Increase range of wireless?
#1
Original Poster




Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: SFO/SEA
Programs: Amex Biz Cent, Marriott LTP, Avis PC, Hilton Owners Diamond, AS MVP
Posts: 3,404
Increase range of wireless?
I've searched and read a few threads on this subject, but none seem to answer my question directly. Basically the situation is that our existing wireless signal does not hit all corners of the house (namely the signal drops off right outside my room). I've looked into a few solutions- the d-link DWL-G800AP wireless range extender, the Netgear powerline wireless range extender WGXB102, or simply buying a couple of the new Buffalo Wireless-G MIMO performance routers and setting one of them up as an access point in the middle of the house.
SInce I am not well versed in the field of wireless networking, what would you say is the better solution?
SInce I am not well versed in the field of wireless networking, what would you say is the better solution?
#2
In Memoriam




Join Date: Jun 2000
Programs: Honors Diamond, Hertz Presidents Circle, National Exec Elite
Posts: 36,111
If you can buy it from a place that will let you return easily, you might try the Linksys Range Expander. The latest version -- version 3 -- is very stable and does a good job. MOst of the cheap ones on eBay are version 1s which don't work as well and don't play nicely with version 3 (should you decide to get two).
It says it only supports other Linksys products but I suspect that's more of an issue of they don't want to be called when your cross-brand boxes don't work together. OfficeMax and Walmart have them for ~$80; either would allow a return.
It says it only supports other Linksys products but I suspect that's more of an issue of they don't want to be called when your cross-brand boxes don't work together. OfficeMax and Walmart have them for ~$80; either would allow a return.
#3
Original Poster




Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: SFO/SEA
Programs: Amex Biz Cent, Marriott LTP, Avis PC, Hilton Owners Diamond, AS MVP
Posts: 3,404
If you can buy it from a place that will let you return easily, you might try the Linksys Range Expander. The latest version -- version 3 -- is very stable and does a good job. MOst of the cheap ones on eBay are version 1s which don't work as well and don't play nicely with version 3 (should you decide to get two).
It says it only supports other Linksys products but I suspect that's more of an issue of they don't want to be called when your cross-brand boxes don't work together. OfficeMax and Walmart have them for ~$80; either would allow a return.
It says it only supports other Linksys products but I suspect that's more of an issue of they don't want to be called when your cross-brand boxes don't work together. OfficeMax and Walmart have them for ~$80; either would allow a return.
Do you know how the Linksys compares to say, the Belkin ? Belkin seems to be a lot cheaper and at least on Amazon, has better reviews.
#4
FlyerTalk Evangelist



Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Department of Homeland Sincerity
Programs: WN Platinum, UA 1k, AA EP, Marriott Plat
Posts: 12,317
Buy a powerline ethernet adapter to make ethernet available in your room, and then hook a wireless gateway to the ethernet connection to have wireless in your room. Problem solved.
#5
In Memoriam
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Easton, CT, USA
Programs: ua prem exec, Former hilton diamond
Posts: 31,801
What are you running now?
If your laptop is not using a longer range wireless, just getting a $20 card for it may make all the difference.
If your laptop is running a longer range card but your router isn't, then changing the router may make the difference.
Try moving the router a bit or changing the direction of the antenna, if the signal is that close, that's all you may need.
I ended up getting an access point and wiring it to the other side of the house when I wanted to extend.
If your laptop is not using a longer range wireless, just getting a $20 card for it may make all the difference.
If your laptop is running a longer range card but your router isn't, then changing the router may make the difference.
Try moving the router a bit or changing the direction of the antenna, if the signal is that close, that's all you may need.
I ended up getting an access point and wiring it to the other side of the house when I wanted to extend.
#6
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Newport Beach, California, USA
Posts: 36,062
#7
Original Poster




Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: SFO/SEA
Programs: Amex Biz Cent, Marriott LTP, Avis PC, Hilton Owners Diamond, AS MVP
Posts: 3,404
THanks to all for all the help...I decided to go with getting the Buffalo router and setting it up as an access point in the middle of the house. After hours of dicking around and finally calling tech support (nice that Buffalo has 24/7 reps), it now works and I can happily have fast internet in my room.
It seems as though internet is one of my basic survival needs...I don't know how I would have survived 2 weeks of having to move to the den to use it!
It seems as though internet is one of my basic survival needs...I don't know how I would have survived 2 weeks of having to move to the den to use it!
#9
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Apr 1999
Location: Bryn Mawr PA & Wailea HI
Posts: 15,726
Also many of the Buffalo AP have replaceable antennas. I replaced the original antenna with a nice new 7 dB antenna ($7), added WW-DRT (free) and doubled my usable range.
MisterNice
MisterNice
#10
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: The Big D
Programs: AA, CO, DL, WN, SPG Gold
Posts: 1,842
The issue with WDS is that your throughput is cut in half -- not good for large file movement in your home network. And a lot of manufacturer implementations have very flaky (or can't handle) WPA-PSK TKIP protection.
#11
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Newport Beach, California, USA
Posts: 36,062
I've noticed the latter. Why does throughput get cut in half?
#13
Join Date: Sep 2004
Programs: UA GS
Posts: 2,159
Wirelessly posted (BlackBerry8830/4.2.2 Profile/MIDP-2.0 Configuration/CLDC-1.1 VendorID/104)
I would have recommended the airport extreme. It is very reliable and with the aiport expresses they work really well.
I have an old house with really thick brick walls and I tried all the different routers from lynksys to netgear. I used the range extenders but they did not work reliably and they were a pain to set up. I bought an extreme and it covers the whole house. I added the express so I could get a strong signal in our backyard. Anyway I really like the airport.
I would have recommended the airport extreme. It is very reliable and with the aiport expresses they work really well.
I have an old house with really thick brick walls and I tried all the different routers from lynksys to netgear. I used the range extenders but they did not work reliably and they were a pain to set up. I bought an extreme and it covers the whole house. I added the express so I could get a strong signal in our backyard. Anyway I really like the airport.






