[ale] [Semi-OT] Second WiFi in the house?
DJ-Pfulio
DJPfulio at jdpfu.com
Fri Oct 9 13:21:28 EDT 2020
On 2020-10-09 11:46, Leam Hall via Ale wrote:
> I'm not sure any of my current network gear supplies PoE, and the
> phones are likely not strong signals as they are older, too.
PoE injectors are provided w/ ubiquiti kits. The older ones at least.
Buying last-gen gets cheaper prices. If you care about ecurity, use a VPN
with all wifi, regardless.
> The current setup is: Cable -> SurfBoard SB 6141 -> ASUS RT-N66R
> (wifi) -> Linksys EZXS88W (for internal lab)
It that Asus still getting regular patches? Since switching to OPNsense,
I don't worry about having patches available or needing to buy new physical
router every 4-6 rs s support drops. OTOH, Asus is under mandated FCC
oversight for their routers and has become a near model for firmware updates
since that ruling.
> The reality is I probably need to upgrade more than just "add an
> AP", but that was part of what I wasn't sure about. The house isn't
> that big, nor is it concrete, but phones lose connection from 15
> yards away.
15 yards LoS or going thru 3 thick walls?
I'm not a fan of wifi bridges. There are other options to reliably extend
networks inside house. Powerline ethernet and MoCa if rooms have COAX
already. I think MoCa provides more bandwidth, but you may need filters
to keep it only in your house and/or to share with CATV or ISP or other coax
signals on the same wires.
> On Fri, Oct 9, 2020 at 11:39 AM Michael Martin via Ale <ale at ale.org>
> wrote:
>>
>> I’ver replaced the Ubiquity WAPs with Eero — mesh networking seems
>> to have come a long way and it is not as fiddly as managing your
>> own infrastructure.
>>
>> I would consider doing some research into mesh network products
>> (I’m sure Ubiquity has one by this time) and compare.
>>
>> Mike
>>
>>> On Oct 9, 2020, at 11:32 AM, James Taylor via Ale <ale at ale.org>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> I have three in my abode. I have wired connections to the two at
>>> the extremities, and one in the middle that is wifi bridged
>>> because no cable there. The bridged works as well as the the
>>> direct wired for most stuff. If you have a situation where you
>>> need to connect a location you can't wire, getting two and
>>> bridging the second would probably work well. -jt
>>>
>>>
>>> James Taylor 678-697-9420 james.taylor at eastcobbgroup.com
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>>> DJ-Pfulio via Ale <ale at ale.org> 10/9/2020 11:19 AM >>>
>>> On 10/8/20 4:02 PM, Leam Hall via Ale wrote:
>>>> Is there anything particular to look for a second wi-fi in the
>>>> house. Our phones are old, and our current wi-fi switch is old,
>>>> so we keep getting dropped and then using all our limited data.
>>>> My thinking is to get a second wifi and run a wire to the
>>>> living room, which should give us coverage. It theory it should
>>>> be easy, but I don't know what I don't know these days.
>>> Ubiquiti PoE APs are pretty great. Decouples the wifi from the
>>> router.
>>>
>>> https://www.amazon.com/Ubiquiti-UAP-AC-LR-US-Unifi-AP-AC-Range/dp/B07CLN4BBM
>>> - $222 for a 2-pak, but you probably only need 1 AP unless you
>>> have multiple "wings" on your estate or it has concrete walls.
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