
#EERO ROUTER LOGIN PASSWORD#
I will try to fix his password issue with that.ģ. Smart Home Manager: I have not tried that yet after the Eero setup because my father's account is locked for too many bad logins it says It doesn't reset itself I guess. No, I have not tried to test the speed yet connected directly to the 599 yet.Ģ. I did a so-called test file from Google and it was going at about 80 mbps.ġ. They are all doing the same thing about 26mbps. I have tried downloading with and without 4K Video Downloader and different Websites and different file types and sizes. The connection speeds are anywhere from 867mpps to 1300 mbps. I have an Asus PCI Wi-Fi 5 adaptor and it is connecting to the Eero at the same speed as I was getting connected to the Arris 599's wi-fi. Now i'm only getting an average of about 24 mbps downloading those files via 4K Video Downloader.
#EERO ROUTER LOGIN PRO#
Before switching to the Eero Pro 6E, I was getting anywhere from 50-99 Mbps when downloading video files from YT. 'm pretty certain that the 589 and the 599 had the same Web Interfaces.except that maybe the 589 didn't have Wi-Fi 5 (ac).Īnyhow, I have the Internet 100 plan and am on VDSL2.
#EERO ROUTER LOGIN DOWNLOAD#
megabytes per second)? I ask because download often show MB/s instead of Mb/s, and that's nearly an order of magnitude difference between the two. how are you getting those numbers? Are you sure they're in megabits per second (vs. Sorry, but if the eero shows gigabit, that should be okay.ġ) Have you ever tried a speed test while connected directly to the 599?Ģ) Have you tried a speed test using the Smart Home Manager (which does a gateway speed test and a client speed test back to back)?ģ) When you are doing speed tests and/or downloads, are you on a wired connection to the eero or wireless? Have you tried the other for comparison?Ĥ) Can't believe I didn't ask this before: What speed service are you paying for?ĥ) Your download speeds. I never had a NVG599 (I only had a 589 for a few months several years back), so I don't remember where the LAN interface speeds are on it. The WAN of the eero is the public, so that is good. The eero gives IP addresses to things directly connected to it, so everyone is getting 192.168.4.x, and that is good. At the same time, you might need to go into the extender's settings to enable that feature, which can be complicated for a lot of users.Proper behavior is that the NVG599 give IP addresses to anything directly connected to it, which is limited to the eero. To be fair, some recent extenders give options to keep your main WiFi network's name and bands to make switching easier and automatic. If you're close enough to an Eero router, it'll connect your devices to the 5GHz band, which offers faster speeds, but has less range than the 2.4GHz band. If your devices need better range, Eero will automatically connect your devices to the longer-range 2.4GHz band. Mesh systems like Eero, on the other hand, help your devices automatically switch to the nearest Eero, and each Eero broadcasts the same WiFi network name.Įero will also automatically connect your devices to the appropriate WiFi band - 2.4GHz and 5Ghz - depending on their needs.

For example, an extender's network name might be your main network's name with the letters "EXT" tagged on, to indicate that it's your extender's WiFi network. That's mostly because WiFi extenders have their own network name that's slightly different to your main WiFi network's name. Anyone who's used a traditional WiFi extender will know that you sometimes need to manually switch your devices to the extender's own WiFi network when you're too far from your main WiFi router.
