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Help with Mesh WiFi System
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:09 pm
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:09 pm
Tried researching myself but being low-tech, getting confused by the information out there. I have AT&T fiber with a dead spot in the most inopportune area of my house (living room TV). I built my house 3 years ago and it's never been an issue until recently. The installed the modem/router almost directly above the living room in the attic.
What I have installed is the Humax BGW320-500.
My house is a 1-story, 2700 sq ft.
Is there anything simple & reasonably cost effective I can install to increase coverage without getting AT&T involved?
What I have installed is the Humax BGW320-500.
My house is a 1-story, 2700 sq ft.
Is there anything simple & reasonably cost effective I can install to increase coverage without getting AT&T involved?
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:12 pm to Hiking Tiger
quote:
I built my house 3 years ago and it's never been an issue until recently.
I hate to be that guy but how the hell did you build a new house and not have ethernet run to every room and every possible TV location?
Where do you have ethernet run to?
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:32 pm to notsince98
Builder was somewhat old school and didn't know what we were talking about when I asked so I didn't push it. Big regret now for sure.
My assumption is the only ethernet is run to the attic.
My assumption is the only ethernet is run to the attic.
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:36 pm to Hiking Tiger
quote:
The installed the modem/router almost directly above the living room in the attic.
That’s not a bad spot to be in.
Could drop an Ethernet cable down to the TV from attic potentially.
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:39 pm to Hiking Tiger
I am running the TP-Link Deco Mesh which has been great for about 6 months.
I have AT&T Fiber - Hardwired one Deco unit upstairs, and the other 2 communicate with the base wirelessly and serve the downstairs.
Deco Mesh System
This is the one I have, but there are higher end models - I had no need for those features, so I opted to not pay the premium for things I wouldn't use (WiFi 7)
I have AT&T Fiber - Hardwired one Deco unit upstairs, and the other 2 communicate with the base wirelessly and serve the downstairs.
Deco Mesh System
This is the one I have, but there are higher end models - I had no need for those features, so I opted to not pay the premium for things I wouldn't use (WiFi 7)
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:39 pm to s14suspense
quote:
Could drop an Ethernet cable down to the TV
Agreed; I always had to have at least a five port switch behind the TV for the Xbox, the receiver, the TV, the Phillips Hue controller, etc. anyway.
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:39 pm to s14suspense
Should also mention, around the same time this dead spot appeared, my Ring doorbell on the front porch (15' from living room TV) also stopped connecting.
Not sure if that's another dead spot or Ring (3 years old) went bad. It had been perfectly fine for the 1st 3 years as well.
That's why I was leaning towards mesh vs. considering dropping ethernet to TV. Guess I could try a new Ring 1st and see if it connects.
Not sure if that's another dead spot or Ring (3 years old) went bad. It had been perfectly fine for the 1st 3 years as well.
That's why I was leaning towards mesh vs. considering dropping ethernet to TV. Guess I could try a new Ring 1st and see if it connects.
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:42 pm to Hiking Tiger
quote:pulling wire isn't the funnest thing in the world, buit if you have ethernet in the attic, you could connect a switch and drop lines down the walls of key rooms you want wired. not too difficult to find the cable; cut a hole in the wall in the room and stick a light in it. go into the attic and guide the wire down to it and then put in a $2 monoprice wall plate with an ethernet keystone.
My assumption is the only ethernet is run to the attic.
where is the other end of the ethernet that is going into the attic?
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:44 pm to Hiking Tiger
quote:when i purchased a ring, i complained about signal drop-out and amazon sent me a free little doohicky to plug into the wall between the ring and the router. it did the trick.
Should also mention, around the same time this dead spot appeared, my Ring doorbell on the front porch (15' from living room TV) also stopped connecting.
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:44 pm to FuzzyBearE
Is this just plugged straight into AT&T modem/router with a small ethernet cable? Do you have to do any bypassing, contacting AT&T, etc.?
I realize all dumb questions, just no clue about these things.
I realize all dumb questions, just no clue about these things.
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:58 pm to Hiking Tiger
There are two ways to do it, yes, you plug it into the modem/router with an ETH cable (go to monoprice or buy them off of Amazon in a pack of 10, you'll find uses for them.)
1) Plug the Deco in and let it act like it's own router, creating a different subnet behind AT&T. Unless you need to forward ports (unlikely) from the Internet into your house, nobody needs to be contacted or called.
2) Put the modem into passthrough mode and make the Deco the "primary" router between the Fiber modem (which is now just a bridge in passthrough mode, which means its main job is to turn the connection from Fiber into Ethernet, and do nearly nothing else.) I feel that #2 is slightly more complicated to most users.
1) Plug the Deco in and let it act like it's own router, creating a different subnet behind AT&T. Unless you need to forward ports (unlikely) from the Internet into your house, nobody needs to be contacted or called.
2) Put the modem into passthrough mode and make the Deco the "primary" router between the Fiber modem (which is now just a bridge in passthrough mode, which means its main job is to turn the connection from Fiber into Ethernet, and do nearly nothing else.) I feel that #2 is slightly more complicated to most users.
Posted on 1/24/25 at 12:58 pm to Hiking Tiger
Buy a cheap 4/8 port unmanaged POE switch, two TP Link eap670s, and 2 long cat6a cables.
Throw the POE switch next to the BGW320, and run the two APs off of that switch to two locations of the house, and boom you have a high-performance mesh setup.
Throw the POE switch next to the BGW320, and run the two APs off of that switch to two locations of the house, and boom you have a high-performance mesh setup.
Posted on 1/24/25 at 1:02 pm to bluebarracuda
He can also use ceiling mounted WAPs, so there's no cable drop (although that means you won't get ETH to the entertainment center)
Posted on 1/24/25 at 1:09 pm to LemmyLives
He can just leave the APs in the ceiling in the attic
Posted on 1/24/25 at 1:20 pm to LemmyLives
quote:
1) Plug the Deco in and let it act like it's own router, creating a different subnet behind AT&T. Unless you need to forward ports (unlikely) from the Internet into your house, nobody needs to be contacted or called.
Would something like this work?
A 2-pack, 1 into the modem/router, 1 in entertainment center by TV?
Posted on 1/24/25 at 1:35 pm to Hiking Tiger
Yeah, that would work and you could just string them out as far as possible in your attic to cover the whole house if attic is accessible.
Posted on 1/24/25 at 2:05 pm to Hiking Tiger
With a single story home and your internet located in the attic, the ceiling access points make a lot of sense. you can easily put multiple in around the house and you can use wired backhaul to the At&t gateway in the attic. This will give you the best coverage and WiFi performance. They can be had fairly cheap, too (like $70/ea).
Something like 2 or 3 of these: LINK
EDIT: I'd recommend doing ceiling APs as they will reside in the conditioned space. Placing traditional APs in the attic is a bit questionable as it will get very hot up there and the housing for traditional APs isn't designed to handle the dust levels, either. Plus you need to run power.
With ceiling APs, you can get them Power Over Ethernet. You'd just need a PoE inserter at the gateway.
Something like 2 or 3 of these: LINK
EDIT: I'd recommend doing ceiling APs as they will reside in the conditioned space. Placing traditional APs in the attic is a bit questionable as it will get very hot up there and the housing for traditional APs isn't designed to handle the dust levels, either. Plus you need to run power.
With ceiling APs, you can get them Power Over Ethernet. You'd just need a PoE inserter at the gateway.
This post was edited on 1/24/25 at 2:09 pm
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