Baza wiedzy
AVM Content
- FRITZ!Box 7590 AX
- FRITZ!Box 7590
- FRITZ!Box 7583
- FRITZ!Box 7560
- FRITZ!Box 7530 AX
- FRITZ!Box 7510
- FRITZ!Box 7490
- FRITZ!Box 6890 LTE
- FRITZ!Box 6850 5G
- FRITZ!Box 6850 LTE
- FRITZ!Box 6840 LTE
- FRITZ!Box 6820 LTE
- FRITZ!Box 6660 Cable
- FRITZ!Box 6591 Cable
- FRITZ!Box 6490 Cable
- FRITZ!Box 5590 Fiber
- FRITZ!Box 5530 Fiber
- FRITZ!Box 5491
- FRITZ!Box 5490
- FRITZ!Box 4060
What is Wi-Fi roaming and how does it work?
In home networks with a wireless router (for example FRITZ!Box) and one or more wireless repeaters (for example FRITZ!Repeater), the Wi-Fi networks of individual devices overlap. If a smartphone, tablet, or other wireless device in such an environment automatically switches from a Wi-Fi network with a weak signal to one with a stronger signal, this is referred to as "Wi-Fi roaming".
The roaming behavior is not influenced by the router or the repeater. Instead, the wireless device itself makes the decision to change the Wi-Fi network as soon as the signal strength and transmitting power fall below a limit specified by the manufacturer.
When a device switches to a different Wi-Fi network, network and data connections (for example VoIP calls, video streams, or downloads) are briefly interrupted. The duration of the interruption caused when Wi-Fi roaming occurs can be reduced to a minimum if routers and repeaters use identical Wi-Fi network names (SSIDs), network keys, and Wi-Fi channels. In contrast to Wi-Fi roaming, the FRITZ!Box can use Mesh Wi-Fi steering to seamlessly steer current wireless devices to the optimal Wi-Fi network.
Not all wireless devices support Wi-Fi roaming. Refer to the respective manufacturer for information on the range of functions of other wireless devices.
Note:All FRITZ!WLAN Sticks support Wi-Fi roaming.