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How To Fix A Slow Or Unstable Wi-Fi Connection

How to Fix a Slow or Unstable Wi-Fi Connection. 

Unstable Wi-Fi Is Caused by Congestion

When two or more routers transmit on the same channel, they would slow each other down and cause unstable connections.

The problem would be denser in living spaces. In apartment complexes, tens of routers can send traffic on the same channel. Even modern wireless technology cannot cope with that level of interference between the routers.

The 2.4GHz frequency suffers from congestion the most because of its limited number of channels and long-range. It has eleven channels but only three of these are non-overlapping. That means that speed and connection quality suffer when there are way more routers in the same area.

5GHz, on the other hand, offers 23 non-overlapping channels and its shorter range means fewer overlapping radio signals. It’s a lot like AM and FM radio where the longer-range AM has poorer audio fidelity and FM sounds great but it comes at the expense of range.

How to Fix Your Unstable Wi-Fi Connection

Download and Install a Wi-Fi Analysis App

On Windows, lots of free apps can analyze the quality of wireless channels. One of the best options is available on the Microsoft Store and it is known as Wi-Fi Analyzer.

If you have got Windows, but don’t have access to the Microsoft Store, we recommend NirSoft’s WifiInfoView. For those without Windows, search your respective operating system’s app store for “Wi-Fi Analyzer” and you should see dozens of options.

Detect Unstable Wi-Fi

Using Wi-Fi Analyzer is dead simple. Just install and run the app. After installation, you can launch it by going to Windows Search (Windows key + Q) > Wi-Fi Analyzer.

The tool should detect your Wi-Fi signal strength, which ranges from zero to -100 decibel milliwatt (dBm), the lower the better. If you have a 5GHz network, there is a toggle in the app that allows you to switch between detecting 2.4GHz and 5GHz. It’s at the bottom of the interface.

Wi-Fi Analyzer then displays a visualization of the Wi-Fi networks in your vicinity. If two networks broadcast on the same channel, you’ll notice overlap. Each channel is a number between one and 161 on the 5GHz frequency and one through 11 on the 2.4GHz frequency.

The X-plane axis represents the channels available on the 2.4GHz spectrum. As you can see, channels four to seven are unoccupied. Channels five and six have no competition whatsoever. Given the app’s analysis, I should change my router’s 2.4GHz channel to either five or six.

But how do you change your router’s channel?

How to Change Your Router’s Channel

Accessing your router’s settings require a browser, like Chrome or Microsoft Edge. Accessing its settings, unfortunately, varies between different models of router, but some general rules apply.

1. Netgear routers: In your browser, navigate to https://routerlogin.net

2. TP-Link routers: In your browser, navigate to https://tplinklogin.net

3. Linksys routers: In your browser, navigate to 192.168.1.1.

I then changed the network channel to the option which offered good connection, saved the settings, and then restarted the router by power cycling it (turning it off and on again). Afterward, it stopped randomly disconnecting.

One thing to mention: most modern routers include a feature that combines 2.4GHz and 5GHz frequencies onto a single network name or SSID. This feature is notoriously unreliable and if you’re having network problems, I suggest disabling it as a precautionary step. On my Telus router, it’s referred to as SmartSteering. Other brands have completely different names.

How to Fix Unstable Wi-Fi? Decongest It!

If your Wi-Fi sucks, using a Wi-Fi analysis app is the best way to find out your router’s ideal network settings. If after changing your router’s channel, you still get unreliable internet, consider optimizing your network for speed instead. Sometimes ironing out the kinks in your home internet might fix reliability issues.

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