I bought a new router a month ago. The Ubiquiti Amplifi HD. Now I have significant Wi-Fi problems. IPerf always shows between 20-40 Mbit / s. Measured with two Linux PCs. The desktop PC is connected to a switch with Gigabit LAN, namely the Netgear GS116E Managed. There I set up a VLan, in which the LAN port of the router and the LAN port of the desktop PC are located. With a laptop, I'm connected to the router via WLAN.
Now I start an iPerf server on the laptop (iperf -s) and on the desktop I do the speed test (iperf -c 192.168… -w256k).
The router is about 2m away from me. All other WLAN devices are separated. When I connect my laptop via LAN, I get 943 MBits.
Can someone help me there?
The problem is that I live in a facility where I provide my roommates with the Wi-Fi because it is only sent via mschapv2, and I forward it to my router via raspberry, which then turns it into a wpa2 personal. Most game consoles unfortunately do not support wpa2 enterprise: / and the tplink archer c7 from the setup does it all well.
In terms of speed
The problem is that I live in a facility where I provide my roommates with the Wi-Fi because it is only sent via mschapv2 here,
Excuse me because you don't want to make further efforts.
A LAN network can be reached anytime and anywhere that works stably and safely. If you are too lazy you have to live with the restrictions, there's no tip to help!
Most game consoles do not support wpa2 enterprise: /
Thank God
and the tplink archer c7 from the facility does it all great.
Cable solution is the real deal. With Wi-Fi, you will have to live with the restrictions (even if it doesn't suit you).
Have fun with it.
I don't have access to the LAN network…
It has nothing to do with laziness. I just want to know what else I could try.
I don't know the product, but what happens if you turn on A-MSDU?
Already solved, thanks. Strangely, my laptop has a very bad internet connection. 1 MBit. The net driver may be installed correctly. (This is often the case with Debian.)