Written by the iotguys.co.uk team – experts in high-performance mobile broadband and industrial IoT networking.
In a world increasingly reliant on mobile broadband, 5G routers promise to deliver blazing speeds, ultra-low latency, and dependable remote access for everything from home offices to industrial IoT deployments. But the reality for many users is a frustrating experience: speeds that vary wildly from day to day, confusing signal bars, and performance that falls short of expectations—even when you’re using a high-end 5G router like the Teltonika RUTX50.
If you’ve ever wondered why your 5G router feels slower than your phone, or why it works great one day and terribly the next, you’re not alone. This comprehensive guide will walk you through everything you need to understand to get the most out of your 5G router. We use the RUTX50 as our core reference device, but the principles apply broadly—if you’re using a different brand, consult your router’s manual to locate equivalent settings and features.
From understanding mobile frequency bands and modem categories, to band locking, antenna selection, SIM card restrictions, and even real-world signal mapping tools—this is your one-stop guide to mastering high-performance 5G in the UK.
Mobile broadband performance is not just about signal bars. The underlying technologies—4G LTE and 5G NR—operate across multiple frequency bands, each with different strengths, weaknesses, and network deployment strategies. Before you can fix a slow connection, you need to understand the architecture behind it.
4G, or Long-Term Evolution (LTE), revolutionised mobile data by delivering high-speed internet on a wide scale. It operates under 3 GHz and uses multiple frequency bands. The key features include:
5G New Radio is the latest evolution, offering dramatic improvements in:
But there’s a catch: most UK 5G networks still use Non-Standalone (NSA) deployment, where 5G handles downloads, and uploads revert to 4G. This is a crucial limitation we’ll explore further.
| Type | Download Path | Upload Path | Reality in UK |
|---|---|---|---|
| NSA (EN-DC) | 5G (n78 etc.) | 4G (often B20) | Most 5G deployments |
| SA (Standalone) | 5G | 5G | Limited rollout, mostly trials |
This means that even if your router shows a fast 5G connection, your upload speed might still be limited by whichever 4G band it uses for uplink—often a slow one like Band 20.
In the UK, mobile networks operate on a mix of low, mid, and high-frequency bands. Each one affects performance differently.
| Band | Frequency (MHz) | Speed Potential | Range | Penetration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2100 | Medium | Medium | Medium | Often congested fallback |
| 3 | 1800 | Fast | Medium | Good | Common CA anchor |
| 7 | 2600 | Very Fast | Short | Poor | Great rooftop speeds |
| 8 | 900 | Slow/Medium | Long | Good | Mostly O2 |
| 20 | 800 | Slow | Very Long | Excellent | Primary rural + fallback band |
| 28 | 700 | Medium | Very Long | Excellent | Becoming more common |
| Band | Frequency (MHz) | Speed Potential | Range | Penetration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n1 | 2100 | Medium | Medium | Medium | Anchor for EN-DC |
| n3 | 1800 | Fast | Medium | Good | Refarmed from LTE |
| n7 | 2600 | Fast | Short | Weak | Mostly Vodafone (limited) |
| n28 | 700 | Medium | Very Long | Excellent | Good rural 5G coverage |
| n78 | 3500 | Ultra Fast | Short | Very Poor | Main 5G speed band in UK |
Most users see the best performance on n78, but due to its poor penetration and short range, routers often fall back to slower LTE bands unless placement and antenna strategy are optimal.
Not all routers are created equal, even if they support 5G. The internal modem’s Category (Cat) determines its capabilities in both 4G and 5G modes.
| Cat | Max DL Speed | Max UL Speed | CA Support |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | 150 Mbps | 50 Mbps | No |
| 6 | 300 Mbps | 50 Mbps | 2CA |
| 12 | 600 Mbps | 100 Mbps | 3CA |
| 18 | 1.2 Gbps | 211 Mbps | 4CA |
| 20 | 2.0 Gbps | 150 Mbps | 5CA |
Most routers don’t explicitly list 5G categories, but equivalent performance varies by modem chipset. The Quectel RM500Q-AE inside the Teltonika RUTX50 supports:
This means the RUTX50 can combine multiple bands for both technologies—if they’re enabled and available from your SIM/network.
You’d be forgiven for assuming that a 5G router should outperform any 4G setup across the board. But real-world usage often tells a different story—especially when it comes to upload speeds.
You might run a speed test and see:
That’s right—4G outperforms 5G on the uplink. Here’s why:
Most UK 5G deployments are NSA (Non-Standalone). That means even when you’re “on 5G”, your upload traffic is still routed through 4G. If the 4G anchor band is a low-capacity band like Band 20 (800 MHz), then your upload speed suffers.
Worse, some networks deliberately deprioritise uplink on these fallback bands. The result? 10 Mbps uploads on a “350 Mbps” connection.
Even on standalone 5G networks, most spectrum is allocated to downlink. For example, a 100 MHz wide n78 channel might allocate:
Because consumer demand is so download-heavy, uplink is often sacrificed in capacity planning.
