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cbeck's avatar
cbeck
Aspirant
Jan 03, 2018
Solved

Orbi & Sonos - To SonosNet or not?

Currently have Sonos using Orbi wireless, as no nearby sosnos devices to wire direct to any speakers.  Performance to the 9 Sonos devices seems pretty good, but wonder if a Boost device would enhance performance all around.  I know I can just try both, but interested in experiences of others. Router in basement and one satellite on first floor middle - about 26 devices, 9 of whihc are Sonos.

With a Sonos Boost, can it be connected to a satellite or does it need to be hardwired to the router?  I am using the Orbi in AP mode, so in that case, would the Sonos Boost connect to the Verizon FIOS router or the conneted Orbi router next to it or can it be conneted to the satellite whiich is nearer to most of the speakers?

  •  

    I have ~9 Sonos devices running Sonosnet with Orbi in AP mode and it works perfectly.

     

    You do not need a Boost to use Sonosnet, as every Sonos device has the hardware necessary to operate as a mesh network.

     

    If you want to try it, all you need to do is plug in one, and only one, of your Sonos devices into Ethernet. Don't wire more than one Sonos device to Ethernet or you could potentially create a problem with network loops and crash your network.

     

    I would plug the Sonos device into your Orbi or Fios router for best results, so it's not also traversing the Orbi backhaul.  However, it should work with the one Sonos device plugged into a Satellite.  (I haven't tried that though.)

     

    For best results, you do need to manually set the 2.4 GHz  channel used by Sonos and by Orbi so they do not overlap. Set one on CH1 and the other on CH11.

     

    If you use Sonosnet, placement of the devices matters a lot.  Sonosnet cannot work properly unless the Sonos devices are placed where they can see enough neighbors to form a mesh. If necessary, you can place a boost or bridge in strategic locations around the house (no need to wire them) to improve mesh topology.

     

6 Replies

  •  

    I have ~9 Sonos devices running Sonosnet with Orbi in AP mode and it works perfectly.

     

    You do not need a Boost to use Sonosnet, as every Sonos device has the hardware necessary to operate as a mesh network.

     

    If you want to try it, all you need to do is plug in one, and only one, of your Sonos devices into Ethernet. Don't wire more than one Sonos device to Ethernet or you could potentially create a problem with network loops and crash your network.

     

    I would plug the Sonos device into your Orbi or Fios router for best results, so it's not also traversing the Orbi backhaul.  However, it should work with the one Sonos device plugged into a Satellite.  (I haven't tried that though.)

     

    For best results, you do need to manually set the 2.4 GHz  channel used by Sonos and by Orbi so they do not overlap. Set one on CH1 and the other on CH11.

     

    If you use Sonosnet, placement of the devices matters a lot.  Sonosnet cannot work properly unless the Sonos devices are placed where they can see enough neighbors to form a mesh. If necessary, you can place a boost or bridge in strategic locations around the house (no need to wire them) to improve mesh topology.

     

    • cbeck's avatar
      cbeck
      Aspirant

      None of my speakers are within wired distance of the router (router in basement, all spoeakers on second floor).  Thus, the reason for a Boost device to sit next to router.  Thanks for the suggetions on channel conflict.  I have the Boost today, so will try it out and see if it is betre o worse than current configuation.  

      • ClintonBoyd's avatar
        ClintonBoyd
        Aspirant

        Hi, for what it's worth, I had a Boost plugged in to the Orbi router in one corner of the house and the system was basically unusable. I have the original Orbi and one satellite combo and 5 sonos speakers. Unplugging the Boost and going with a completely wireless setup was the solution for me - there is no controller lag any more and there are no dropouts.