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#11
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On 19/12/14 11:39, Roger wrote:
On 19/12/2014 03:38, Bill Wright wrote: I put this on uk tv broadcast but then thought there'll be more people on here who would know about wifi, so here it is on here as well. I have wifi analyser app on my phone, and I also have a wi-spy thingy. Why are almost all wifis on channels 1, 6, or 11? I can see that they are form the only combination of three channels that don't overlap at all, but I would have thought that better results would be obtained in many cases by using the other channels, especially the ones midway between the over-occupied ones. I was at a friend's house last night and she was complaining that her wifi didn't work too well. This was an old house with thick walls. The modem was in the dining room and in the kitchen next door the signal was very poor, but usable I would have thought. But in most locations in the room the signal on the same channel (11) from the house across the road (by chance the kitchen window faces across the road to the living room of the opposite cottage, where their modem is). This is a village high street, with quite dense housing. Behind my friend's property and about 40m from her house is a new estate. Stepping outside and walking a few yards I found seven other wifis, all on channel 11. So I wrote down the occupancy on each channel, as found by walking along the pavement on both sides for 10 paces up the road and ten paces down the road, and also from standing at one point at the bottom the garden near the new houses. The results (ch then number of wifis) we 1: 5 2: 0 3: 0 4: 1 5: 0 6: 8 7: 0 8: 1 9: 0 10:0 11: 8 12: 0. This from memory. The one given as ch4 might have been 5. Subsequently I put the wi-spy on the dashboard and drove around. The channel usage generally is much the same as reported above. It's quite rare to see a wifi on any channel other than 1, 6, and 11. Now this seems a bit barmy to me. Why don't wifi installers find a clear channel, or at least a channel without complete overlap? Do wifis come preset with channels 1, 6, and 11? Can't they be altered? Bill It's because channels 1, 6 and 11 are the only ones that dont overlap each other. Any of the channels in between overlap 1, 6 or 11 (whichevr 2 they are inbetween) as well as each other. This is more complicated hese days as high speed routers can use 2 channels but the basic principle is the same - if you use channel 6 you wont overlap with someone on channel 1 or 11. Have a look at the diag in the wiki article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_WLAN_channels It's more like: they are the default channels most manufacturers select as they don't overlap, are in the US group and most users don't change channels. I use 13 in preference, but my wifi capable printer is limited to US channels!!! -- PeeGee "Nothing should be able to load itself onto a computer without the knowledge or consent of the computer user. Software should also be able to be removed from a computer easily." Peter Cullen, Microsoft Chief Privacy Strategist (Computing 18 Aug 05) |
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#12
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On 19/12/14 12:08, Martin wrote:
On Fri, 19 Dec 2014 10:56:23 +0000, Indy Jess John wrote: On 19/12/2014 03:38, Bill Wright wrote: Now this seems a bit barmy to me. Why don't wifi installers find a clear channel, or at least a channel without complete overlap? Do wifis come preset with channels 1, 6, and 11? Can't they be altered? My Toshiba laptop can list all the wifi signals it can see along with SSID and signal strength. From SSID names it looks as though Sky normally defaults to 1 and Virginmedia defaults to 11. The layman's advice on the internet suggests that if the default doesn't work, try channel 6. The ones that seem to be channel agile appear to only seek on power on and then stay with it, and if somebody else uses the same one nearby afterwards they get interference later. So they ring the help line and the advice given first of all is to switch off and back on, and of course that fixes it because the seek finds a better channel. Personally, having looked at the set I can see from my house, I have chosen channel 9 and if that suddenly gets an overlap, I should use Channel 4. I leave mine on all the time so no channel agile one is going to swamp me. Really? I have mine on all the time too. There are often more than a dozen wifi modems/routers going at the same time near me. Eventually if I do nothing others will use the same frequency as me. My neighbour seems to have auto enabled - within a minute or two of me changing channel, his switches to the same one. It is the only signal better than -80dB (apart from mine, of course). -- PeeGee "Nothing should be able to load itself onto a computer without the knowledge or consent of the computer user. Software should also be able to be removed from a computer easily." Peter Cullen, Microsoft Chief Privacy Strategist (Computing 18 Aug 05) |
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#13
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On Fri, 19 Dec 2014 03:38:27 +0000, Bill Wright wrote:
I have wifi analyser app on my phone, and I also have a wi-spy thingy. Why are almost all wifis on channels 1, 6, or 11? Here's a screenshot from inSSIDer showing a similar situation in my neighbourhood, although there is one channel 2 user and one on 3 (me). https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B3z...ew?usp=sharing -- TOJ. |
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#14
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On 19/12/2014 13:23, Bill Wright wrote:
