FYI, your router doesn't receive signal, it sends it out.
You REALLY don't want to use a 40 MHz width on 2.4 GHz..
You could probably enable 'b/g' protection and it might change. Some utilities just support 'b' since you have 11 mbps as an advertised supported data rate that clients can negotiate to (look at the 'min data rate').
On enterprise gear you can actually tweak what data rates are being sent out in the beacon, but I wouldn't worry about it too much in your case.
What router do you have? Also what program is the top picture?
FYI, your router doesn't receive signal, it sends it out.
Theoretically. The problem with the 2.4 GHz range is that it's SO limited as for spectrum as compared to 5 GHz. By having a 40 MHz width plopped effectively around channel 6 your wireless signal reaches into and is impacted by ALL other 2.4 GHz wireless traffic.Wouldn't a wider width give it more throughput?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't just running 802.11n and eliminating all over wireless modes share a faster speeds for clients connected on a subnet?
Theoretically. The problem with the 2.4 GHz range is that it's SO limited as for spectrum as compared to 5 GHz. By having a 40 MHz width plopped effectively around channel 6 your wireless signal reaches into and is impacted by ALL other 2.4 GHz wireless traffic.
Here's an example below. Usually with 20 MHz width you have 3 separate non-overlapping channels. If you had your 40 MHz channel at either end you'd still be impacting the below (but, as yours is in the middle, it hits every other neighboring wireless traffic on the 2.4 GHz ISM band).
Not necessarily. Enabling N just adds another set of 'high speed' rates. The other rates are still available and negotiable between clients. It would be a very bad idea to completely limit other data rates as the client will negotiate a slower data rate in response to a weaker signal that may not support the higher rate. The router may simply designate a client as N if it advertises it supports rates higher than 54 mbps.
I thought I was taught otherwise, but I definitely could be wrong. With that said, what would be a reason to isolate network modes in the first place, or at least why an option is even available within your network server?