- Oct 9, 2002
- 28,298
- 1,235
- 136
Searching for information, all I find are user forum posts. I can't find an official Sony page stating that only 2.4 GHz is supported. Not even this official tech specs page:
https://www.playstation.com/en-us/explore/ps4/techspecs/
"802.11b/g/n" -- this doesn't tell me if it supports 5GHz N. Though, for someone like me, seeing that it lacks 802.11a support tells me it almost certainly does not support 5GHz. However, I want something I can show to other people and have them immediately understand that 5GHz is not supported.
I spoke with someone today. His son was angry when they bought a high-end "tri-band" router and his PS4 could not see or connect to the 5GHz network. Sony tech support passed the buck with the generic "your ISP is blocking ports" reply. Exactly how would an ISP blocking ports prevent a PS4 from seeing a 5GHz network, Sony? If the PS4 had 5GHz capability at all, it could see and connect to a 5GHz network even if that network had no connection to the Internet at all (LAN only).
You'd think Sony would just save people the trouble with a clear message stating something like this: "The Playstation 4 models [...] do not support 5GHz. These models can only connect to a standard 2.4GHz WiFi 802.11b/g/n network."
[2016-02-23 Update]
The XBOX 360 was released in 2005 and both versions of the XBOX 360 wireless adapter supported 5GHz. The first version was just 802.11a (that would be pretty slow), but the second version with 2 antennas supported N 5GHz.
So now the PS4 has revised hardware and I'm having the same problem. Still no information online to confirm if it has 5GHz capability...so I can only assume it's 2.4GHz-only. Now it was pretty mind-blowing to find that the original PS4 hardware didn't have 5GHz capability, but excluding it from the late-2015 revised hardware is just unbelievable. What is Sony thinking? Maybe it's: "We're winning the console war this generation, so we don't need to improve anything."
https://www.playstation.com/en-us/explore/ps4/techspecs/
"802.11b/g/n" -- this doesn't tell me if it supports 5GHz N. Though, for someone like me, seeing that it lacks 802.11a support tells me it almost certainly does not support 5GHz. However, I want something I can show to other people and have them immediately understand that 5GHz is not supported.
I spoke with someone today. His son was angry when they bought a high-end "tri-band" router and his PS4 could not see or connect to the 5GHz network. Sony tech support passed the buck with the generic "your ISP is blocking ports" reply. Exactly how would an ISP blocking ports prevent a PS4 from seeing a 5GHz network, Sony? If the PS4 had 5GHz capability at all, it could see and connect to a 5GHz network even if that network had no connection to the Internet at all (LAN only).
You'd think Sony would just save people the trouble with a clear message stating something like this: "The Playstation 4 models [...] do not support 5GHz. These models can only connect to a standard 2.4GHz WiFi 802.11b/g/n network."
[2016-02-23 Update]
The XBOX 360 was released in 2005 and both versions of the XBOX 360 wireless adapter supported 5GHz. The first version was just 802.11a (that would be pretty slow), but the second version with 2 antennas supported N 5GHz.
So now the PS4 has revised hardware and I'm having the same problem. Still no information online to confirm if it has 5GHz capability...so I can only assume it's 2.4GHz-only. Now it was pretty mind-blowing to find that the original PS4 hardware didn't have 5GHz capability, but excluding it from the late-2015 revised hardware is just unbelievable. What is Sony thinking? Maybe it's: "We're winning the console war this generation, so we don't need to improve anything."
Last edited: