Cable Modem Routers: Beamforming vs Band Steering vs MU-MIMO

Learn > Cable Modem & Routers > Cable Modem Routers: Beamforming vs Band Steering vs MU-MIMO

Here’s what you need to know about MU-MIMO, beamforming, and band steering. Each technology is very similar in making a WiFi network faster and more efficient, but they do have slight differences. Let’s break it down.

What is Beamforming?

Beamforming is a router feature technology that directs signals toward the intended wireless device that is connected to it instead of sending signals in random directions. Without beamforming, signals are sent in every possible direction. Beamforming and MU-MIMO work together. Since the signal is more efficiently used, MU-MIMO can help increase WiFi range and speed on a WiFi network.

 

What is Band steering?

Band steering is a router feature that automatically connects your devices to the best available WiFi frequency in your home. Typically, most cable modems or cable modem routers come with two main frequency bands: 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz. A router that supports band steering takes inventory of all the connected devices and decides which to send to different frequency channels to efficiently maintain your WiFi network performance.

What is MU-MIMO?

MU-MIMO stands for Multi-User, Multi-Input, Multi-Out. This technology is a router feature that started with WiFi 5 and has advanced with WiFi 6. MU-MIMO allows an access point to simultaneously communicate with devices. This means sending and receiving data from the Internet to multiple devices at the same time for faster and more efficient wireless Internet.

How are they different?

While beamforming, band steering, and MU-MIMO technology are similar in that they make your network more efficient, how they do this is the difference. Each is a critical component though, and when they work together, they help make your WiFi better. The difference:

 

  • Beamforming allows point-to-multipoint communication to create a stronger, better, faster wireless communication.

How: It can temporarily bend the network towards wireless devices at the far end of the house to improve their signal strength. This is especially helpful in large, multi-story homes.

  • Band steering enabled on your router allows your 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz networks use the same SSID name and password.

How:  When enabled, your wireless router can decide which band to put all your connected devices on to get the best performance.

  • MU-MIMO sends signals around obstacles in your home to help deal with dead spots.

How: It creates an express lane (or lanes) on your wireless network to make sure any slower WiFi devices don’t affect the faster devices.

 

Want more information on MU-MIMO and other WiFi boosting resources? Check out Hitron’s Learn Page for more.

 

Need a Better Internet Solution?

CODA56 2.5 Gbps Modem

Related Articles

Why Your Modem Keeps Resetting and How to Fix It

Your modem is the gateway to your Internet connection — so when it starts resetting on its own, it can disrupt everything from video calls to streaming and online gaming. If your modem keeps resetting, there are several potential reasons, and understanding them can...

Modem Basics: What It Is, How It Works, and Why You Need One

A modem is the essential device that connects your home to the Internet. It receives signals from your Internet Service Provider (ISP)—whether through cable, DSL, fiber, or cellular—and converts them into digital data your devices can use. One common example is the...

DOCSIS 4.0 Cable Modems: What You Need to Know Before Buying

DOCSIS 4.0 Is the Next Generation of Cable Modem Technology DOCSIS 4.0 represents a major leap in cable broadband performance. If you're researching what it means for your home Internet setup—or considering when to upgrade—this guide covers everything you need to...

What is an Internet Modem? (Simple Guide to How They Work)

An internet modem is the device that connects your home to your Internet Service Provider (ISP). It translates the signal from your ISP into a form your devices can use, allowing you to access the Internet. Without a modem, you wouldn’t be able to get online.  ...

Featured Articles

3

Buying vs Renting a Router

Should you invest in your own Internet equipment and buy a router instead of renting one from your Internet service provider (ISP)? It depends on the cost and your preferences. Here are some pros and cons to help you decide.

Cable Modem Routers… A Complete Guide

This friendly, complete cable modem guide will answer your essential questions about cable modems, comparisons, compatibility and more FAQs that matter to you.

What is a Router?

A router is a small box that translates data from your modem to communicate a Wi-Fi signal to the devices on your local network. Learn more.

Let me know when the OS2210 is available?

[contact-form-7 id="16041" title="OS2210 - Notification"]