I saw an interesting question recently that I thought I would offer up an answer to:
In Windows ‘netsh wlan show interfaces’, what does the signal % mean?
Here is an example (I have two wireless interfaces on my system – Wi-Fi is the built in wireless adapter, and Wi-Fi4 is an external adapter – cheap – literally $8 from Amazon):
Windows (for some obscure reason) reports the signal level as a percent, not as actual dBm. We have found various resources on the Internet that report there is a rough formula for this % to convert it to dBm. The formula is:
(% number / 2) – 100 = dBm
Here is a resulting chart:
100% | -50dBm or better |
90% | -55dBm |
80% | -60dBm |
70% | -65dBm |
60% | -70dBm |
50% | -75dBm |
40% | -80dBm |
30% | -85dBm |
20% | -90dBm |
10% | -95dBm or worse |
Hope this helps. You can find other interesting Windows and Wi-Fi articles and tips by selecting the tags below.
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