Objective 2.2: Explain wireless networking technologies
Cert: CompTIA A+ Core 1 (220-1201) V15 Domain: 2.0 Networking Weight: ~23% of Core 1 Depth: Explain. Understand the wireless technology landscape and the meaningful differences between frequencies, standards, and short-range options.
What this objective tests
You should be able to talk about Wi-Fi frequencies and channels, name the 802.11 generations and what each adds, and recognize short-range wireless technologies (Bluetooth, NFC, RFID) and their use cases.
Key facts
Wi-Fi frequencies:
- 2.4 GHz. Longer range, more wall penetration, slower max speeds. Crowded (many devices share the same channels). Three non-overlapping channels in most regions (1, 6, 11).
- 5 GHz. Shorter range, less wall penetration, faster speeds. Many more non-overlapping channels available, so less interference.
- 6 GHz. New band opened to Wi-Fi 6E and Wi-Fi 7. Fastest, lowest latency, but shortest range and requires Wi-Fi 6E or 7 client and AP.
Channels:
- A channel is a slice of frequency a Wi-Fi network operates on within a band.
- Regulations. Allowed channels and power levels differ by country. Equipment defaults to local regulations through the device's regulatory domain setting.
- Channel selection. Pick a channel with minimal overlap with neighbors. Many APs auto-select; manual selection is sometimes needed in dense environments.
- Widths. Wi-Fi channels can be combined: 20 MHz (basic), 40 MHz, 80 MHz, 160 MHz, and 320 MHz (Wi-Fi 7). Wider channels go faster but cover fewer total channel slots.
- Frequencies. Each band has a specific frequency range (2.4 GHz: roughly 2.4 to 2.4835 GHz; 5 GHz: multiple sub-bands; 6 GHz: 5.925 to 7.125 GHz).
- Bands. The grouping of channels by frequency: 2.4 GHz band, 5 GHz band, 6 GHz band.
802.11 standards (Wi-Fi generations):
| Standard | Marketing name | Band(s) | Top theoretical speed |
|---|---|---|---|
| 802.11a | (none) | 5 GHz | 54 Mbps |
| 802.11b | (none) | 2.4 GHz | 11 Mbps |
| 802.11g | (none) | 2.4 GHz | 54 Mbps |
| 802.11n | Wi-Fi 4 | 2.4 and 5 GHz | 600 Mbps |
| 802.11ac | Wi-Fi 5 | 5 GHz | ~3.5 Gbps |
| 802.11ax | Wi-Fi 6 / 6E | 2.4, 5, and 6 GHz (6E) | ~9.6 Gbps |
| 802.11be | Wi-Fi 7 | 2.4, 5, and 6 GHz | ~46 Gbps |
Real-world throughput is much lower than theoretical, especially in busy environments.
Bluetooth:
- Short-range (~10 meters classic, up to 100 meters Bluetooth 5 in clear air) wireless for peripherals.
- Bluetooth versions: 4.x (legacy), 5.x (current), 6 emerging.
- Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) is a power-efficient variant used by trackers, IoT sensors, and beacons.
NFC (Near-Field Communication):
- Very short range (a few centimeters). High-frequency (13.56 MHz).
- Common uses: tap-to-pay (Apple Pay, Google Pay), tap-to-pair (Bluetooth speakers), badge entry, smart card replacement.
RFID (Radio Frequency Identification):
- Tag-and-reader system. Tags can be passive (powered by the reader's field) or active (battery-powered).
- Common uses: inventory tracking, asset management, building access cards, livestock tagging, supply chain.
- NFC is technically a specialized form of high-frequency RFID with two-way communication.
Common gotchas
- 2.4 GHz interference. Microwaves, baby monitors, Bluetooth, and many other devices use 2.4 GHz. Heavy interference in dense apartments or office floors.
- Channel overlap on 2.4 GHz. Only channels 1, 6, and 11 are non-overlapping in most regions. Using channels 3, 7, or 9 causes interference with neighbors who properly use 1, 6, or 11.
- 5 GHz wall penetration. 5 GHz signals lose more strength through walls than 2.4 GHz. APs may need to be closer together.
- 6 GHz client compatibility. A Wi-Fi 6E AP can serve 6 GHz only to Wi-Fi 6E (or Wi-Fi 7) clients. Older devices fall back to 2.4 or 5 GHz.
- Channel widths and density. A single 160 MHz channel eats most of a region's 5 GHz spectrum. Good for one isolated AP, bad in a dense multi-AP deployment.
- NFC vs Bluetooth confusion. NFC requires touching. Bluetooth works across the room. They are used together for tap-to-pair (NFC initiates, Bluetooth carries data).
- RFID vs NFC confusion. NFC is a subset of high-frequency RFID but with two-way communication. Most "RFID badges" in offices today are either low-frequency 125 kHz or high-frequency 13.56 MHz.
Real-world context
For a small office or home:
- Dual-band routers with simultaneous 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz are standard. Place the AP centrally.
- Use 5 GHz for laptops and high-bandwidth devices. Use 2.4 GHz for printers, IoT devices, and far-away rooms.
- Auto channel select on consumer routers usually works. In dense apartments, manually picking 1, 6, or 11 on 2.4 GHz can help.
For business multi-AP deployments:
- Match band, channel width, and AP placement to building geometry and user density.
- Wi-Fi 6 or 6E is the modern baseline for new deployments. 6E for high-density and low-latency requirements where clients support it.
Common helpdesk wireless calls:
- "Wi-Fi is slow." Usually band selection (laptop stuck on 2.4 GHz) or channel interference.
- "Wi-Fi drops every few minutes." Could be a flaky AP, roaming misconfiguration, or interference.
- "My new Wi-Fi 6E phone is no faster than the old one." Probably no 6 GHz AP in the building, so the phone is on 5 GHz like before.
Sources
- [CompTIA A+ 220-1201 Exam Objectives Version 4.0, Section 2.2](../../../../../../30-RevyTechJourney/CompTIA%20A%2B%20220-1201%20Exam%20Objectives%20%284.0%29.pdf)
- [Wikipedia: IEEE 802.11](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11)
- [Wikipedia: List of WLAN channels](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_WLAN_channels)
- [Wikipedia: Wi-Fi 6](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-Fi_6)
- [Wikipedia: Wi-Fi 7](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-Fi_7)
- [Wikipedia: Bluetooth](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluetooth)
- [Wikipedia: Near-field communication](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near-field_communication)
- [Wikipedia: Radio-frequency identification](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio-frequency_identification)
