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Forum Discussion
Spartanfighter
May 19, 2019Aspirant
Tri band extenders in cascade
Good afternoon,
My question is pretty simple.
A wifi extender "A" (connected wirelessly to the router) would cut the speed in half. A second extender "B" connected to extender "A" would f...
- May 19, 2019
Yes and no.
If you're using dual band and not using fastlane (see fast lane info) the radio has to receive the data and then retransmit it on the same radio. This is why it cuts throughput in half and increases latency. Going with a triband with a dedicated backhaul like EX8000 or Orbi reduces this as it dedicates a radio just for "talking" to the main router. It doesn't "solve" the problem because you still have delays the more you daisy chain them together for distance but it does help with the problem. Fastlane helps as well. Most people don't daisy chain extenders as that latency and errors increase the more you add.
https://kb.netgear.com/24662/What-is-FastLane-Technology-and-how-do-I-configure-it
Spartanfighter
May 20, 2019Aspirant
So let say I can have only one AP at the one side of a building and I wish to ensure wifi coverage over the whole building via a daisy chain I guess . Wired extenders is not a choice since that would require cabling/digging through the walls. Each wifi extender in cascade would cut speed in half.
What other options do I have? How about a mesh wifi system, or extenders over powerline?
How can I best extend the wifi network without using cables or reducing speed at each "hop" ofthe chain?
Thanks
plemans
May 20, 2019Guru - Experienced User
Spartanfighter wrote:
So let say I can have only one AP at the one side of a building and I wish to ensure wifi coverage over the whole building via a daisy chain I guess . Wired extenders is not a choice since that would require cabling/digging through the walls. Each wifi extender in cascade would cut speed in half.
What other options do I have? How about a mesh wifi system, or extenders over powerline?
How can I best extend the wifi network without using cables or reducing speed at each "hop" ofthe chain?
Thanks
You can have more than one extender. If you're going to do it its best to do it like star topology instead of daisy. what I mean by that is set it up like this:
Extender<----router/modem--->Extender
versus daisy which is
router/modem--->extender-->extender
Mesh network is a decent option. it tolerates daisy chain better than just linking multiple extenders. Powerline is also an option. You can even use it as the wired backhaul for Orbi, as wired connection for access points, or even get the powerline that has wifi built in.
What sized area are you trying to cover?
- SpartanfighterMay 22, 2019Aspirant
Thanks for your replies. It is a long-corridor type area, which will require around 10 extenders.
- plemansMay 22, 2019Guru - Experienced User
how long is this corridor that it needs 10 extenders?
Have you tried powerline to go from one end to the other? see how the connection is?
Orbi pro only supports up to 6 satellites and that's the pro setup.
For the cost oof one of these systems, it might be worth removing your base moulding (trim) and running a cable behind there. You could fish the wire up and back down for ethernet drops spaced down the corridor.