I live in a small 2 bedroom flat and can only get a WiFi signal in the lounge. How can I improve the reach to a signal in the other rooms??
You can't improve the reach, but you may be able to improve the connectivity. As a start, try splitting the SSIDs as explained in Step 4 of the help article here. You will doubtless soon be inundated with other expense-laden solutions from other members.
@redchiz1 wrote:You can't improve the reach, but you may be able to improve the connectivity. As a start, try splitting the SSIDs as explained in Step 4 of the help article here. You will doubtless soon be inundated with other expense-laden solutions from other members.
@Skye wants to improve the reach. Why are you, by your own admission, proposing something that will not do this?
Not particularly "expense-laden" but my solution was the Sky SR203 router available from around £20 on a well known auction site. No setup required and far greater "reach". A number of contributors here have recommended and implemented this as a cost effective solution.
Definitely the cheapest/easiest solution @forestdweller
Beause improving the reach isn't the be all and end all.
My question stands.
@redchiz1 wrote:Beause improving the reach isn't the be all and end all.
It is if the device is out of the range of the poor Wi-Fi from the Now router.
I am not surprised the OP hasn't come back in the face of all this pointless gainsaying. 😢
Perhaps if you hadn’t started with a preemptive pop at those who might care to offer an effective solution to the question as posed….
We don't know what will be effective until we try it, will we? Sometimes tweaking the wireless settings helps, I know from experience. And I was right about the likely responses, wasn't I?
@redchiz1 wrote:And I was right about the likely responses, wasn't I?
Only because the only effective cure will be using a device with better Wi-Fi, be that a different router, a WAP or mesh.
Yes indeed, you have said that, and I don’t deny that a device clinging on to the edge of 5GHz will have a happier time if it is moved to 2.4GHz, and can then be moved a little further away from the router, even, and will still stay connected.
But the key factor there is ‘is moved’. Split the bands, and you move the onus of device steering and band steering from the router and the device to your own manual intervention, or to the throw of a dice as to which band each device will end up on when you split the bands.
And sure, there may be one device you have that makes the move from iffy 5GHz to solid 2.4GHz, and you might well point to this as an improvement.But the random process that’s going on here is equally likely to move a different device in the wrong direction.
I would have no beef with anyone suggesting splitting the bands, as long as they explained that that’s not enough; you then have to visit each of your 5GHz-capable devices to ensure that if they are in 5GHz range, then that is the band they are on, and that if they are outside this range, or for mobile devices likely to move outside this range, then they are on 2.4GHz
Or you can cause this:-
https://eyenetworks.no/en/bad-apple-a-single-device-can-bring-your-wifi-down/
*sigh* I did say in my original reply "as a start."
@redchiz1 wrote:*sigh* I did say in my original reply "as a start."
And what would have been next, pray?
I will save that for the OP if they ever post again.
Oh go one, I'm just dying to hear what you would suggest, that doesn't mean spending money.
Me too.