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Forum Discussion
KRight
Jan 25, 2025Initiate
RV Park WiFi - Extending/Bettering Signals
Hey y’all, We recently bought a small RV park in rural AL and have got wifi up and running for the guests but we have been receiving complaints (mainly TVs struggling to connect) about it not worki...
KRight
Jan 26, 2025Initiate
It currently has 14 sites. Will be adding half a dozen more. The size is approximately 240’ x 200’. I believe each router from t mobile will allow 70 devices. I am thinking about adding a wireless access point with PoE and mounting it centrally to the park. As opposed to the current nighthawk sitting inside the laundry room. I was looking at the wavlink ax1800.
plemans
Jan 26, 2025Guru - Experienced User
If you're running this as a business, it's time to actually talk to someone in person that can help you set it up.
reason why is you're going to want your business devices on a different subnet than what the guests are using. Sadly, there's enough nefarious people out there that using consumer grade gear with your payment terminals/business information is going to put you at risk.
If you upgrade to a business class router/firewall (even second hand), you can have separate ssids on different vlans. This keeps your equipment separate from everyone elses. And maybe you only need coverage for the business stuff in a single building. Then you could probably just have the business class router/firewall in a single building with an access point, and use a couple consumer grade access points (outdoor rated) for guests. You're going to want more than 1 in the middle or people will complain if wifi is something you're advertising. Luckily, the wavlink's aren't that expensive. so you could do an outdoor rated one (or 2) and maybe some indoor rated ones.
whenever people are using these for a business, its always worth investing the extra to ensure your data is safe from the guests there. And if you're advertising it as a feature, ensuring you have enough coverage for what you're advertising (or it'll hurt your reviews). A little extra money up front can save you a lot of time, costs if your data is compromised, or cost from negative reviews.
Even using something like a used SXR80 system would allow vlans and can be picked up used for quite reasonable as its end of life (eol). And it can have added satellties. there isn't any outdoor rated ones for that system but it could provide some central coverage with separate ssid's/vlans and all you to connect (if you got a poe injector/switch) a couple outdoor rated ap's.