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Forum Discussion
Geek95
Aug 23, 2016Follower
Wired Connection to Satellite
Is it possible to use Ethernet to connect router and satellites?
peteytesting
Jan 21, 2017Hero
Jmmelgaard wrote:I need a wired connection to overcome interference. Do you plan a FIX to your oversite or do I need to return your product and buy a competitor's product?
its not an oversight , its an intentional decision not to include it because the product is designed to provide whole home wifi without the need for ethernet backhaul
if you purchased the orbi with the expectation it would have ethernet backhaul the issue is with your expectation and or lack of looking at the feature set before purchasing
sure return it as if you have structured cabling already installed you dont need any of these mesh systems , all you need are wireless access points
powrby4d
Jan 21, 2017Guide
Maybe he just expected it to have the same functionality as every other AP and switch with the added capability of wireless backhaul such that the product was a net improvement over the industry standard, not a poorly-conceived trade-off of a crippled AP with an added band rather than a more flexible AP.
I'm not in a position to tell strangers what combination of wired and wireless they need for their particular situation. I'm quite sure that you aren't either.
- loomis1975Jan 22, 2017Luminary
You have a point. But its kind of like asking Tesla to FIX their OVERSIGHT that their cars don't use gasoline, because you can't always recharge your new Tesla everywhere. Dude, buy a Prius.
That being said, Linksys Velop does do wired backhaul automatically AFTER you set it up initially for wireless during install.
- peteytestingJan 22, 2017Hero
loomis1975 wrote:That being said, Linksys Velop does do wired backhaul automatically AFTER you set it up initially for wireless during install.
yes but like all these mesh systems if the ethernet backhaul is present it will always use it over its wifi backhaul and them make buying a mesh system useless and over priced as wireless access points will achieve exactly the same thing
- peteytestingJan 22, 2017Hero
powrby4d wrote:I'm not in a position to tell strangers what combination of wired and wireless they need for their particular situation. I'm quite sure that you aren't either.
is that not why we are here ??? and in every case if structured ethernet is present you are paying far to much for a mesh system that wont be used and where a few wireless access points achieve the same thing and in fact work better
- rwiegandJan 31, 2017Aspirant
I don't understand this stuff, so please be gentle.
I want to have a wifi system with multiple acces s points that acts like a single AP, most labs and offices I've worked in have been set up that way-- one ssid, one password, no obvious switching between APs. My main problem is between my house and shop, the signal from the house in the barn is too weak to work, but too strong to trigger automatic switching to the AP in the barn most of the time. This means I have to manually change the WIFI settings on my phone maybe 10 times a day, a real PITA, as I go back and forth.
Orbi seems to do what I want, but I'd need a wired connection for the remote AP because the signal is poor. Based on this discussion, it seems there are alternate approaches to do this using my existing wired network. Reading about this, I see some posters who say you can simply set the APs to the same channel and ssid's and it will work that way, others who say it is much more complicated and that won't work.
I own a half dozen netgear wirerless routers of various vintages, and would be happy to buy something new if necessary, if I know what to do. There is a cat6 wire connected to a netgear gigibit switch providing ethernet to the remote building. What's the best way to get seamless wifi coverage?
Thanks very much for any advice!
- st_shawJan 31, 2017Master
You already have an AP in the barn, but your phone is not switching because the signal from the AP in the house is too strong. You should be able to make this work with the gear you have now.
Try reducing the power on the AP in your house. You probably just need to reduce power on the 2.4 GHz band. This should force your phone to swich to the barn AP when in the barn.
If you buy new hardware, you could try the wired APs from Ubiquiti. You can set a minimum RSSI level, below which the AP will disconnect your phone. This would prevent the phone in the barn from connecting to the house AP.
It will also help seamless roaming if you use the same SSID, same password, and same security settings between the house and barn AP, but use different channels on the two.
- suginoFeb 24, 2017Aspirant
Doesn't Mesh allow hanoff while multiple WAP's do not?
- peteytestingFeb 24, 2017Hero
sugino wrote:Doesn't Mesh allow hanoff while multiple WAP's do not?
handoff is a client desision at this stage as no clients have the standard to allow the AP or mesh to control what the client does
however both mesh and multiple ap's allow roaming