The Psychedelic Socialist
ClioSport Club Member
Just wondering if there's any networking wifi buffs who can help with a coverage problem we're having at home.
We've currently got three TP-Link EAP245 access points set up around the house, all hardwired back to the central switch over cat5e. They all run one SSID for seamless roaming around the house and are managed centrally (Omada) with them broadcasting on separate channels.
They all work fine for the most part, but we have a couple of rooms in the house that don't get great signal from any of the APs, most frustratingly in the living room.
I don't really want to run any more cables around the house so I'd thought to fix this buy getting a couple of wife extenders (e.g. a TP-Link RE450 / AC1750 like the APs).
Is this likely to solve the problem or will we now have five separate APs around the house, crowding out the spectrum even more, with devices spending all their time hanging on to a poor connection from another room rather than switching onto a more reliable / closer AP?
We've currently got three TP-Link EAP245 access points set up around the house, all hardwired back to the central switch over cat5e. They all run one SSID for seamless roaming around the house and are managed centrally (Omada) with them broadcasting on separate channels.
They all work fine for the most part, but we have a couple of rooms in the house that don't get great signal from any of the APs, most frustratingly in the living room.
I don't really want to run any more cables around the house so I'd thought to fix this buy getting a couple of wife extenders (e.g. a TP-Link RE450 / AC1750 like the APs).
Is this likely to solve the problem or will we now have five separate APs around the house, crowding out the spectrum even more, with devices spending all their time hanging on to a poor connection from another room rather than switching onto a more reliable / closer AP?