Hello @wendiewendie06 The frequencies used should be compatible as far
as I can tell – however, if I recall correctly, Google/Nest WiFi no
longer allows units manufactured for different regions to join a single
system. I think I'd stick with finding ...
Hello @nkr1125 This is not an option, unfortunately, and I wish it were
as well. I'd love to see this as an option in the device list, or in the
details for each access point (better yet – both!). All I can suggest at
this point, though, is to use th...
Hello @nkr1125 This is not an option, I'm afraid. Client devices decide
which access point (and which band – 2.4GHz or 5GHz) to connect to. They
don't always make great decisions. After a Google WiFi restart (e.g.,
following a power outage), the prim...
Hello @Cabrehruh Trying to build a "daisy chain" topology isn't going to
work well. Each unit decides which other unit to send traffic to on its
own – they don't have any way of actually knowing where they are placed
relative to each other. So, if a ...
That's not a band separation issue. More likely it's that the guest
network may be isolating clients from each other and from devices on the
main network. I like putting some IoT devices on my guest network, too,
but anything that requires dynamic di...