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Forum Discussion
WestMilford-Di
Feb 26, 2018Aspirant
Design Hep for Orbi
I have a very long one story house and am currently using a router & range extender (see diagram on placement). The range extender does an OK job but does not reach out to cover my pool or external garages. I am thinking of switching to an Orbi system. I am looking at the AC3000 RBK50.
I assume that I would replace my current router with the Orbi router and current extender with the Orbi Satelitte. (correct?)
For the external coverage, I have electric power in both garages.
Should I get another satellite and put in inside garage A?
will the satellite need to talk to the Orbi Base or Obai satellite in the main house?
Will this cover the pool area?
Or do I need to get the outdoor satelitte unit?
I am new to this so sorry if these questions are basic and repeated in the forum. If you need further details, please let me know.
Thankful.
13 Replies
- tucsonticoVirtuoso
More information is needed to give you a better answer. You state you have a "long one story" house. How long? What kind of construction, e.g., drywall over wood framing or concrete block & stucco? How many walls between the Orbi base and Orbi satellites? What is the approximate area you're trying to cover in square feet?
Having said all that, I own a 3000 sq ft house with exterior walls made of concrete block and stucco. The interior walls are "standard" wood frame covered in drywall. I have an attached 4 car garage (about 1000 sq ft) also made from block and stucco framed out and covered in drywall. I have an Orbi Base (RBR50) and one satellite (RBS50). The base sits in my office in the far northeast corner of my single story house. The satellite is about 60 feet away with 3 interior walls between them. I get very good coverage throughout my house and garage. I also get decent WiFi signals within 50-60 feet outside the house. I live in a semi-rural area with my neaest neighbor over 100 yards away so I don'thave any competing signals disrupting my Orbi WiFi.
This coverage pattern did not happen immediately after I plugged in the Orbi! I had to adjust the location of the base and satellite several times to find a good compromise. Additionally, I did a "sweep" of signals outside my house to find a clear channel for both 2.4 gHz and 5 gHz bands. All these steps have given me a stable, strong signal as Imentioned above.
In your case, I'd start with an Orbi base and one satellite. Adjust the things I mentioned to get the best coverage and add a satellite if necessary later. As the car manufacturers say: "Your mileage may vary." Good luck!
- WestMilford-DiAspirant
Thanks for the responses. I attached a layout of my property but I guess it didn't take.
My house is 70' long by about 25' wide. The modem/router is in the front corner BR of the property at one end of the house. Inside construction is standard 2x4 & drywalls. The range extender is currently in the LR about mid-way lenghthwise from the router (so about 35' away?).
The pool and backyard garages are about 200-225' feet from the house (so add another 50' to get to the router diagonally).
This probably doesn't change anything so I think I will start with the base + 1 satellite and see how that goes. If it covers 5,000 sq ft it may just make it down to the pool anyway.
But one further question that is still not clear: if I were to add a second satellite at my backyard garage, does that talk to the router/base or the first satellite?
- tucsonticoVirtuoso
The Orbi can be configured either as a "Daisy Chain" or "Hub & Spoke" topology (Look in the "Advanced" Tab under Advanced Setup>Wireless Settings).
In the Daisy Chain mode, the satellites will "talk" via the Backhaul channel to each other to get/send data and the closest satellite will talk to the base (router) via this same channel . This can extend the straightline distance of your WiFi but it can/will slow down the speeds abit as the farthest satellite has to wait for the intermediate satellite to transfer the info.
In a Hub & Spoke mode, each satellite talks to the base independently via te Backhaul channel. This gives higher overall throughput but can limit the range. Remember, the 2.4gHz band will give better range through obstructions while the 5 gHz band is faster its signals drop off rapidly with distance and obstructions. BTW, the backhaul channel is in the 5 gHz band. That's why experimenting with placement of the base and satellitesis very important to get good coverage/signal strength.
- FURRYe38Guru - Experienced User
Where is the current router place now? Next to the modem?
I have a similar rectangular house and have my Orbi up up stairs on the 2nd level at one and of the house and my Satellite at the opposite far end of the house and both connect well and have great speeds and performances and coverage. My house is 5000Sq ft.