cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Disabling SmartSteering and Optik TV

x917
Just Moved In
I have Telus fibre Internet and Optik TV with 3 STBs -- 1 wired and 2 wireless. I am interested in disabling the SmartSteering feature on my supplied T3200M modem in order to hopefully address some issues I've been having with my wireless home network. However, I am worried that I will screw something up with the Optik TV installation, since I don't know much about it. I'm concerned that it requires SmartSteering to be enabled, or that it needs the 2.4 GHz and/or 5.0 GHz networks to be configured a certain way after SmartSteering is turned off. Is there anything I should be mindful of before doing this? My plan is to let the 5.0 GHz network keep the same SSID as it is now, so that devices that require 5.0 GHz can find their way there without needing to be reconfigured. The 2.4 GHz SSID would have "-2.4" appended to it. All other settings would remain as they are.
4 REPLIES 4

RonAKA
Rockstar

I use the T3200M modem with a wired Optik TV and also one wire less set top. I disabled SmartSteering to get one wireless network on each frequency. My iPhone does not seem to stay connected to the 5G. I encountered no problems by just disabling it and creating a new SSID name for the 2.4G network. TV still works fine, and now my iPhone stays connected. It is the only device I connect to the 2.4G. The rest were left on the default SSID at 5G.

x917
Just Moved In

Thank you for the reassurance. I just disabled it and set things up the same way. Everything seems to be fine, except the WiFi link speeds on my phones seem to be lower overall with the frequencies separated than I remember them being with SmartSteering enabled. I don't feel any usage difference in the speeds though, so I'm not sure what to think of it yet.

 

Connectivity of Apple products to my wireless network with SmartSteering enabled was actually one of the issues I was dealing with, but now they have no problems connecting to the separate 2.4 GHz network. Hopefully this addresses my other issues as well.

I also used a simple program called WifiInfoView to view the WiFi traffic and to pick a less busy channel to use. Options, Channel Summary Mode is a convenient way to look at the data. High use close to your home can slow things down. 

If you kept your previous Smart Steering SSID on your 2.4 Ghz band then all your devices will be on 2.4 Ghz until your specifically connect to the 5 Ghz SSID. This could be why your WiFi link speeds are lower.