Still all sorts of wrong though. My client can’t do 320MHz channels, I was okay with that compromise since it was USB and I bought it knowing that limitation (and guised by the assumption the bottleneck would be the 5gbits usb port anyway). All the other ones I looked at required 13th gen intel mobo so those were out of the picture for me.
Still, I want my 1.4gigs Not sure if it’s an OpenWrt issue or the Asus driver issue, but something is very wrong in both our scenarios. Since we’re replicating similar behavior on two different chipsets (qualcomm and intel), I’m leaning towards it being an openwrt issue.
Someone take a deeper look into this, pretty please?
Do you have a linuxcomputer where you can attach your usb-WiFi?
Asus rog be92 uses the same chip as almost all other wifi7 usb-WiFi adapters: RTL8912AU and linuxdrivers for testing was introduced just a couple of days ago.
(There is one new usb-WiFi wifi7 model that uses mediatek 7925: Netgear A9000)
That is actually what I used for the fast results above - with a cheap model from Fenvi
I do have an old laptop I could install linux on, but I probably wouldn’t know how to install said drivers. I mostly care about my daily driver though, which is my Win11 machine. I’m just confused because I don’t know why I’m seeing such low numbers. 1.2-.1.4 would be something I’d expect for virtually ideal conditions (which they’re in).
Edit: The laptop is so old it doesn’t even have a usb3 port. So there goes that idea.