Years ago I used a similar thing to access the free WiFi from the local council offices. It wasn't great, but it worked.A colleague of mine swore he managed to see the university WIFI from some distance using one of these ...
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Powerline internet might work but, in my experience trying to do the same thing, it didn't because the power line to the outside can be very noisy. You can try it but I ended up returning the unit.
Mesh networks are really expensive.
You can get a simple WiFi extender though. We have this one in high speed mode which works really well.
AC1750 Wi-Fi Range Extender
TP-Link's RE450 comes with next generation 802.11AC Wi-Fi technology, 3 times faster than the standard 802.11n speeds.www.tp-link.com
High speed mode means that the link from the house to the extender uses the 5GHz channel exclusively. The extended network uses 2.4GHz exclusively. Devices switch easily and invisibly between them.
I also tuned down the extension signal strength to the lowest as the extender doesn't need to be broadcasting out very strongly.
This setup easily handles video calls and on speedtest I'm getting pretty much full speed internet.
Yeah?
No. that's not happening - but it's a nice thought
Not in the fucking valley we live in you won't - we don't even get G let alone 5G so WiFi signals from a long way away isn't going to happenThere is a bit of a subculture dedicated to home made extenders/distance wifi solutions. If you have an old satellite dish to repurpose, you can apparently get connections from tens or sometimes even as much as a hundred miles away!
Try googling homemade Yagi Antennas or "Pringles Can Extenders" for some ideas - we may even have a past thread on the subject!
we don't even get G let alone 5G
It's the shed that needs the WiFi. Can you vaccinate a shed?Sounds like you need a few more covid jabs.
In a final note to all of this, it took MUCH swearing and throwing around of a mobile phone but the Sonos system now works as well, saving me the cost of a Bluetooth speaker for the cave - oh glory be!
I managed this one on my own
By you or HV, or both?
I managed this one on my own
It was a team effort
Well, OK, the Sonos was Izz but doing the "heavy lifting" of googling for the local computer shop and starting this thread . . . THAT WAS ME
hah de ha haaaIn other news . . . I'm planning on having a bonfire next week, weather permitting
In other news . . . I'm planning on having a bonfire next week, weather permitting
You can get a waterproof one for not much more than a regular one - eg 25 quid for 30 metersOr if you're me, something cheap maybe using vaseline in some cheap hosepipe...
My home network is hooked up with the shittiest 10 and 20 metre cat5 imaginable...
In our case the WiFi over power works perfectly fine, thank goodnessIf you don't want to run cable you want point to point WiFi. We use it a clients site and it's surprisingly good. Something like this...
TP-Link CPE510 Pharos Outdoor 5Ghz 13dBi WiFi 4 Point-to-Point PtP Link Kit (300Mbps N)
www.broadbandbuyer.com
So, I'm trying to improve the wifi connection in my bedroom/home office for meetings in a new job without reducing speed... it's all in a typical two-story London maisonette, but the router is at the opposite end on the other floor from the bedroom and the walls are thick, so video calls can be clunky.
Does this look like a sensible solution:
So, I'm trying to improve the wifi connection in my bedroom/home office for meetings in a new job without reducing speed... it's all in a typical two-story London maisonette, but the router is at the opposite end on the other floor from the bedroom and the walls are thick, so video calls can be clunky.
Does this look like a sensible solution:
I might tag this on here as possibly relevant ...
When Virgin game me a new modem/router, I stuck the old WIFI router I'd bought years before at the back of the house with the settings and firmware that had worked before and most things get an IP and work fine - but my WIFI camera and smart lightbulb just won't connect which is annoying because they're already on the edge of their range and I want to use them even further away.
With the smartbulb, for the install I also had to turn on mobile data ...
I used to slag off power line adaptors but these days they are really very good. I'm going to use it to place an ap upstairs at the back of the house to add to the one downstairs to hopefully give me coverage in the bog and garden. Might be worth a try?So, I'm trying to improve the wifi connection in my bedroom/home office for meetings in a new job without reducing speed... it's all in a typical two-story London maisonette, but the router is at the opposite end on the other floor from the bedroom and the walls are thick, so video calls can be clunky.
Does this look like a sensible solution: