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Forum Discussion
Walkers
Nov 22, 2018Aspirant
Best wired access point
Hi. I'm new to this so apologies for a simple Q. I'd like advice on which Net gear Access Point product would work best for a wired Cat 5/6 Home/Small office, coming off a Net gear N 300 router. I ha...
Walkers
Nov 22, 2018Aspirant
Thanks. The house is 2 floors but with old thick stone walls and lots of tri-iso isulation that can block wi-fi. House size is 260 sq metres but the wifi is a front and disaapears at the back of the house. Sorry yes the internal ethernet cabling is cat 5e. I am not familiar with the Orbi set-up, so thought at this stage of having say 1 x EX6150 in AP mode as an access point in the house and an EX7000 in the Barn. I reads on the tech UM that in AP mode for the EX7000 you can't only use the other ethernet ports to hard wire? Sorry to have so many Q's!
StephenB
Nov 22, 2018Guru - Experienced User
Orbi would replace your router, and would cost quite a bit more than an EX7000+EX6150. It's a fully integrated wifi system.
>>> I read on the tech UM that in AP mode for the EX7000 you can't only use the other ethernet ports to hard wire?
In AP mode, you should be able to use the remaining ports of the EX7000 to connect other devices.
>>> I read on the tech UM that in AP mode for the EX7000 you can't only use the other ethernet ports to hard wire?
In AP mode, you should be able to use the remaining ports of the EX7000 to connect other devices.
- WalkersNov 22, 2018Aspirant
Thanks and apologies for the terrible spelling in my earlier reply. I've had a look at the Orbi netgear systems and was wondering if you would look at the orbi SRK 60 pro or the RBK 50 with say 2 satelites? (obviously price is a factor). It looks a bit more complex to set up. Does the Orbi base station hardwire into the existing ISP provided router ( N300) and can you also hard wire the Orbi satelitte (in the Barn) with the Ethernet cat 5e. We use a Netgear Prosafe 8-port switch at the router to all the RJ45 terminals: are there any conflcits with using a switch and the Orbi set-up. Again, apologies for multiple Q's and advice really appreciated.
- StephenBNov 22, 2018Guru - Experienced User
Walkers wrote:
Thanks and apologies for the terrible spelling in my earlier reply. I've had a look at the Orbi netgear systems and was wondering if you would look at the orbi SRK 60 pro or the RBK 50 with say 2 satelites? (obviously price is a factor).
The Pro is intended for small business, the RBK50 is intended for home use. An RBK53 (which has two satellites) would work well.
Walkers wrote:
Does the Orbi base station hardwire into the existing ISP provided router ( N300)
You can connect it to the ISP-provided router (directly or via the switch ) and turn the N300 wifi off. In that configuration you'd set it up as an access point.
Once that's done, you sync the two satellites - best done near the base station. Then you can place the two satellites where you want them (one in the barn, one in the house). You can connect them with cat5e, and the satellites will use gigabit ethernet as the backhaul. The satellite in the house could also use wifi backhaul if there is no convenient cat5e there.
- WalkersDec 12, 2018AspirantHi Apologies for the delay in coming back to you. I've got the Orbi system and wanted to check the exact way this will work with the Netgear N300 router/modem. This is model DGN2200v4. 1. Do I need to turn-off the Router/modem Wi-Fi? I can see from the Netgear forums that this is required? I've logged into the Netgear genie and can see that I can set the router/modem to AP mode in the advanced settings. Is this correct? Does this turn-off the modem Wi-Fi and enable the Orbi Router to work without conflict? 2. I have a switch to take Cat5e Ethernet across the property. Which order do I plug the modem and Orbi in. Incoming BT socket to Netgear N300 modem to Orbi Base station to switch? Or some other combination. Help much appreciated.