My Deco X60 network seems to have run out of slots for wifi devices to connect to
Hi... I have built a smart home setup running on a 24-port gigabit switch connected to a Deco X60/M5 hybrid network. Some devices are on ethernet and some are on Wifi. I have a mix of mobile phones, tablets, TVs, speakers, smart plugs and switches, plus various other wireless smart devices. Currently, I have a mix of several Deco devices: 3 V2 Deco X60s and 2 V3 Deco X60s and 3 V3 Deco M5s. Attached are screenshots of the details.
The number of total connected devices has never gone more than 83 and I seem to have problems getting new devices to connect to wifi now. Some that were previously connected cannot connect unless i turn off or disconnect existing ones.
Am i missing any settings where i can specify the maximum number of wifi clients? Also, it seems everything wants to connect to the main Deco and most of the connected Decos are not getting clients even if their ranges are overlapping. Is there a way to configure the system to optimize distribution of the clients?
I would appreciate any help with this as the set up has me frustrated and I am currently looking at replacing the entire system.
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Hi, welcome to the community.
It must be a large house to install so many Deco units. The capacity of connected clients will not continue to grow with the increase of Deco units in the Mesh network.
May I know how many smart IoT devices are in the 83 online clients?
Most of the smart devices are 2.4ghz only, and I wonder whether the 2.4ghz has reached its limit since the 2.4ghz channels are always crowded and easily affected by the adjacent wireless signals.
Did you also check the CPU and memory usage on the web UI?
By the way, is "Service Area Deco" the only one that is wirelessly connected to the other Deco in the network map?
And Did Deco work in wireless router mode or Access Point mode?
Thank you very much.
Best regards.
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You have invested a lot into Deco mesh system, it would be waste if you just replace it. Also, with the new WiFi mesh you may have same issue.
I have suggestions for you to try, perhaps they could stabilize your Deco mesh.
1. Changing subnet mask to increase the IP pool is a good idea. To avoid LAN/WAN IP address overlap, you can configure ISP modem/router to provide IP addresses from the different IP range. Most ISP routers have that setting configurable. Here are standard private IP ranges:
- 10.0.0.0 to 10.255.255.255
- 172.16.0.0 to 172.31.255.255
- 192.168.0.0 to 192.168.255.255
Default Deco IP range is in 192.168.*.*, which means you can choose, for example, 172.16.1.* IP range as LAN IP addresses on your ISP router and thus remove possibility of overlap with Deco LAN addresses in the range 192.168.*.*
2. You can also take one step further: configure Deco mesh to run in Access Point mode. In that mode, ISP router will be responsible for IP address allocations. This will offload Main Deco and also may give you better view to your home network and more control over DHCP settings. For example, most ISP routers allow to change DHCP Lease time. With Deco mesh running in AP mode you could decrease DHCP Lease time on ISP router to 30 minutes and see if it makes the difference.
Switching a Deco to Access Point (AP) Mode
When you run Deco mesh in AP mode you will not need to pass all traffic through Man Deco. You can rewire your home network so that switch connects to ISP modem/router, and Main Deco connects to the switch (or ISP router) just like any Satellite Deco. With such large network as yours, not only that will improve Main Deco performance, but that should also improve overall Deco mesh performance. For example, in Deco AP mode mobile device connected to wired Satellite Deco will send its traffic through switch directly to ISP router, not through Main Deco.
3. Also, when you are facing what looks like IP addresses allocation issues, it makes sense to implement the following for your devices on home network:
- For stationary devices and critical, such as NAS, configure them with static IP addresses so that they can always stay online. It is not "business critical," it is "household critical": for example, you may consider family TV a critical device, configure it with static IP address, too;
- For every mobile device at your household, such as smartphones, tablets, laptops - disable "MAC address randomization" on them for Deco SSID. This will not only make these devices utilize single IP address while on your home network, but could also improve mobile device roaming between Deco nodes.
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... and one more thing: if you reconfigure your Deco mesh in Access Point mode, you'll have options on how to more evenly distribute clients between Deco nodes. I can discuss these options with you, but that only works with Deco running in AP mode, so let's not overload this conversation until you have Deco mesh configuration that works for you.
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