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Forum Discussion
brianl1948
Jan 27, 2026Follower
How simple is the installation of a Netgear range extender?
I have no experience with range extenders but am considering buying a AX3000 Dual-band WiFi 6 Mesh Extender to solve the following problem: I've just moved into a 3 bedroom townhouse and have ins...
CrimpOn
Jan 27, 2026Guru - Experienced User
Probably. Might be worth a few minutes to read through the User Guide:
https://www.downloads.netgear.com/files/GDC/EAX17/EAX17_EAX16_UM_EN.pdf
WiFi extenders were the way many people extended WiFi coverage in their homes. The main frustration is that the primary WiFi router and the WiFi Extender are actually two distinct systems. Mobile devices often do not roam seamlessly between the primary router and the extender. This causes frustration because performance on the mobile device will diminish and the user will finally remember, "s**t. I moved too far from that WiFi. Need to turn WiFi off and back on again so my phone/tablet/laptop will connect to the WiFi I am closer to right now. The Mac and printer, of course, are not mobile and thus will be perfectly happy. This frustration is why mesh WiFi systems were invented in about 2015-2016.
It might be that Telstra provides a mesh extension to their WiFi unit (monthly fee, of course).
Otherwise, a WiFi extender (from anyone) is a possible solution.
- coolwifiJan 27, 2026Luminary
The Netgear extenders are supposed to be mesh extenders and it's up to the client to choose when to roam. This roaming issue with clients issue exists in the mesh systems too.
- StephenBJan 28, 2026Guru - Experienced User
coolwifi wrote:
it's up to the client to choose when to roam.
Yes. Although the mesh can provide hints/suggestions to switch, it is up to the client to follow through.
And a traditional extender has the same constaints - the main difference is that with two SSIDs it is easier to see the wifi that the client is connected to - and you can choose the network manually.
plemans wrote:
You might just try centrally locating the router so it provides better coverage.
If that is practical, then worth trying first.
If not, an extender will solve the problem. The one you are thinking about should work fine, but the only way to tell is to get one and try it. There is a new Wifi 7 extender from Netgear, which is the same price in the US - if that is also the case in Australia, I'd get the newer one.