[pouya+lists.9f...@nohup.io]
> Worked for 2.4GHz but not for 5GHz.
I stand corrected. There was a mix-up with an older 3b, which only
has 2.4GHz (too many rpis lying around). Sorry about the confusion.
Pouya
--
9fans: 9fans
Permalink:
On Mon, Jan 25, 2021 at 08:06:05PM +, Richard Miller wrote:
>
> Did you bind '#l1' first?
Yes, I did. Basically followed the same instructions as you wrote
below (think I even took them from your reply on an older thread
so thanks!) plus 'ndb/dns -r'. Worked for 2.4GHz but not for 5GHz.
A
> was trying to do just that last night on a very old pi3b+ and it seemed
> to choke on
>
> aux/wpa -2p -s SSID_5G /net/ether1
Did you bind '#l1' first?
Here's what works for me:
term% bind -a '#l1' /net
term% aux/wpa -2p -s 1d2e12-5GHz /net/ether1
!Adding key: essid=1d2e12-5GHz proto=wpapsk
On Mon, Jan 25, 2021 at 12:09:36PM +, Richard Miller wrote:
> > does the pi3 b+ support 5ghz wifi?
> > ...
> > on the same topic - is 5ghz supported on the pi4 ?
>
> Yes to both - as regards the hardware.
>
> I can't recall whether the ether4330 driver tries
> to connect to 5ghz channels.
> does the pi3 b+ support 5ghz wifi?
> ...
> on the same topic - is 5ghz supported on the pi4 ?
Yes to both - as regards the hardware.
I can't recall whether the ether4330 driver tries
to connect to 5ghz channels. You could experiment
by giving your router a separate 5ghz-only SSID
and see if
hi,
does the pi3 b+ support 5ghz wifi?
i have a feeling it doesn’t but i cannot find a message in 8fans passim which
states one way of the other,
i understand it will probably be no quicker but i am seeing miserable
performance from wifi at the moment which i am fairly sure is due to my