59

As wikipedia reference, 802.11 standards (which defines Wi-fi networks) tell us that wireless networks works with 13 different channels on OFDM (depending on the release, a, b, g or n). From this I was wondering, if I have more than 13 machines on the same room (one room work for example with 50 notebooks), it would be impossible to connect all of them to internet at the same time? I mean, each device would use one specific channel to communicate with the acess point, limiting the acess point to 13 permanent connections.

How does all this stuff really work?

5
  • 19
    Short answer: No. The access point uses one channel to communicate with all the devices it needs to talk to. There are no "permanent connections". Aug 29, 2011 at 14:14
  • 4
    thats a bit like saying "my tv has 10 channels, does that mean only 10 people can watch tv?".
    – Sirex
    Mar 1, 2012 at 13:31
  • @Sirex It is completelly different, TV channels are not using the same technology as 802.11 standard. If it was the same think, so I would only use 13 devices on the same wifi router, and it is not true.
    – Diogo
    Mar 1, 2012 at 14:15
  • 2
    That'd be why "its a bit like" and not "its like".
    – Sirex
    Mar 5, 2012 at 8:11
  • Maybe you find useful explanation here tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5416 Jan 9, 2013 at 19:14

7 Answers 7

95

First of all, the U.S. only allows 11 of those 13 channels. Additionally, the original wifi developers made a mistake, of sorts, and signals within channels bleed over to their neighbors...
there are really only 3 channels you should use: 1, 6 and 11.

Keep in mind that applies to the 2.4Ghz spectrum. There's also the 5Ghz spectrum that has more channels, less contention (for now), and is supported for 802.11ac, but has less propogation through things like walls and trees. 2.4Ghz is old busted; 5Ghz is the new hotness.

That said, you can have far more than 3 devices on wifi at a time even on just the 2.4Ghz frequencies, because devices will share time on each channel. It's just like having someone listen to several conversations taking place at once in a crowded room: not everyone is talking all the time. If two people talk at the same time, the listener may have to ask one or both to repeat themselves. The more people you add to the room, the less total information you can pass around, because people will constantly interrupt one another at an increasing rate and the general background noise will start to become as loud the person next to you can easily talk. A good rule of thumb is around 25 devices per channel for casual browsing, but this can drop significantly for non-casual traffic like gaming, p2p file sharing, video streaming, and large file transfers.

In networking parlance, we say a wifi cell is unswitched and half-duplex, making it very sensitive to collisions. Wired networks typcially don't have these weaknesses (switched and full-duplex), and are also much less susceptible to random electromagnetic interference. While wifi is a "good enough" technology to use at home, serious networks or any serious application will do much better pushing as many people or as much network traffic as possible to a wired connection.

I run the campus network at a small college, and it's sad to see how many new students arrive this year who have never used a wire for network access. They think the notion of needing a wire is quaint, and don't understand the physical limitations involved, and why 80 devices (more than 2 per student on average) in dorm space the size of their parents' house doesn't work so well. Re-educating them about this is hard.

15
  • 15
    It's not a mistake that channels bleed over... it's a way to increase throughput in low noise conditions while ensuring that one channel doesn't stomp on another. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… for some background on it. Aug 29, 2011 at 14:46
  • 4
    Note that 1, 6, and 11 only apply in the US. Different nations have different rules for unlicensed wireless transmitters; and it also depends on the mode your transmitter is usually used. See this -- You may be able to use a channel 14, and if you're always in close proximity to the wireless access point (making OFDM acceptable) you might want to use 1, 5, and 9 instead. Aug 29, 2011 at 15:59
  • 2
    @bmike - mix of g/n. The rule of thumb depends on the kind of traffic. Our college students like to do lots of hd streaming video (netflix), low-latency gaming, and even some file sharing that all eat up airtime. Aug 30, 2011 at 15:30
  • 2
    I just realized my airports are doing simultaneous dual band and the mix of clients is very evenly split. The rule of 25 looks to be SOLID.
    – bmike
    Aug 30, 2011 at 16:01
  • 3
    @kinokijuf Old now, but I also want to add that the whole point here is that what inssider shows you is misleading. You might have a situation where channel 10 is completely empty, but if channel 11 is busy the "bleed-over" concept will still mean you get poor throughput. Inssider also tells you nothing about actual use... only signal strength. If you have one neighbor on channel 8 with a strong signal, but they're never home, and another neighbor on channel 4 with a weak signal, but they work from home and always fill the airspace, you're better off using a channel nearer to 8 than to 4. Jun 11, 2012 at 15:15
19

Wifi channels do not correspond to number of devices that can be connected.

