![]() On 5GHz, I mostly see speeds of 500-800 Mbps when I'm near one of the routers. During the brief periods of 6E connectivity on my S22 Ultra, I did see network speeds in excess of 1Gbps, which is impressive but of limited usefulness right now. Some routers have trouble with the 50-60 devices I have online, but the Eero Pro 6E keeps them all connected. With two nodes running, I have good coverage across my house (just under 3,000 sq feet), and even extending into the yard where my Nest cameras have remained online consistently. ![]() When the mesh is working well, it can handle anything I throw at it, even when I intentionally try to push it to the limit with multiple high-speed downloads to saturate my internet connection, alongside in-network video streaming in the 60-70Mbps range. With the Pro 6E, you may have to share backhaul with your devices, lowering the overall speed.Įero's radios do seem to be pretty powerful. With the older Eero Pro 6, you have two 5GHz radios, so one of them is dedicated to backhaul. The problem is that you need that 5GHz band for devices. Eero says the routers dynamically adjust to use either 5GHz or 6GHz based on network conditions. However, the app is so simple that the only indication you have of backhaul performance is a signal icon-no band info at all. The other supposed advantage of 6GHz support is that it can be used for faster, more efficient backhaul between the nodes. The Eero Pro 6E compared to the Eero Pro 6 (left and top) If anything, I'm seeing 6GHz less often as time goes on. Eero tells me its single SSID approach is a problem for some clients, and it is working with OEMs to address this. I've used these devices on 6E networks before, and they are at least able to connect. There are multiple threads in the Eero subreddit asking about the lack of 6GHz connectivity on compatible devices. Most routers this expensive at least have the option to create dedicated 6E SSIDs, but not Eero. Eero uses a single SSID, which simplifies connectivity, and the system doesn't seem very good about recognizing 6GHz clients. However, they almost never connect on 6GHz, preferring to stick to 5GHz. I've been testing with a variety of devices, including the Galaxy S22 Ultra, Galaxy Z Fold3, and Pixel 6 Pro, all of which support Wi-Fi 6E. Given my experience with 6GHz on the Asus ZenWifi ET8, I'm not surprised that Eero's 6GHz support has some issues. That wireless figure relies upon the 6GHz band, and precious few devices have support for that. Eero says the Pro 6E can reach speeds of 2.3Gbps wired and 1.3Gbps wireless. ![]() With the power of 6GHz, these routers support higher theoretical speeds, but emphasis on theoretical. ![]()
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