Deco XE75 phantom 6ghz network

Deco XE75 phantom 6ghz network

Deco XE75 phantom 6ghz network
Deco XE75 phantom 6ghz network
9 hours ago
Hardware Version: V2
Firmware Version: 1.2.9 Build 20240724 Rel. 39578

I've got two Deco XE75's and a Deco X50 Outdoor all together in a wired mesh, configured in Access Point mode. I use the 6e network as a separate SSID from my main 5ghz network. I've noticed two problems with the 6ghz network:

 

1) It can take 6ghz devices a long time to see the 6ghz network. It's as if the 6ghz just randomly stops broadcasting its SSID randomly.

2) There's a "phantom" 6ghz network that is coming from the Deco. You can see in the screenshot that my 6ghz network (Emerald Hill Zone) has a phantom network that's one number lower on the MAC address called zEQQQtt3wlPDmXA8.

 

I don't know if the phantom network (which I'm assuming might be the backhaul network, but why would that be broadcasting when all Deco's are wired) is related to the fact that the SSID just randomly doesn't show up in scans or what, but it's pretty annoying to wake a device from sleep and have to wait a solid minute or so for it to connect.

 

93bbe9b1bcef4339b2b5ce52a98f418f

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Re:Deco XE75 phantom 6ghz network
31 minutes ago

Hey @TequilaSagara,

The 'phantom' network that you see is a part of the 6GHz backhaul as you suspected. There are firmware fixes on the way to hide the network, but there was actually a reason for its visibility according to our team - and your behaviors corroborate it. I would need to look up the conversation that I had, but essentially the presence of the phantom network as it stands allowed for devices and nodes to more quickly identify and transition between bands and encryption methods.

 

FYI I also believe that the wireless backhaul is maintained between Decos even if they are wired, this way they can fallback to their wireless connections if the wired connection fails.

 

I would also double check that you do not have any network settings on your phone or PC such as Private or Randomized Addressing enabled. 6GHz connections require WPA3 so one of these settings could cause the handshake between your network and device to happen more often than it needs to.

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