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wireless range

Posted: Mon Jun 20, 2011 2:43 pm
by paulWTAMU
I'm puttin a metal outbuilding, with insulation, this year and may wind up having a PC out there. It'll be about 60 feet from the wireless router I have in my house. My house is wood/aluminium siding. Do you think I can connect to my network from that outbuilding or will I have to figure something else out or run a physical line to it?

Thanks

Re: wireless range

Posted: Mon Jun 20, 2011 2:55 pm
by TheEmrys
What protocol? Are you in a heavily populated area? Are there many other wireless devices in the neighborhood?

From the outset, I would be pretty confident that -n would work just fine, at 5 ghz. 2.4 and I'm less optimistic. Any chance you could test signal strength there with a wireless device now?

Re: wireless range

Posted: Mon Jun 20, 2011 2:57 pm
by Captain Ned
That's going to be iffy with the range & 2 sets of metal siding. If you can hang a router in a window at each end it'll be a lot easier. If not, grab 2 Linksys WRT-54GLs, or whatever Tomato-capable router floats your boat and just crank up the transmission power on both ends using Access Point + WDS mode.

Re: wireless range

Posted: Fri Jun 24, 2011 7:58 am
by paulWTAMU
There's one other network I'm on the range of, but it's just me and it.

My current router is 2.4 but an upgrade isn't a big deal either.

I'll lay hands on a wireless network finder and see what it says in the ocation of the building. Worse to worse I'll take Cap'ns advice and hope that works.

Re: wireless range

Posted: Fri Jun 24, 2011 8:17 am
by bthylafh
Captain Ned wrote:
That's going to be iffy with the range & 2 sets of metal siding. If you can hang a router in a window at each end it'll be a lot easier. If not, grab 2 Linksys WRT-54GLs, or whatever Tomato-capable router floats your boat and just crank up the transmission power on both ends using Access Point + WDS mode.


Since OP mentioned that there's another network in range, probably he'll want to give the routers directional antennae so they communicate with each other but don't interfere with the neighbors. You should be able to make a serviceable, if ghetto, pair from aluminum or Pringles cans.