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09-06-2021 11:36 PM
Hi,
I have the EE Smart Router and have just purchased a Ring 4 doorbell. I want to get the doorbell so that it always connects to the 5ghz band and not the 2.4.
I’ve gone into the router admin settings to see if I can separate the bands and then I’d just set the doorbell up on the 5ghz band. Unfortunately, I can’t see an option for splitting bands.
My question is, am I missing seeing the band splitting option, if so where is it?!
Failing that is there a way in the router settings to edit the device so it only connects to either the 5 or 2.4?
All help is greatly appreciated
09-06-2021 11:46 PM
I would recommend abandoning the exercise of trying to get a small device onto the 5.0 GHz radio.
This is because the 5.0 GHz radio is intended for short-range, high-bandwidth applications and it is unlikely to provide a sufficiently stable connection for most houses where the router is typically quite far from the front door and with at least the additional barrier of the front door, or a front wall on top of other obstacles.
Splitting the radios would be your best hope. There is unlikely to be a way to blacklist your device for one of the radios while whitelisting it for the other (blacklisting and whitelisting are typically by MAC for both radios). Routers with a guest network/guest radio may have other options.
09-06-2021 11:49 PM - edited 09-06-2021 11:52 PM
With the EE Smart Router, unlike the EE Smart Hub, you cannot separate the wireless bands/SSIDs. You could try disabling the 2.4 GHz band, let your device connect & then reenable the 2.4 GHz band.
However doorbells typically run on the 2.4 GHz band anyway.
10-06-2021 12:00 AM
@mikeliuk please stop your misinformation posts.
What are you trying to achieve?
10-06-2021 12:02 AM - edited 10-06-2021 12:09 AM
Oh, he is so disruptive! I'm reporting him to the Mods if not higher up. He is wasting so much of my time trying, unsuccessfully, to put him right 😞 as well as the many unsubstantiated Google extracts/links he digs up about technical matters he is ignorant of.
10-06-2021 12:08 AM
I have done so several times, classic case of a little knowledge used in the wrong way causes far more disruption and no help to the original posters.
The SNR confusion is a classic case - happy for helping people, but it helps no one when he spouts stuff he does not understand, and editing posts 5 or 6 times until he gets a glimmer helps no one.