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Forum Discussion
NickUser
May 10, 2022Tutor
Satelitte w/ ethernet port?
I currently have an Orbi RBR10 mesh system in my house and it works great. Recently I have taken a new job with the ability to work from home. However the company provided equipment allows internet ...
- May 10, 2022
plemans is correct. There are any number of WiFi extenders which have an Ethernet port on them.
So the connection is: Orbi router ->to->Orbi satellite->to->WiFi extender (@5G)->to computer with Ethernet cable.
For this application, the WiFi extender has only the one WiFi link in operation (I actually disable the "user side" of the extender so there is no competition for WiFi bandwidth.)
My experience has been with WiFi extenders by Netgear and TP-Link. (Have a TP-Link RE220 coming from Amazon tomorrow. When gizmos cost less than $25, I often buy one to see how it works.)
plemans
May 10, 2022Guru - Experienced User
Problem with the RBS10 satellites is that they don't have ethernet ports (as you've found out).
And the 10 series is only compatible with the RBS10's.
So they won't work.
what you can do? get a dual band extender and connect it. It won't integrate with the orbi setup but it'll connect and work. Justs as a separate system.
or you can upgrade. You can find renewed RBK43 systems for pretty cheap and they have quite a bit more performance than the 10 series.
Up to you if you want to upgrade your system or augment it.
NickUser
May 10, 2022Tutor
plemans Thank you for the reply - as for the extender, will it connect to my mesh (i.e. one of the satellites) or would it have to have good connection all the way back to the router? They are on opposite ends of the house, but I have a satellite upstairs that provides good signal.
Any recommendation on model number or best extender to purchase?
- plemansMay 10, 2022Guru - Experienced User
You could connect it to a satellite but you're going to take a speed hit.
The reason why is the dual band systems have to use the same chip to go router----satellites and then satellites----devices. and can't do both at once. Same with extenders.
so if you're connecting to a satellite, its already going to be running at 50% speed of what it receives. You can connect an extender to it and luckily, if you're hardwired into that extender, you don't take the same hit (just distance/interference). so you might be ok if you're starting point from that satellite is decent. If you're going to go with an extender, i'd look for at least the same specs as the orbi satellite. (its an AC1200).
Again, you should be able to connect it but it won't integrate with your orbi. It'll have to be managed separate and you'll want a separate ssid for it.
CrimpOn has attached quite a few different extenders to his system just to see if they'll work and I don't think he's found any that didn't.
- CrimpOnMay 10, 2022Guru - Experienced User
plemans is correct. There are any number of WiFi extenders which have an Ethernet port on them.
So the connection is: Orbi router ->to->Orbi satellite->to->WiFi extender (@5G)->to computer with Ethernet cable.
For this application, the WiFi extender has only the one WiFi link in operation (I actually disable the "user side" of the extender so there is no competition for WiFi bandwidth.)
My experience has been with WiFi extenders by Netgear and TP-Link. (Have a TP-Link RE220 coming from Amazon tomorrow. When gizmos cost less than $25, I often buy one to see how it works.)