Apollo.11 wrote in post #12680022
Logged into the Trendnet and changed the settings like you recommended.
These were the default settings:
RTS Threshold = 2347
Fragmentation Threshold = 2346
Explain to me to me what 'draft n' is and why I would continue to have problems.
Draft N (or 802.11n) was not set in stone by IEEE until 2009. Before that (and even now in some cases) different company's used different chips with slightly different configurations. Most often you can get them to work together with some modifications to settings.
These settings in the most basic terms, increase the likelihood that your computers will stay connected, with the downside being that it will add a little overhead which translates to lower speeds. However, the slow down will be negligible with these settings.
A firmware update 'may' help, but if the chipset is 'draft' (pre-2009) then I doubt it will help. As far as other devices (like phones) knocking you off, I doubt that too because these situations usually result in a lot of noise, which would knock you off constantly or degrade your connection repeatedly. Which you did not describe.
What you're describing is loss of connectivity after periods of wireless inactivity. That sounds like an RTS problem. Your connection is probably not being 'kept alive'. Adjusting the RTS threshold will cause your wireless connection to respond in a shorter period of time (oversimplified), increasing the likelihood that you'll stay connected longer.
Higher grade (and newer) wireless routers typically will not have these issues because they use smarter firmware what recognizes these issues and will compensate automatically.