghz cpu running PfSense CE as my router, which is fed from a cable modem (Netgear CM600). Dual stack IPv4/IPv6 is enabled on the network and working fine.

The router is plugged into a Netgear 8 port POE+ switch, which feeds 2xR720s located at opposite ends of my home (two story, about 1800 square feet). Each ruckus AP is powered by Trendnet 90w POE injectors, since they require POE++ to function fully. The power setting in each AP is also manually set to bt. One POE injector is located about 10' away from the AP while the other is about 75' away.

PfSense and the APs are all on the latest possible firmware as of today (APs are on unleashed 200.15.6.12.304 and PfSense is version 2.7.2-RELEASE). The latest version of Ruckus unleashed was just released a few days ago and I was running 200.14 before that with the same exact issue.

Now, 500mbps is fine for my needs (especially for a phone!), since my servers/NAS/bandwidth hogs are all wired, but I would like to be able to have throughput that is at least as good as the old, consumer grade router at my workplace and it just bothers me that I can't get it to work. Anyone have any idea what could be going on or have any suggestions as to how to further narrow down what the issue is?

Thanks for reading!

7 REPLIES 7

You don't need a 2.5Gb switch to use the R720, you just won't received 2.5Gb speed, which unless you have a 2.5Gb connection won't matter anyways.

 

You also don't need PoE++, you get more 5GHz transmit with bt PoE, but no worse than the 710 on at.

  • R710 802.3af: 19/20dBm (2.4/5GHz)

  • R710 802.3at: 22/20dBm

  • R720 802.3af: 18/20dBm

  • R720 802.3at: 18/20dBm

  • R720 802.3bt: 23/22dBm

At 22dBm per chain with 3dBm antenna gain you're hitting 31dBm EIRP for a 4x4 AP, which will probably blow the regulatory limit in a lot of locations anyway (often 30 is the limit). 29 is still outrageously high transmit power for most situations.

I'd be inclined not to worry about the PoE and definitely not the 2.5 Gb port... Have two of them running at home off of two Rucks ICX7150 switches.

Thank you for the information, especially your mention of regulatory limits, which is not something I had previously considered and will look into more closely. Re: the 2.5gbps port, my post was poorly phrased; I know I can use it since I am using that port for poe. I had intended to convey that I could not fully utilize it with my setup (both because of 1gbps switches/NICs and because my NAS, the fastest local device, can't serve faster than a 1gbps connection can handle anyways. I am actually already running 802.11bt, just to be able to max things out, but it is not necessary, I agree.

david_lipkin
New Contributor II

I don't think that the 720 supports wifi-6/802.11ax. The literature seems to say 802.11ac and below. Do I have that wrong?