YES.
I think usually the dedicate one radio to the uplink. The standard AP has two radios, by default one in 2.4GHz the other in 5GHz band. Not sure if newer Wifi standards offer more flexibility while keeping performance. Technical details.
But in general a „wireless bridge“ is a mode many devices support. GL.iNet did a great job to offer this very easy to use (hiding the OpenWRT away).
But you can also use two devices. A wireless bridge (L2) and a router of your choice.
YES. I think usually the dedicate one radio to the uplink. The standard AP has two radios, by default one in 2.4GHz the other in 5GHz band. Not sure if newer Wifi standards offer more flexibility while keeping performance. Technical details.
But in general a „wireless bridge“ is a mode many devices support. GL.iNet did a great job to offer this very easy to use (hiding the OpenWRT away).
But you can also use two devices. A wireless bridge (L2) and a router of your choice.