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Forum Discussion
Smouritsen
Feb 01, 2021Aspirant
Physical placement RBK23
Hi
Thinking of acquiring a RBK23 setup.
My internet comes into basement in corner of house (60 sqm), then RBR will be next to modem. One RBS on either gnd or 1st floor and second RBS on 2nd floor. We have concrete layers between floors - no option at all to run ethernet cabling anywhere!
Will this work with backhaul connection RBR<->RBS<->RBS? I can not find any documentation stating that a connection from farthest RBS to RBR via another RBS is ok?
Hope for clarification. Thanks
Smouritsen wrote:We have concrete layers between floors - no option at all to run ethernet cabling anywhere!
Concrete floors can present a serious obstacle to WiFi signals.
As long as the satellite ring light turns blue, the Daisy Chain design will be fine.
If the signal cannot penetrate the concrete floors, the only solutions are (a) ethernet cable, (b) Powerline adapters, or (c) MoCHA if there is existing coax cable between floors.
There are probably lots of components that penetrate the floors, including water pipes, drain pipes, heating and cooling plenums, etc. Ethernet cable can often be snaked alongside those components. (There is even "plenum rated" cable that can go inside air ducts.)
There is also outdoor rated ethernet cable that could be run up the side of the building.
I have mixed feelings about Powerline. When it works, it's great.
6 Replies
- SmouritsenAspirant
Disregard my Q, I found the article about daisy chaining, so should all be good!
- CrimpOnGuru - Experienced User
Smouritsen wrote:We have concrete layers between floors - no option at all to run ethernet cabling anywhere!
Concrete floors can present a serious obstacle to WiFi signals.
As long as the satellite ring light turns blue, the Daisy Chain design will be fine.
If the signal cannot penetrate the concrete floors, the only solutions are (a) ethernet cable, (b) Powerline adapters, or (c) MoCHA if there is existing coax cable between floors.
There are probably lots of components that penetrate the floors, including water pipes, drain pipes, heating and cooling plenums, etc. Ethernet cable can often be snaked alongside those components. (There is even "plenum rated" cable that can go inside air ducts.)
There is also outdoor rated ethernet cable that could be run up the side of the building.
I have mixed feelings about Powerline. When it works, it's great.
- SmouritsenAspirant
I decided to give it a go - and boy am I happy I did 👍🏻 I have a 1000/100 coax connextion, and with my RBR in basement, a RBS on ground floor and another RBS on 2nd floor, I am measuring between 5-700 Mbps download and 105-115 Mbps upload. Absolutely fantastic.
Took a little fiddling around to get it up and running, since it was a pre-owned system and I had to reset all three devices first.
But super happy with my buy!
- FURRYe38Guru - Experienced User
Basements are not recommended places for main host router such as the RBR. Concrete and steel will impact wifi signal coverage and performances. Main or 2nd level is recommended for main wifi routers.