Each channel corresponds to a frequency that the wifi devices work on, so if your router is set to use channel 11, then all devices that try to connect to is must also communicate on channel 11.

The number of actual devices that can connect on a given channel is limited by the software on the router and by bandwidth, as more devices are connected they all use a portion of the available bandwidth until the connection becomes near unusable due to having no bandwidth spare for communication.

5

Interference is more important than channel.

Each channel is actually wide enough to cover the two adjacent channels in each direction.

So, if you are looking for interference-free communication, you only get 4 channels with which to work.

However, there is more than just the frequency that you're dealing with in determining router connections. Theoretically you can have any number of wireless networks in an area and communication will still work.

However, having more than 4 networks properly spaced will result in decreased performance across all the networks in a given area.

1
  • 1
    You are correct, but answering different thing that he asked. He asked about devices connecting to same access point.
    – Zds
    Aug 29, 2011 at 14:04
5

Just complementing most of answears, I found that Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA) should be the name of the technique used to share the same channel by a lot of users:

"If the channel is sensed "idle," then the node is permitted to begin the transmission process. If the channel is sensed as "busy," the node defers its transmission for a random period of time. Once the transmission process begins, it is still possible for the actual transmission of application data to not occur."

5

Just adding my 2 cents:

  1. All Access points, and devices are sharing the channel. So if there are 10 access points and 200 devices on channel 6 (regardless of if they are yours or not) are sharing the capacity of the channel. For the G protocol that would be ~50 Mbps, for N ~150Mbps.

  2. Devices and access points (or routers) time share sending and receiving data on the channel. Each device on the channel takes turns sending and receiving data.

  3. Some advanced routers can communicate on 2 and 3 channels at once! This requires more compute power of course but it is possible. The really advanced devices are able to filter out devices that are not on its "network" and improve speed performance for it's devices.

  4. Wireless N uses the 5Ghz frequency spectrum which is newer, which relates to less devices being on those frequencies.

To answer your question in short: You could have thousands of devices on your network; theoretically. All of the 13 computers (devices) will be able to access the internet at the same time.

4
  • Thanks for your contribution... You would have a reference for the third item???
    – Diogo
    Aug 29, 2011 at 17:48
  • 1
    @Digo_Rocha: edgewater.ca/networking-solutions/eap3000/access-points No joke expensive. Multichannel is just like having multiple access points. Then you provision your devices to use a specific one, and each is on a different channel :)
    – user77360
    Aug 29, 2011 at 18:02
  • @Digo_Rocha: and for the second part cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/wireless/ps5678/ps10981/… Once again, no joke expensive.
    – user77360
    Aug 29, 2011 at 18:05
  • @Digo_Rocha: and finally if you want to "see" the wireless landscape: metageek.net ... which is an example of a lower cost spectrum analyzer. If there are noise sources in your environment you should try to eliminate them to improve wireless performance
    – user77360
    Aug 29, 2011 at 18:07
0

in ofdma idelly each user communicates in a sub channel(aka user channel) which belongs to one of the channels in the channel alloted for the wifi (application) in the fcc spectrum. 802.11g uses both OFDM and DSSS. in dsss the user information is spread over the channel used by the router(each symbol; the wave carrying the bit is spread over many such waves breaking each symbol into many small symbol over the channel used by router, the sequence knowno the router and the user device) . ratio of transmission bandwidth ( channel used by router)to information bandwidth( determined by how much each user wants) gives processing gain which gives us the number of users.

0

You can use a multi channel system using say 1, 6 and 11 or more by using bridging routers 1 for each device or sharing let say a CCTV cameras I use 1, 6 and 11 channel at the same time each of my 3 Wi-Fi bridge routers with different channels each are connected to 2 IP cameras the bridge router receivers then is plugged into the modem or can be a switch the router part of the modem is then connected by Wi-Fi to other devices. if needed you can connect bridge routers on different channels of the 13 available. Hope I have explained properly

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .