Wireless standards tend to get proposed, drafted, and finally accepted at what
seems ШУУД ҮЗЭХ like a glacial
pace. It’s been roughly 17 years since we began to see the first 802.11b wireless routers and laptops. In the intervening time, we’ve only seen three more mainstream standards take hold since then: 802.11g, 802.11n, and now 802.11ac. (I’m leaving out some lesser-used ones like 802.11a for the purposes of this story.)
Now a new standard looms over the horizon. And if you thought that your
new 802.11ac router’s maximum speed of 1,300Mbps was already fast, think
again. With 802.11ac fully certified and out the door, the Wi-Fi
Alliance has started looking at its successor, 802.11ax — and it looks
pretty enticing. While you may have a hard time getting more than
400Mbps to your smartphone via 802.11ac, 802.11ax should deliver real
world speeds above 2Gbps. And in a lab-based trial of technology similar
to 802.11ax, Huawei recently hit a max speed of 10.53Gbps, or around
1.4 gigabytes of data transfer per second. Clearly, 802.11ax is going to
be fast. But what is it exactly?
What is 802.11ax WiFi?
The easiest way to think of 802.11ax is to start with 802.11ac — which
allows for up to four different spatial streams (MIMO) — and then to
massively increase the spectral efficiency (and thus max throughput) of
each stream. Like its predecessor, 802.11ax operates in the 5GHz band,
where there’s a lot more space for wide (80MHz and 160MHz) channels.
With 802.11ax, you get four MIMO (multiple-input-multiple-output)
spatial streams, with each stream multiplexed with OFDA (orthogonal
frequency division access). There is some confusion here as to whether
the Wi-Fi Alliance and Huawei (which leads the 802.11ax working group)
mean OFDA, or OFDMA. OFDMA (multiple access) is a well-known technique
(and is the reason LTE is excellent for what it is). Either way, OFDM,
OFDA, and OFDMA refer to methods of frequency-division multiplexing —
each channel is separated into dozens, or even hundreds, of smaller
subchannels, each with a slightly different frequency. By then turning
these signals through right-angles (orthogonal), they can be stacked
closer together and still be easily demultiplexed.
According to Huawei, the use of OFDA increases spectral efficiency by 10
times, which essentially translates into 10 times the max theoretical
bandwidth, but 4x is seeming like more of a real-world possibility.
This lovely diagram shows you North America’s 5GHz channels, and where
those 20/40/80/160MHz blocks fit in. As you can see, at 5GHz, you won’t
ever get more than two 160MHz channels (and even then, only if you live
in the boonies without interference from neighbors).
How fast is 802.11ax?
If we go for the more conservative 4x estimate, and assume a massive
160MHz channel, the maximum speed of a single 802.11ax stream will be
around 3.5Gbps (compared with 866Mbps for a single 802.11ac stream).
Multiply that out to a 4×4 MIMO network and you get a total capacity of
14Gbps. If you had a smartphone or laptop capable of two or three
streams, you’d get some blazing connection speeds (7Gbps equates to
around 900 megabytes per second; 10.5Gbps equates to 1,344MB/sec).
In a more realistic setup with 80MHz channels, we’re probably looking at
a single-stream speed of around 1.6Gbps, which is a quite reasonable
200MB/sec. Again, if your mobile device supports MIMO, you could be
seeing 400 or 600MB/sec. And in an even more realistic setup with 40MHz
channels (such as what you’d probably get in a crowded apartment block),
a single 802.11ax stream would net you 800Mbps (100MB/sec), or a total
network capacity of 3.2Gbps. (Read: How to boost your WiFi speed by
choosing the right channel.)
802.11ax range, reliability, and other factors
So far, neither the Wi-Fi Alliance nor Huawei has said much about
802.11ax’s other important features. Huawei says that “intelligent
spectrum allocation” and “interference coordination” will be employed —
but most modern WiFi hardware already does that.
It’s fairly safe to assume that working range will stay the same or
increase slightly. Reliability should improve a little with the
inclusion of OFDA, and with the aforementioned spectrum allocation and
interference coordination features. Congestion may also be reduced as a
result, and because data will be transferred between devices faster,
thus freeing the airwaves for other connections.
Otherwise, 802.11ax will work in roughly the same fashion as 802.11ac,
just with massively increased throughput. As we covered in our Linksys
WRT1900AC review, 802.11ac is already pretty great. 802.11ax will just
take things to the next level.
Do we need these kinds of speeds?
The problem, as with all things WiFi, isn’t necessarily the speed of the
network itself — it’s congestion, and more than that even, it’s what
the devices themselves are capable of. For example, even 802.11ax’s
slowest speed of 100MB/sec is pushing it for a hard drive — and it’s
faster than what the eMMC NAND flash storage in most smartphones can
handle as well. Best-case scenario, a modern smartphone’s storage tops
out at around 90MB/sec sequential read, 20MB/sec sequential write —
worst case, with lots of little files, you’re looking at speeds in the
single-megabyte range. Obviously, for the wider 80MHz and 160MHz
channels, you’re going to need some desktop SSDs (or an array of desktop SSDs) to take advantage of 802.11ax’s max speeds.
Of course, not every use-case requires you to read or write data to a
slow storage medium. But even so, alternate uses like streaming 4K video
still fall short of these multi-gigabit speeds. Even if Netflix begins
streaming 8K in the next few years (and you thought there wasn’t enough
to watch in 4K!), 802.11ax has more than enough bandwidth. And the
bottleneck isn’t your WiFi; It’s your internet connection. The current
time frame for 802.11ax certification is 2018 — until then, upgrading to
802.11ac (if you haven’t already) should be a nice stopgap.
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