Forum Discussion
Dear jontalk:
Thank you for your advice. I checked with an analyzer, but there seems to be no real conflict. The analyzer shows only two times the router and the two eeros.
After restarts of all devices this morning, sofar there is no problem.
I'll keep you posted!
Best wishes
Henning
P.S.: I marked "Email me when someone replies", but there is no notification in my email account.
Dear jontalk:
Today12/9 the problem popped up again. Video and voice are stuttering on different channels, more buffering. After roku restart, both are fine again.
Best wishes
Henning
- Henning22 years agoBinge Watcher
Dear Jontalk:
Today 12/12 both effects came back right at start-up.
Any suggestions?
Best wishes
Henning
- Henning22 years agoBinge Watcher
Dear Jontalk:
Yesterday I contacted my ISP (Frontier). They checked my router and the two eeros and coudln't find any problems regarding my case.
Any suggestions?
Best wishes
Henning
- jontalk2 years agoRoku Guru
The WiFi analyzer will show which channels have the most congestion as stated in my first reply. You mention errors which has nothing to do with channel numbers. Are you logged into a 2.4 or 5 gHz band? And if the former (2.4), its notorious for band overlap while 5 gHz has less range but is faster. If on the other hand you're logged into the 5 gHz band, I suggest you look at the analyzer and see which channel number is the most congested. The lower channel numbers have lots of overlap while the higher numbered channels have better range. The stuttering could be affected by others in your area using the same channels. I live in a condo where there's lots of congestion and use a powerline network to avoid this. If unfamiliar powerline adapters use the electrical circuits of a home to transmit data and are stable and reliable as a result. If your home has Ethernet ports installed in the room where you view TV, I'd recommend connecting the Roku with wired instead of WiFi. Hope that helps