Quote:(03-10-2022, 06:44 PM)bigblackknees Wrote: [To see links please register here]
I am wondering, I need to help a friend.
What determines the range of a Wi-Fi network? There are a lot of different factors: from the router itself (the number and strength of antennas), from the walls in your house, from the number of neighboring Wi-Fi networks, from the location of the router, some other interference, etc. Everyone has different conditions, different walls, etc. The only thing I can advise is to roughly focus on the area of your house. If you have, for example, a one-room apartment, then even an inexpensive router with one antenna with a power of 3 dBi will cope with its task without any problems. Well, if you have a house, or a bigger apartment, then take the device more expensive. Although, the price is not always an argument. I have an Asus RT-N18U router - an expensive one, three antennas, some kind of Asus proprietary function there, which increases the network coverage radius. So, under the same conditions, at the same distance, it shows the result not much better than that of the same D-link DIR-615/A. Which has internal antennas, and it is several times cheaper.
You can try strengthening your wireless network:
- search and change the channel on the router.
- transfer network to the 802.11N operating mode.
- check the transmission power in the router settings.
How to increase the range of a Wi-Fi network using additional devices?
- installing a repeater, or setting up a second router in amplifier mode.
- changing the antennas of the router to more powerful ones.
- buying a new router, switching to 5 GHz.