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Forum Discussion
Jazzer52
Dec 21, 2017Aspirant
Best solution for old house with large stone walls
NETGEAR EX7500-100UKS Nighthawk Mesh X4S Wall-Plug Tri-Band WiFi Range Extender. I have a large old house with 3ft thick stone walls. The wi-fi signal from the router is quite powerful and extends w...
Jazzer52
Dec 22, 2017Aspirant
Thanks for your reply.
We only have a short coaxial run from a satellite dish through the wall to the TV set up. It doesn't run through the house unfortunately. I think I'm looking for a powerline set up but I'm unsure which models will work best.
TheEther
Dec 22, 2017Guru
I would take the advertised speeds of each model with a grain of salt. Real world speeds will be nowhere near them.
Just pick a model with the features you need. Some models come with a built-in Wi-Fi Access Point. Or you could get a model without one and install your own. An external Access Point is likely to have better antennas.
Just pick a model with the features you need. Some models come with a built-in Wi-Fi Access Point. Or you could get a model without one and install your own. An external Access Point is likely to have better antennas.
- Jazzer52Jan 17, 2018Aspirant
Thanks for your reply.
I have bought a NETGEAR EX6120 and a EX6130 to extend signal to the wi-fi black spots. Both extenders are linked to the router and up and working but I am disappointed by the range. I'm not so much bothered about speed for the black spots because those areas only need email and browser access but I would like greater range. Will I achieve greater range if I enable the FastLane Technology using either 2.4GHz or 5GHz rather than both bands at the same time with the Basic mode? If so which FastLane option would give the greater range?
If range is still limited would I be better changing to Access Point rather than Range Extender?
Thanks
- TheEtherJan 17, 2018GuruI would not expect FastLane to have any effect on range. An Access Point may not necessarily have better range, either, though it should be faster.
What kind of walls do you have? Concrete? Brick? Plaster? Or drywall? Wi-Fi cannot penetrate the first 3 very well.- Jazzer52Jan 17, 2018Aspirant
My house is 17th century. It has 3ft thick limestone exterior walls and some load-bearing interior walls are likewise. However, other interior walls are plaster and lathe or insulated plasterboard. Therefore, wifi signals travel from the router in an irratic and unpredicable manner throughout the building. The wi-fi extenders are functioning and delvering signal to the previous back spots but I had hoped for stronger signals. I posted in the hope that someone might have advice on increasing the strength of the signal.