We install a Calix as a “trial” so we have visibility into their network and voila all their Wi-Fi problems go away. After the free month trial it becomes a paid service and for $12/mo we make sure their Wi-Fi keeps working. Win-win for us and them ;-)
-Sean On Fri, Dec 13, 2019 at 10:33 AM Ken Hohhof <[email protected]> wrote: > Has anyone figured out a solution to interference with Google WiFi at > customers fed via 5 GHz? > > > > We have found it to be an unsolvable problem due to: > > > > 1) Google does not let you set the frequencies > > 2) Google does not let you set the channel width (and therefore > presumably uses 80 MHz channels) > > 3) The mesh system presumably uses additional spectrum for the backhaul > between pucks > > 4) Most customers put in 3 of them, virtually guaranteeing at least 1 of > them will be right near the dish to the tower > > 5) Many customers also figure they can put them in outbuildings to get > service to their shop, barn, etc. (one customer today intended to put one > in his wife’s “she-shed”) > > > > With any other router we just set the channel to a U-NII-1 or DFS > channel. We have a fair amount of 3.65 GHz in our network and then it > isn’t a problem, but the majority is still 5 GHz. > > -- > AF mailing list > [email protected] > http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com >
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