Radio Channel

Wireless / Radio Channel

The "Radio Channel" page presents an overview of which wireless LAN channels are occupied by wireless networks and displays a list of all of the wireless radio networks at your location. The FRITZ!Box automatically configures the basic radio channel settings. You can adjust these settings as needed.

Click on the "Apply" button to save your settings. If you leave the page without saving, all of your changes will be discarded.

Set radio channel settings automatically (recommended)

With this option the FRITZ!Box automatically checks the wireless environment to select the optimum radio channel settings.

Adjust radio channel settings

With these settings you configure the radio channel settings yourself so that you can adapt them to the circumstances at your location.

  • Wireless standard
    With this setting you specify a wireless standard. The standards are "802.11n+g+b" for the 2.4-GHz band and "802.11n+a" for the 5-GHz band.
  • Frequency band
    FRITZ!Box transmits in either the 2.4-GHz (ISM) band or in the 5-GHz band, but not simultaneously in both bands. Due to the multitude of users (WiFi, Bluetooth, microwave devices etc.), the 2.4-GHz band is loaded more than the 5-GHz band.

    Note: If the FRITZ!Box detects the presence of a so-called "higher-priority user" in the 5-GHz band, such as radar, for instance, it automatically switches channels.

  • Radio channel
    If you select the "auto channel" setting instead of a fixed channel, the FRITZ!Box independently searches the wireless LAN environment for networks in the vicinity and sets the optimum channel. This process can take 30 seconds or more. During this period no wireless device can register at the FRITZ!Box.

Adjust radio channel settings

With this setting you configure the radio channel settings yourself so that you can adapt them to the circumstances at your location.

  • Wireless standard
    With this setting you specify a wireless standard. The standards are "802.11n+g+b" for the 2.4-GHz band and "802.11n+a" for the 5-GHz band.
  • Frequency band
    FRITZ!Box transmits in either the 2.4-GHz (ISM) band or in the 5-GHz band, but not simultaneously in both bands. Due to the multitude of users (WiFi, Bluetooth, microwave devices etc.), the 2.4-GHz band is loaded more than the 5-GHz band.
    Note: If the FRITZ!Box detects the presence of a so-called "higher-priority user" in the 5-GHz band, such as radar, for instance, it automatically switches channels.
  • Radio channel
    If you select the "auto channel" setting instead of a fixed channel, the FRITZ!Box independently searches the wireless LAN environment for networks in the vicinity and sets the optimum channel. This process can take 30 seconds or more. During this period no wireless device can register at the FRITZ!Box.
  • Use optimized radio channels
    When this option is enabled, FRITZ!Box attempts to use radio channels with a bandwidth of 40 MHz. This means that the FRITZ!Box, depending on which generation of the IEEE 802.11n standard is used, can transport 150 to 450 Mbit/s over wireless LAN. If not enough space is available in the radio spectrum to allow interference-free transmission on the channel with bandwidth of 40 MHz, the FRITZ!Box automatically reduces bandwidths to 20 MHz ("fallback") with a correspondingly lower transmission capacity.
  • Maximum transmitter power
    The range of the radio waves can be influenced by adjusting the transmitter power.

WLAN Location

The "Wireless Location"area displays the allocation of radio channels by other wireless networks in the vicinity.

Show disturbances

The "Show WLAN disturbances" option displays the graph of which radio channels are already being used by other wireless networks. Overlapping of radio channels can lead to reduced throughput rates, ranges, or even interrupted connections in the participating WLAN radio networks. If your WLAN connection is unstable, look for a better channel in the graph and then select it under "Adjust radio channel settings".

Wireless Radio Networks

The "Wireless Radio Networks" overview shows which wireless radio networks were found at your location.

All radio networks found at your location are displayed in a table indicating their signal strength, radio network name (SSID), the radio channel used, and MAC address.