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Forum Discussion
Sydswan
Mar 14, 2020Aspirant
CONNECTING SHED TO INTERNET
We are connected to the Internet via Satellite. The modem is in the house, which has metal walls and roof. The wifi does not extend much beyond the house unless the door is open. I am wanting ...
- Mar 14, 2020
> Economically for me is not acquiring expensive equipment.
Define "expensive". We could go on like this for quite a while.
> I could run an thernet cable in conduit across to the shed; 15m
> shouldn't cause much loss of signal?I've dealt only with unshielded twisted-pair in (more-or-less) free
space. I don't know if metallic (or buried non-, for that matter)
conduit would cause problems. You might want to do some reading, or
wait for more free advice to roll in. In free space, you should be good
up to 100m. I'd guess that 20m of almost anything would work, but what
do I know?> [...] i would then need to acquire a second router.
What you'd need would be a wireless access point. Almost any router
can be crippled enough to make it work as a wireless access point.
Conceivably, you might find a purpose-built WAP which costs less than a
similar full-function router.
Sydswan
Mar 14, 2020Aspirant
Thank you for your response;
Economically for me is not acquiring expensive equipment.
I could run an thernet cable in conduit across to the shed; 15m shouldn't cause much loss of signal?
i would then need to acquire a second router.
I will follow up your suggestion re power line adapter- sounds like a plug and play system.
much appreciated Syd
antinode
Mar 14, 2020Guru
> Economically for me is not acquiring expensive equipment.
Define "expensive". We could go on like this for quite a while.
> I could run an thernet cable in conduit across to the shed; 15m
> shouldn't cause much loss of signal?
I've dealt only with unshielded twisted-pair in (more-or-less) free
space. I don't know if metallic (or buried non-, for that matter)
conduit would cause problems. You might want to do some reading, or
wait for more free advice to roll in. In free space, you should be good
up to 100m. I'd guess that 20m of almost anything would work, but what
do I know?
> [...] i would then need to acquire a second router.
What you'd need would be a wireless access point. Almost any router
can be crippled enough to make it work as a wireless access point.
Conceivably, you might find a purpose-built WAP which costs less than a
similar full-function router.