When you lock your router to 4G-only mode, especially on a Cat 20 modem (like the one in the RUTX50), you may activate multiple LTE bands for both download and upload.
This can lead to:
If you’re using your 5G router for any of the following, test it in 4G-only mode:
How to test it on the RUTX50:
If you’re happier with 4G performance, consider keeping it locked—especially if download speed isn’t your primary concern.
Many users are misled by signal bars. Full bars don’t guarantee good performance. Instead, use the router’s admin interface to check three key metrics.
This shows raw signal strength from the tower.
This measures how clean the signal is—i.e., how much interference exists.
The most important metric for speed. This measures how much usable signal is getting through.
You can view these on the RUTX50 via:
Status > Network > Mobile
If your signal strength is great but your speeds are poor, chances are your SINR is low or your router is connected to a congested or fallback band.
If there’s one area where marketing misleads more than anywhere else, it’s antennas.
Only install an external antenna if the signal at the antenna’s location is significantly better than at the router.
Adding an antenna doesn’t “boost” your signal. It relocates the point of reception. If you install a 4×4 antenna with 5m cables in the same room as the router, you’ve just added signal loss for no gain.
Routers like the Teltonika RUTX50 have four antenna ports. To make full use of its capabilities:
If you previously used a 2×2 MIMO antenna on your 4G router, do not just add another antenna. Replace it with a unified 4×4 MIMO antenna for full performance.
Most commercial 4×4 antennas come with RG58-type coax. At 5m, expect ~1.8–2.2 dB of loss per cable at 2.6 GHz or 3.5 GHz (LTE Band 7, 5G n78).
That means each signal path loses nearly half its strength by the time it hits the router—unless you’re placing the antenna in a clearly better signal environment (e.g., outside, loft, roof).
Use LMR200 or LMR400 only if:
Do not replace your bundled 5m RG58 cables with LMR unless you’re also extending the length. Otherwise, it’s unnecessary.
Most mobile routers, including the Teltonika RUTX50, default to automatic band selection. The problem? Automatic doesn’t mean optimal.
The router may choose:
Locking bands gives you the power to:
Try each setup and test for 10–15 minutes at a time—document download/upload speeds, ping, and SINR values.
SIM cards are not just about data limits. Their access class, network privileges, and provisioning rules dramatically impact performance—even if they’re branded “unlimited 5G”.
If you’re using a business/IoT SIM, check:
For performance-critical applications, consider testing:
Even a simple test with a Tesco Mobile SIM or Giffgaff can uncover operator-level differences that affect your speed.
Your router doesn’t always connect to the closest or fastest tower. Sometimes, it picks a distant mast broadcasting a weak but “strong-looking” Band 1 or Band 20.
Use www.cellmapper.net:
Cross-reference this with what your router reports:
If your router is connecting to a tower broadcasting only Band 1, you can disable B1 in your band selection and force a faster connection elsewhere.
Even moving your antenna 1 metre can drastically change SINR and improve your real-world speed.
Here’s a consolidated breakdown of major networks and who uses their infrastructure, including common band usage and typical 5G performance.
Many 5G users see dramatic performance swings during the day. That’s not your router failing—it’s network congestion.
If your router performs well in the morning but slows in the evening, it’s a congestion issue—band locking or network switching may help.
Once you’ve understood how bands, signal quality, antennas, SIM plans, and operator performance interact, you can take deliberate steps to optimise your setup for long-term success.
Teltonika regularly releases updates that improve:
Update via:
System > Firmware
Check changelogs and back up settings before applying.
The RUTX50 can aggregate multiple 4G bands and combine them with 5G (if available) for better performance. This works automatically, but only if:
Avoid disabling too many bands unless you’re testing. Some CA requires B3 + B1 or B3 + B20 to work properly.
If managing multiple routers or performing field installs, Teltonika RMS lets you:
It’s especially useful for resellers, integrators, and IoT companies needing to maintain performance remotely.
Never judge your router’s performance by:
Use the Status > Mobile page and manually monitor:
Only these give you the true picture of what’s happening.
Here’s a practical list of steps you or your support team can follow when a 5G router is underperforming:
If after all this you’re still not achieving usable speeds, it’s likely an issue with:
The Teltonika RUTX50, when configured correctly, is one of the most capable industrial 5G routers on the UK market. But the router is only one part of the equation.
The mobile broadband environment in the UK is complex:
What makes the difference is understanding the entire chain—from mast to modem, antenna to APN, SINR to SIM.
This guide has provided not just fixes, but knowledge—the kind of insight you’ll use for years across multiple installs, router brands, and SIM providers.
And remember:
“High performance starts with high understanding.”
If you’re stuck, struggling with a poor install, or want help optimising your deployment, reach out to the helpful team at iotguys.co.uk. We don’t just sell routers—we engineer results.
📶 Unlock the Full Power of Your 5G Router – Especially the Teltonika RUTX50 - 5G SIM says:
[…] speeds, weak uploads, or confusing signal readings—you’re not alone. That’s why the team at iotguys.co.uk has put together a comprehensive, real-world user guide focused on the Teltonika RUTX50, one of the […]