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Study Guide · A+ Core 1 · CompTIA 220-1201 V15

What each objective is asking you to know

Plain-English reference for every CompTIA A+ Core 1 V15 objective. Each entry covers what the exam tests, key facts, and how the concept connects to neighboring objectives. Pair with Quiz and Flashcards to lock it in.

Objective 2.2

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):

StandardMarketing nameBand(s)Top theoretical speed
802.11a(none)5 GHz54 Mbps
802.11b(none)2.4 GHz11 Mbps
802.11g(none)2.4 GHz54 Mbps
802.11nWi-Fi 42.4 and 5 GHz600 Mbps
802.11acWi-Fi 55 GHz~3.5 Gbps
802.11axWi-Fi 6 / 6E2.4, 5, and 6 GHz (6E)~9.6 Gbps
802.11beWi-Fi 72.4, 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)