Any advantage to disabling or turning off network bands 802.11a / 802.11b / 802.11g

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1

Product reference: DLink DSL-2890AL

I am interested in what gains can be attained by disabling the following network bands. In particular performance and power consumption. 802.11a / 802.11b / 802.11g.

I am well aware that disabling those bands would prevent products that use those bands from connecting.

I have a router that has dual 2.4GHz and 5GHz band.

On the 2.4GHz I have the opportunity to disable 802.11b and/or 802.11g.

On the 5GHz I have the opportunity to disable 802.11a.

Valamas

Posted 2013-07-31T22:18:24.420

Reputation: 1 275

I would doubt much, if any, in either case, mostly because on the b/g - the slowest client determines which you are on usually (so unless you have a client using b, you'll be using g). My bet is that 5ghz is the same way. In any case, you could get a Kill-A-Watt to check the actual use.

– nerdwaller – 2013-07-31T22:33:56.483

power meter, great suggestion – Valamas – 2013-07-31T22:34:46.777

I am hoping someone has actually tested this to save you the $20 since at the levels of a router - it would take quite some time to pay that off in power savings. That is unless you have other things worth testing and could save additional power consumption as a result elsewhere. – nerdwaller – 2013-07-31T22:38:42.690

Answers

8

This question on performance can be separated into two categories:

Performance of 2.4GHz vs. 5GHz and Performance of allowing backwards compatibility (e.i. allowing b devices, even if you don't own any). I assume that your devices are all N capable.

Performance of 2.4GHz vs. 5GHz

N devices can connect to both the 2.4 and 5GHz range. The two ranges are different in several different ways:

  • 5GHz will always have a shorter range than 2.4.
  • 5GHz will have trouble going through objects (anything with water: wood, cement, etc) while 2.4 will not.
  • 5GHz will have a greater throughput at its smaller range than 2.4
  • 2.4GHz is over used by the industry, more usage leads to noise, more noise leads to congestion, congestion leads to decreased performance.

Therefore if you are close to the router the majority of the time using only the 5GHz will not take away from the potential performance of using both. If, on the other hand, the router is usually far away, using the 2.4 band will offer less power usage will no decrease of performance.

Performance of allowing backwards compatibility

There is no significant performance degradation of allowing backwards compatibility. However, when a device connects to the network and the router is forced to use backwards compatibility with the device there could be a significant performance difference.

  • With devices using the B standard, many routers must employ "hacks" to prevent the B device from messing with the other N/G/A devices. This performance drop could be over 80% for all other devices on the network.
  • With devices using the G standard, many routers must reduce the amount of frames (hence data) being transferred by the network to the G standard. Therefore, any N devices will be impacted.

So in the end allowing older devices to connect will not impact performance by itself. However, having these devices connect could reduce the performance of the whole network.

Mark Lopez

Posted 2013-07-31T22:18:24.420

Reputation: 925

6

You should definitely turn off 802.11b on the the 2.4 ghz

In an 802.11g network, however, the presence of a legacy 802.11b participant will significantly reduce the speed of the overall 802.11g network.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11g-2003

You will not see any performance degradation by leaving the 802.11a network enabled. If you do not have any 802.11a devices.

A lot of devices released before 802.11n was ratified, only support b/g/a. Those devices may see better performance on the 5ghz 'a' band than the 2.4ghz 'g' band.

spuder

Posted 2013-07-31T22:18:24.420

Reputation: 8 755