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Forum Discussion
LenaWood
Nov 04, 2018Aspirant
NETGEAR Orbi AC3000 Tri-band Wi-Fi System
We have 3 buildings (2 brick houses (800 sq ft & 500 sq ft) and a Metal Shop (24' X 48') on our property that is approx 100' X 120'. We are interested in the NETGEAR Orbi AC3000 Tri-band Wi-Fi System which Costco is putting on sale soon. It says it will cover 7,500 sq ft. Our concern is our metal building. Will the metal building interfere with the reception? Right now our "Standard" router isn't quite strong enough to get wifi into the shop.
Any information would be helpful. Thanks!
Lena
4 Replies
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- randomousityLuminary
Not sure what kind of interference the metal building will cause, but you do have the option of using a wired backhaul from the router to a satellite placed inside the metal building, which should avoid the issue in the first place. Not sure whether that will give you good enough coverage, with the satellite covering inside the metal building, and the router covering everything else. But you could play around with different configurations (router in one brick building and satellite in the other, router in one brick building and satellite in the metal building, either using a wired or wireless backhaul) and see which works best. If it comes down to it, you could buy an additional satellite so that you have the router in one brick building, a satellite in the other brick building, and a satellite in the metal building.
- LenaWoodAspirant
I believe the system we would be purchasing comes with 2 sattelites and the router. How far apart can the pieces of equipment be from each other and still work properly?
Thanks for the information given so far.
Lena
- ekhalilMaster
LenaWood wrote:
I believe the system we would be purchasing comes with 2 sattelites and the router. How far apart can the pieces of equipment be from each other and still work properly?
Thanks for the information given so far.
Lena
30 feet is recommended, but you can have up to 40-50 feet distance before the backhaul signal stregth starts to degrade.
Of course, you can have a longer distance if you use wired backhaul instead.