eric
7
I have a USB RT3070 adapter working with my AR300M16-ext so very similar to your AR300M-lite but I am using a snapshot version of OpenWrt firmware, as I could not get both radios configured with the GL-iNet 3.105 code. There have been some posts that the GL-iNet firmware is not always friendly to USB WIFI devices. The USB adapter I am using is a Panda Long-Range Wireless N Adapter with dual Antennas (PAU08). On Amazon it costs about $10.00. Specs at:
http://pandawireless.com/pandaLongRange.htm
The Panda USB adapter is much better then the internal radio with its two little antennas on my AR300M16-ext. In my neighborhood using the internal AR300M16-ext radio, I see about 8 APs, with the Panda USB adapter I see over 20. Looking at two APs in my house, the Panda USB adapter gives about a 20db improvement over the internal radio in the AR300M16-ext. I am using a powered USB hub between the AR300M and the Panda USB adapter, as I also am backing up my work to an external USB flash drive, so I need 2 USB ports. Once everything is working, I will test without the powered hub and flash drive.
The OpenWrt firmware I am testing with came from:
https://downloads.openwrt.org/snapshots/targets/ath79/generic/openwrt-ath79-generic-glinet_gl-ar300m16-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
There is a bin file for the ar300m-lite in this directory.
I miss the GL-iNet interface, but for this use case, I will learn LUCI. I have not put this into production yet, but for testing the Panda USB adapter is connected and streaming data through an open Xfinity WIFI AP that I cannot see at all with the built in AR300M16-ext radio. I am using the AR300M16-ext internal radio for my local AP.
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