Does anyone know a fix for the Wifi speed limit on a BT Smart Hub 2?
Having recently upgrading to BT Full fibre 900 Halo 3, plus 3 BT complete wifi discs. I am a bit miffed at finding out the Smart hub 2 has a wifi limit of approx 400Mb i.e. 940Mb at the hub 412Mb standing 3 feet away from the Smart hub via wifi.
There is definitely a noticeable difference in speed when hard wiring in my laptop vs connecting via wifi. I have 1 device hardwired (BT TV) and 30+ devices connected via wifi (Alexa's, smart bulbs, smart radiator thermostats etc)
The competition offer routers that allow 900Mb wifi connections, and I am lead to believe this is because they support wifi 6 whereas the BT Smart hub 2 doesn't, I have also hear there is a BT Smart hub 3 coming out soon with Mesh enabled wifi discs.
Do I have to wait until BT catches up with the competition or is there a work around?
Many thanks
Ken
Welcome to this user forum for BT Retail phone and broadband customers.
You are unlikely to get anything like the full speed over wireless, on a single device.
It was never intended that people get full speed on all devices, especially on a wireless connection. The intention is to allow that bandwidth to be shared among family members and multiple devices, without each user noticing any slowdown.
Here is a quote from old post by @SeanD on 18/06/2021
"I think for the first time ever we are in a situation whereby the speed you can now get through Full Fibre outperforms the capabilities of many devices.
The Smart hub 2 does not come with Wi-Fi 6 but this is something we are looking to include in our next generation of Hub. I don't have any info as to when we will launch a new router by Wi-Fi 6 will bring some improvement.
As an example of what I mean in terms of devices not being able to support the full breadth of speed available on Full Fibre , take a look at the table below. This is just for a couple of Apple Smart Phones and Tablets along with popular Samsung models,
Apple (Smartphones) | Dualband (2.4 & 5Ghz) | Theoretical Max speed on 2.4Ghz connection | Theoretical Max speed on 5Ghz connection |
IPHONE SE | Yes | 60mbps | 300mbps |
IPHONE SE 2020 | Yes | 135mbps |
600mbps |
Samsung (Smartphones) | Dualband (2.4 & 5Ghz) | Theoretical Max speed on 2.4Ghz connection | Theoretical Max speed on 5Ghz connection |
galaxy-s10e | Yes | 135mbps | 600mbps |
galaxy-s10-5g | Yes | 135mbps | 600mbps |
Apple (Tablets) | Dualband (2.4 & 5Ghz) | Theoretical Max speed on 2.4Ghz connection | Theoretical Max speed on 5Ghz connection |
IPAD pro 3rd gen (Nov 2018) | Yes | 135mbps | 600mbps |
IPAD pro 4th gen (March 2020) | Yes | 135mbps | 600mbps |
Samsung (Tablet) | Dualband (2.4 & 5Ghz) | Theoretical Max speed n 2.4Ghz connection | Theoretical Max speed on 5Ghz connection |
galaxy-tab-s5e | Yes | 100mbps | 300mbps |
galaxy-tab-s6 | Yes | 60mbps | 600mbps |
You may find this of interest.
https://img01.products.bt.co.uk/content/dam/bt/storefront/pdfs/smart_hub_claims_substantiation.pdf
Its discussed here https://www.ispreview.co.uk/index.php/2018/11/bt-publish-wifi-speedtests-for-new-smart-hub-2-router-...
The only workaround at the moment is to buy your own wifi 6 router. It is worth thinking about how many of your devices are wifi 6 capable and how much bandwith they need. Smart bulbs and thermostats aren't likely to tax even wifi 5. It might be the case that the only application that uses 900Mbs speed is running speed checks.
Even if BT get round to issuing a wifi 6 capable router it is worth remembering that your devices all have to share the available bandwith so they won't all get full speed all the time.