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Problem With Wifi Booster

Does it cause any problems to have several WiFi extenders with the same network name as my WiFi modem/router?

If you use multiple wireless extenders with the same SSID, you should configure them so they have different non-overlapping channels such as 1,6,11 see this: Why Channels 1, 6, and 11? MetaGeek.comThat being said,Wireless signals are affected by many factors including distance, wall density, electrical interference, directional antenna range, etc.All of these factors will affect your actual WiFi range. As wireless connection quality varies the connection speeds are renegotiated. The connection may start at 300 Mbps and end up at less than 20 Mbps or drop entirely.What all of that jargon means is that WiFi connections vary greatly depending on conditions. If it were my house I would use WAP’s (Wireless Access Points) instead of wireless extenders if at all possible. WAP’s connect to your router with a Ethernet cable and then broadcast a WiFi signal. You still want them on separate non-overlapping channels though. I use a centrally located high power dual-band router and have a dual-band WAP installed on the other side of the house where high speed WiFi is most needed. They are connected via a CAT6 Gigabit Ethernet connection.If it were not practical to run Ethernet cables then I would have used a set of Powerline Network adapters such as these: TP-Link AV500 Nano Powerline Adapter Starter Kit, up to 500Mbps (TL-PA4010KIT) to connect to my WAP.They also make a combo powerline adapter and WAP. Here is a dual band model. NETGEAR PowerLINE 1000 Mbps WiFi, 802.11ac, 1 Gigabit Port - Essentials Edition (PLW1010-100NAS)The advantage of the powerline adapters over the wireless extenders is that the powerline adapter sends the network signals over your existing home electrical wiring which is unaffected by WiFi interference so the speeds are much more stable.Good Luck…

Best wifi signal booster?

Unless you specifically need a wireless connection, I would not generally recommend it especially for a fixed device such as a desktop PC or for a device used for serious online gaming or video streaming.

Wireless signals are affected by many factors including distance, wall density, electrical interference, directional antenna range, etc.

Your best bet is a direct Ethernet connection. Ethernet is unaffected by wireless interference and will give you a rock solid, stable network connection.

If it is not feasible to run Ethernet cable the next best option would be a set of powerline network adapters http://isp1.us/reviews/netgear-xavb2101-powerline-adapter/

You plug one in by your router and one in the room where you need access and connect them to the devices with standard Ethernet patch cables. The network signals are transmitted over your existing home electrical wiring which will not be affected by wireless interference. There is still overhead in the connection but it is much more stable than WiFi.

If you absolutely need a wireless connection and your existing router has a weak signal, you can get a wireless extender.

The wireless range extender receives weak wireless signals and repeats them to extend the signal range to greater distances. Some models include Ethernet port(s) in addition to the wireless radio.

Here are the two most popular highly rated models on Amazon.

Securifi Almond - http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0087NZ31S/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B0087NZ31S&linkCode=as2&tag=excharge-20

Netgear Universal WN3000RP - http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004YAYM06/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B004YAYM06&linkCode=as2&tag=excharge-20

Good Luck...

Will this fix the Alienware X51 wifi problem?

If I were to buy this http://www.amazon.com/802-11g-Wireless-Long-Rang-Network-Adapter/dp/B0035H4164/ref=sr_1_4?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1348368921&sr=1-4&keywords=wifi+booster+antenna, would I not have such a problem with the wifi in the computer. Also if a cheaper one would work let me know.

Do I need a WiFi Booster, Repeater, or Extender?

I can get the signal up to at 80 feet from the wifi router. Full bars. Anything over the signal drops completely off.

I'd like to be able to at least double that so I don't have to switch over to 4G LTE when I'm outside mowing the lawn, getting the mail, etc.. whatever.

More of a convince thing than anything but it would be nice to have Wifi outside.

Interestingly there is a bookshelf and a window right at said 80feet so I am thinking I can put, whichever I need, on that and beam the Wifi signal out the window through the glass.

Will I face problems with Teewe usage if I use a WiFi repeater?

Teewe works with devices you already own, including Android smartphones and tablets, Windows and Mac laptops. Browse for what to watch, control playback, and adjust volume using the smartphone, tablet, or laptop you already know and love.Video Guides: Boost Your WiFi Signal Without HardwareYes, you can play video, audio, image files through Teewe. All you have to do is add folders containing the media and all the files will be categorized and will be available on the desktop application.Yes, Teewe can be used on a hotspot but it is not recommended as mobile hotspot might lack certain features essential for Teewe to work properly.If you are trying to play videos stored on your phone or PC than internet connection is not required, the videos will be streamed using your Wi-Fi network. To play online videos like YouTube videos then internet connection is required.You can set up your Teewe in a snap using an Android phone or tablet. You only need to set up your Teewe once (again if you change the WiFi network) - you can use Teewe from additional supported devices without having to set up Teewe again. Before you begin the setup process, make sure you are connected to a 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi network and that your router is configured to the recommended settings listed here “wifisettings”You can set up your Teewe device on your Home WiFi network using your iOS device (iPhone or iPad). You only need to set up your Teewe once (again if you change the WiFi network) - you can use Teewe from additional supported devices without having to set up Teewe again. Before you begin the setup process, make sure you are connected to a 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi network and that your router is configured to the recommended settings listed here “wifisettings”You can also play laptop files (added to Teewe desktop app) to your Teewe using your smartphone. The Teewe desktop app should be running on your laptop and both the phone and laptop should be on the same network as the Teewe device.

Does Xiaomi WiFi repeater solve the problem that too many devices accessing to WiFi?

No, a Wi-Fi range extender (“repeater”) won’t do more than repeat a diminished signal received from the source router. Since you don’t physically control the source router, adding a range extender won’t necessarily achieve anything more than adding interference at the same or adjacent frequencies in use. You’d make Wi-Fi worse for all users in the range extender’s coverage area without necessarily improving your access to it.In this situation, you don’t know for sure if the source router is congested due to a preponderance of ARP or MAC sessions (outstripping the router’s CPU or memory), spectral exhaustion of the WLAN channels, or full saturation of the Internet WAN port connection. Unless you can physically access the source router or impose a MAC blacklist in its firmware, the only solution is to use Scapy or other packet-manipulation tools with a Wi-Fi adapter to send deauth frames to some of the client devices attached to the source router, giving yourself a better chance of sustaining a Wi-Fi session. Of course, this is a zero-sum game and other users can do the same thing.

Why do WiFi extenders suffer from a bandwidth drop problem? Are there solutions?

No solutions I know of. The xtender is using part of its capacity to interact with the “host” router, another part to interact with the target device. In essence, it's using double the bandwidth for the same interaction, by placing it in between the host and target, it has to “look” like the target to the host, and look like the host to the target.That said, mine works fine for smart TV, and has a wired Ethernet port to connect direct to a target device, if it has that capability, or to a smaller router like an AirPort Express, which is what I do, moving “downlink” traffic from extender to target on to a wired connection, or another router.Used like this, you don't get the bandwidth drop, because the target,nor device side no longer uses capacity from the host router. The green CAT6 between the extender and the airport express means none of the host router bandwidth gets used on thAt leg of the leg to the TV, because the TV uses the AiRpots signal.

Making a wifi booster using alominium foil on wireless router with (no antennas)?

Your router probably has internal antennas, which trades off looks for better range. Some routers have a port where you can plug in an antenna...in which case you should just buy one and plug it in. Otherwise, there's no way to improve the signal with foil. Even using foil with an actual antenna, unless you have a near perfectly smooth surface (tough) in a near perfect parabolic shape (tougher), you won't get much of a signal boost.

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