Hi Joshua,
There are several factors in this which can support speed behind a mesh network.
- Speed you are getting on ethernet may or may not be equal on WiFi because WiFi is a half duplex mode of communication, unlike full duplex in Ethernet/wired network.
- Speed depends upon client supportability, compatibility, multipath (if using multiple spatial streams).
- R500 can max support upto 2 spatial streams so your client should also support it.
- Now if we talk a about WiFi speed behind a mesh AP then lets consider below.
Topology:Ethernet network/SW <<<<>>>>> A-Root AP(hardwired) -B <<<<>>>>> C-Mesh AP (WiFi bridge mode)-D <<<<<>>>>> E-Clients behind Mesh APs.
On above ideally you should get below speeds on each points
A- 1Gig over ethernet to Root AP
B- Upto 867 Mbps max over WiFi to any wireless device connecting to this AP directly.
C- Half speed of max speed of Root AP. Means 867Mbps/2= 400 Mbps~
D- AP can provide maxi speed/2 upto what it is receiving from mesh uplink (from root AP).
E- Clients can reach max 400 as that is the limitation introduced by mesh link (last mesh hop).
With each mesh hop, speed will decrease by half from its last hope. Means connecting a 2nd AP to mesh AP will further reduce the speed to 400/2.
I hope it is clear now why you are getting less speed.
If you are getting low speed on root AP then please check how close you are to AP, check if client supports 80MHz on 5G band, etc.
Regards,
Syamantak Omer
Syamantak Omer
Sr.Staff TSE | CWNA | CCNA | RCWA | RASZA | RICXI
RUCKUS Networks, CommScope!
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