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Forum Discussion
jfishburne
May 20, 2018Aspirant
Orbi outdoor satellite range versus indoor satellite range
Hi, I have a large property and I am trying to get wifi from my house out to my barn and up to my pond. I have my router in the house and 1 satellite in the pond pumphouse and 1 in the barn. My cov...
- May 23, 2018
jfishburne wrote:
I have been chatting with Net Gear's Orbi support. For me they recommended that I use the outdoor rated satellite in the middle (I happen to have power in a central location) and use it as a daisy-chain between my router and my farthest satellite which is about 650 feet from my router. I was getting 1 bar of coverage between my router and that farthest satellite and they said this should fix it. I hope that helps.
I looked at your diagram. If I were you I would just go move satellite 2 to the "possible" location temporarily, and see if it improves satellite 3 (or vice versa). That should give you a clue whether it will work before you buy anything.
One issue with daisy-chaining is that the user cannot control it. The system will decide whether to daisy-chain or go direct to the router, and you can't set it one way or the other. By doing the above, you can also see if the system is stable.
TECman51
May 21, 2018Tutor
Can you recommend one that will work well with the Orbi?
TECman51
May 23, 2018Tutor
Quote: Orbi is designed to provide coverage over a large area, not to provide a link over a long linear distance. The best thing for that is a wireless point-to-point bridge with directional antennas on each end.
I need to provide service to a barn about 400' away from the RBR50 or RBS50. Does anyone have a recommendation for a directional antenna that will work well with my Orbi?
- FURRYe38May 23, 2018Guru - Experienced User
How about digging in a buried LAN cable from the main build out to the barn?
Might do a web search for wifi directional antennas.
TECman51 wrote:
Quote: Orbi is designed to provide coverage over a large area, not to provide a link over a long linear distance. The best thing for that is a wireless point-to-point bridge with directional antennas on each end.
I need to provide service to a barn about 400' away from the RBR50 or RBS50. Does anyone have a recommendation for a directional antenna that will work well with my Orbi?
- tsigMay 23, 2018Luminary
Your typically limited to about 330' for cat5 cabling. Would probably still work though.
- st_shawMay 23, 2018Master
TECman51 wrote:
Quote: Orbi is designed to provide coverage over a large area, not to provide a link over a long linear distance. The best thing for that is a wireless point-to-point bridge with directional antennas on each end.
I need to provide service to a barn about 400' away from the RBR50 or RBS50. Does anyone have a recommendation for a directional antenna that will work well with my Orbi?
Here are a couple options.
https://mikrotik.com/product/wireless_wire
https://www.ubnt.com/airmax/nanobeam-ac-gen2/
- jfishburneMay 23, 2018Aspirant
I have been chatting with Net Gear's Orbi support. For me they recommended that I use the outdoor rated satellite in the middle (I happen to have power in a central location) and use it as a daisy-chain between my router and my farthest satellite which is about 650 feet from my router. I was getting 1 bar of coverage between my router and that farthest satellite and they said this should fix it. I hope that helps.
- st_shawMay 23, 2018Master
jfishburne wrote:
I have been chatting with Net Gear's Orbi support. For me they recommended that I use the outdoor rated satellite in the middle (I happen to have power in a central location) and use it as a daisy-chain between my router and my farthest satellite which is about 650 feet from my router. I was getting 1 bar of coverage between my router and that farthest satellite and they said this should fix it. I hope that helps.
I looked at your diagram. If I were you I would just go move satellite 2 to the "possible" location temporarily, and see if it improves satellite 3 (or vice versa). That should give you a clue whether it will work before you buy anything.
One issue with daisy-chaining is that the user cannot control it. The system will decide whether to daisy-chain or go direct to the router, and you can't set it one way or the other. By doing the above, you can also see if the system is stable.
- jfishburneMay 23, 2018Aspirant
That is great thinking. Thank you. I hadn't thought about not being able to control whether it daisy chains or not.