โ03 Mar 2024 10:55 PM
โ05 Mar 2024 07:43 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more@Daniel.a04 as a rule customers should not need to split wifi bands for modern devics like a Firestick or a Peloton bike you only need to do that for older kit or devices with simple wifi chips like smart plugs and bulbs. Sky advise Sky Q operates better with a dualband SSID so only to split bands if devices definitely require it.
Failure to connect is pretty common and can normally be sorted by a reboot of the device or in some cases a factory reset.
โ04 Mar 2024 02:37 AM
Hi @Ipondo ,
The reason certain devices won't connect is due to them expecting a single SSID (WiFi Network name) using 2.4ghz. Sky broadband hubs broadcast both 2.4ghz and 5ghz signal through one SSID, which may be where the issue lays with your devices.
You can split the 2.4ghz and 5ghz through seperate SSIDs through the hub settings.
You can find instructions on how to do this here: How to separate WiFi bands
Hope this helps!
Regards,
Daniel.
โ04 Mar 2024 07:31 PM
Thanks @Daniel.a04 for taking the trouble to answer but tonight after rebooting hub and devices (done many times before) the devices now work!!
โ05 Mar 2024 07:43 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more@Daniel.a04 as a rule customers should not need to split wifi bands for modern devics like a Firestick or a Peloton bike you only need to do that for older kit or devices with simple wifi chips like smart plugs and bulbs. Sky advise Sky Q operates better with a dualband SSID so only to split bands if devices definitely require it.
Failure to connect is pretty common and can normally be sorted by a reboot of the device or in some cases a factory reset.
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