Salta al contenuto principale

Lanciato a giugno 2012. Modello A1278. Processore Intel con Turbo Boost. Fino a 512 MB di RAM Video DDR5

1624 Domande Visualizza tutte

Wifi 5ghz ONLY connection not working

I think I need a new Airport/bluetooth board but open to suggestions. My computer won’t connect to the 5ghz wifi but it will connect to the 2.4 ghz wifi. I have a MacBook pro mid 2012 13inch unibody: 2.5 GHz Dual-Core Intel Core i5

If it does need a new Airport/bluetooth board, do I buy the bluetooth 2.1 or 4.0?

Rispondi a questa domanda Anch'io ho questo problema

Questa è una buona domanda?

Punteggio 0
2 Commenti

I would verify if that is the case. Download from the Apps Store this app WiFi Explorer Lite It will allow you to see visually your WiFi bands.

Let us know what you see for AP's in the 5.0 GHz bands.

da

Thank you, This was very useful. I can see my 5ghz connection so this probably means it isn't my Airport/Bluetooth board? 90% of the time I can't connect because it tells me I have the wrong password (but I am 100% sure the password is correct).

Thank you for your help in preventing me from spending unnecessarily. Seems like it is a settings and/or software issue.

da

Aggiungi un commento

2 Risposte

Risposta Più Utile

The issue is related to the router 5G selected channel. If you set th Channel selection to “Auto”, perhaps it will select a channel which is not supported by your MacBook Pro Wireless Card.

You have to run the “System Information“ on you Macbook and select the “wi-fi“ section under the “Network“ part. You then will see the “Supported Channels”. In my case, i found:

  • Supported PHY Modes: 802.11 a/b/g/n
  • Supported Channels: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 36, 40, 44, 48

You can download an app on your mobile in order to check wich channel was selected by your router, and i’m quite sure, you won’t find it on the list.

In order to solve this issue, you have to access the Router Configuration and select a fixed channel supported by your MacBook such as 36 or similar.

Questa risposta è stata utile?

Punteggio 3
Aggiungi un commento

I think you’re facing a dual AP config issue. I have two routers and they are both named the same ACME each has a different password so when you try to connect you are facing a crapshoot on which one responds first! Was that the 2.4 GHz ACME or the 5.0 GHz ACME. You can also get into trouble with just one AP which offers both 2.4 GHz and 5.0 GHz bands! Your system caches the connection and when if failed to connect to the given AP’s band it can fool you as both bands are named ACME! I recommend renaming the AP bands the 2.4 GHz ACME_2-4 and 5.0 GHz ACME_5-0 So the cache then has distinction of the connected AP band.

So to fix this you’ll need to open up your WiFi settings (unlock your settings first) > Advanced, then delete your entries, save your settings and reboot your system you’ll then need to log back into your WiFi network (make sure you still remember the password)

If you do have this setup I’ll assume your location is too big for a single AP. What you need is a mesh setup that way you have a single AP login to any AP under your control.

Questa risposta è stata utile?

Punteggio 1
Aggiungi un commento

Aggiungi la tua risposta

Gabriel Remillard sarà eternamente grato.
Visualizza Statistiche:

Ultime 24 Ore: 1

Ultimi 7 Giorni: 17

Ultimi 30 Giorni: 77

Tutti i Tempi: 13,140