07-24-2022, 06:35 PM | #45 |
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My condo was built in 2014 and recessed into the wall in the bedroom closet is a small door that includes power and the coax and cat5 that feed every room thru the walls. A wifi router used to sit in the living room cadenza, But everything that was important like all my streaming page and computers were hardwired to the CAT5.All of that went away when they ran optical up to the closet box and put in a small Wi-Fi modem about three months ago. It increased the speed from 80 Mbps to 500…Because optical feeding the Wi-Fi modem is so damn fast now, The cables through the walls are unnecessary, I’m getting 500 Mbps anywhere in the condo now without any cables.
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Ft Lauderdale '23 228i GC Last edited by Glen e; 07-24-2022 at 06:59 PM.. |
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07-24-2022, 09:55 PM | #46 | |
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Quote:
As to the Google thingies, it's probably Google WiFi which uses a mesh setup between APs. This is not the same as a repeater/booster. |
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07-27-2022, 12:16 AM | #48 |
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You want a wired backhaul for your mesh extenders if you can do it - I use it with my Google Fiber 2 gig service. It was a huge pain to get the wired part to work in my house, but I eventually figured out how to get it going with a wired backhaul.
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07-27-2022, 09:32 AM | #49 |
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Agreed. My system, with multiple Deco X20 nodes, was vastly improved by wired backhaul.
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07-27-2022, 07:55 PM | #50 |
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07-28-2022, 08:14 AM | #51 |
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For clarification, of course, any wired connection is preferable to going wireless for the backhaul.
My comment was about a different situation. Repeaters and boosters connect to the main AP as a regular wireless client. Not only does this cause more congestion and performance issues on the overall wireless network, it divides the bandwidth in half. Mesh wireless backhauls are very different than this. Mesh wireless backbones use a different part of the 5GHz radio RF than the normal ones used by wireless clients. These are DEDICATED connections between member APs in the cluster. Of course the performance of these wireless backbones are entirely dependent on things that normally affect wireless networks. As to powerline networking, in many cases yes, it is preferable to using wireless backhauls. But not always. It also depends on the quality of the wiring in the house and that there is no noise in the A/C line between the two powerline nodes. |
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