Roger wrote: It's because channels 1, 6 and 11 are the only ones that dont overlap each other. Any of the channels in between overlap 1, 6 or 11 (whichevr 2 they are inbetween) as well as each other. It appears to me (could be wrong) the the energy distribution is greatest on the nominal channel, and falls off towards the edges of the group of channels actually used. In that case it would be better to use intermediate channels, even though there would be some overlap. The real answer is to move to the 5Ghz Wi-Fi band. This may mean buying a new router and Wi-Fi dongle but is well worth it in my experience if you are in an urban area. -- Peter Crosland Reply address is valid |
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#15
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On 19/12/2014 12:08, Martin wrote:
Really? I have mine on all the time too. There are often more than a dozen wifi modems/routers going at the same time near me. Eventually if I do nothing others will use the same frequency as me. At 11:13pm I'm detecting 32 nearby wi-fi identities. The congested bands are 1, 6 and 11. I have my router configured to band 4 which I'm sharing with only a couple of other wi-fi users. Band 9 is also relatively clear. -- mailto: news {at} admac {dot] myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
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#16
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alan_m wrote:
I'm detecting 32 nearby wi-fi identities. The congested bands are 1, 6 and 11. I have my router configured to band 4 which I'm sharing with only a couple of other wi-fi users. Even if nobody else near you is using ch4, you will partly overlap with everyone using ch2,3, 5 and 6. |
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#17
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On 19/12/2014 03:38, Bill Wright wrote:
I put this on uk tv broadcast but then thought there'll be more people on here who would know about wifi, so here it is on here as well. I have wifi analyser app on my phone, and I also have a wi-spy thingy. Why are almost all wifis on channels 1, 6, or 11? I can see that they are form the only combination of three channels that don't overlap at all, but I would have thought that better results would be obtained in many cases by using the other channels, especially the ones midway between the over-occupied ones. I was at a friend's house last night and she was complaining that her wifi didn't work too well. This was an old house with thick walls. The modem was in the dining room and in the kitchen next door the signal was very poor, but usable I would have thought. But in most locations in the room the signal on the same channel (11) from the house across the road (by chance the kitchen window faces across the road to the living room of the opposite cottage, where their modem is). This is a village high street, with quite dense housing. Behind my friend's property and about 40m from her house is a new estate. Stepping outside and walking a few yards I found seven other wifis, all on channel 11. So I wrote down the occupancy on each channel, as found by walking along the pavement on both sides for 10 paces up the road and ten paces down the road, and also from standing at one point at the bottom the garden near the new houses. The results (ch then number of wifis) we 1: 5 2: 0 3: 0 4: 1 5: 0 6: 8 7: 0 8: 1 9: 0 10:0 11: 8 12: 0. This from memory. The one given as ch4 might have been 5. Subsequently I put the wi-spy on the dashboard and drove around. The channel usage generally is much the same as reported above. It's quite rare to see a wifi on any channel other than 1, 6, and 11. Now this seems a bit barmy to me. Why don't wifi installers find a clear channel, or at least a channel without complete overlap? Do wifis come preset with channels 1, 6, and 11? Can't they be altered? Bill Surely this is well known. If you just randomly overlap with interfering WiFI there is no possibility of co-operation at all while if you stay on the same channel as the interference then the networks can co-operate to some extent to avoid lost packets. -- Brian Gregory (in the UK). To email me please remove all the letter vee from my email address. |
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#18
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On 19/12/2014 15:15, Martin wrote:
I cam only reveive/monitor wifi on the original frequency. What do you see if you monitor the newer frequency? Is that heading towards saturation too? ISTM that 5GHz WiFI is pretty empty in suburban areas, but moderately crowded in towns and cities. -- Brian Gregory (in the UK). To email me please remove all the letter vee from my email address. |
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#19
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On 19/12/2014 23:46, Andy Burns wrote:
alan_m wrote: I'm detecting 32 nearby wi-fi identities. The congested bands are 1, 6 and 11. I have my router configured to band 4 which I'm sharing with only a couple of other wi-fi users. Even if nobody else near you is using ch4, you will partly overlap with everyone using ch2,3, 5 and 6. Yes - meaning more than twice the chance of your packets being corrupted. -- Brian Gregory (in the UK). To email me please remove all the letter vee from my email address. |
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#20
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On 19/12/2014 19:25, Peter Crosland wrote:
On 19/12/2014 13:23, Bill Wright wrote: Roger wrote: It's because channels 1, 6 and 11 are the only ones that dont overlap each other. Any of the channels in between overlap 1, 6 or 11 (whichevr 2 they are inbetween) as well as each other. It appears to me (could be wrong) the the energy distribution is greatest on the nominal channel, and falls off towards the edges of the group of channels actually used. In that case it would be better to use intermediate channels, even though there would be some overlap. The real answer is to move to the 5Ghz Wi-Fi band. This may mean buying a new router and Wi-Fi dongle but is well worth it in my experience if you are in an urban area. 5GHz seems to have much less ability to go through walls though. -- Brian Gregory (in the UK). To email me please remove all the letter vee from my email address. |
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