Not that i know of. I name the two bands differently so it is easy to know which band i am on
Use a non **** router? Seriously i always name my bands separate from each other so i know for sure what band i am always on. The software in that thing is junk.
I'd be curious of your router model number. It's actually kinda important to separate the names of your 2.4 and 5ghz bands. That way in a home network situation (or even Enterprise...) You know for sure if you're on your high bandwidth stream or not. Even businesses like to keep certain access points on certain bands. Even a cheap 50 dollar 5 year old router I had allows me to name my 2 bands something different.This is enterprise level and designed by choice with 100's of client connections.
The focus is on the phones limitations or lack of discovery at this point.
And not that it's necessary to tell you, but the broadcast is via an access point and not a router.
I'd be curious of your router model number. It's actually kinda important to separate the names of your 2.4 and 5ghz bands. That way in a home network situation (or even Enterprise...) You know for sure if you're on your high bandwidth stream or not. Even businesses like to keep certain access points on certain bands. Even a cheap 50 dollar 5 year old router I had allows me to name my 2 bands something different.
I work for a large national company and according to our IT guys, having differently named wifi bands is essential for there networking strategies. I mention to him a router not allowing differently named access points for 2.4 and 5ghz. He said such a device is useless in their environment. In either case, is there a reason you have Enterprise level networking equipment? Consumer level stuff will actually have more features more relevant to what you'd use in a home environment. I use a Netgear R7000. Highly recommend that but if you'd buy new I'd recommend it's newer brother, the R7800 v2. That one supports MU-MIMO
All I was wondering was is this feature gone or am I missing it? Thanks for the input guys.
Mine connected to 5G out of the box, which I thought odd, but I usually use 2.4 due to the greater range. I have not found a preference setting other than the reconnect toggle noted above.
I notice on the 5ghz band that the speed test differs slightly from 2.4 ghz. The 5ghz works better when closer to the router. The 2.4ghz works better with distance.
Well that's how its designed to work. On the other hand, by S8, S8 Plus and the S7 Edge all lose connectivity after sometime on the 5G band but not on the 2.4G. In comparison, my wife's iPhone 6S works well on the 5G band. I have an Asus AC1200 router
I have seen it drop only when I leave the phone idle for hours, especially overnight. I may have to check the router settings to see if anything needs to be changed.You shouldnt be dropping connection at all.
I have seen it drop only when I leave the phone idle for hours, especially overnight. I may have to check the router settings to see if anything needs to be changed.
It should not, DHCP should be able to handle that. I will be honest, this is a new router and I haven't really messed around with the the settings as much as I should have...I will check it out today and try to mess around.I wonder if it purges connections that have been idle to free up ip addresses.