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Hi
My home network is a 200Mb fibre line which I'm looking to extend into a garden cabin/work space at the bottom of my garden (aprx 25m from my house). I've had the power installed today, and initially I was going to run a really long ethernet cable direct from the router to a wireless router in the shed. Wireless so other units can access it, and it would also give me the ability to hardwire for the speeds I seek.
My work entails heavy data use and complicated web apps that need a really fast connection so I'm looking to get as much of that 200Mb speed as possible.
Without boring you too much, hardwiring the cable and tracing it over skirting etc through three rooms in my house before it gets outside just isn't viable so i'm left with a quandary. I've used home plugs in the past with not much success (the last ones giving me just 14Mbps)- They were 500Mb units.
My first question is what is the general expected range of home plugs (I guess I'm on the edge of what's viable?) and secondly, are there any other options that anyone can think of?
thanks in advance!
Al
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You know the answer on the HomePlugs - from past experience
No chance of taking ethernet outside on side of house and around the outside with outdoor grade cable? Ethernet will be good for a run of 100m so there is scope of using extra distance if needed
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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thanks for your reply. I've already done that on the front of the house to hardwire my PC from my office into the lounge where the router is so unless I want the outside to look "industrial" I don't really want to go done this route again. Plus, the side of the house where the router is connected to my neighbours (i.e. a semi detached) so i'd have to go the long way round which isn't really viable. Damn, it's the only thing I regret not doing when I renovated the house - network points everywhere!
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2 outdoor long range access points to bridge the connection?
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Yep, was going to suggest it if he still don't want to run cable underground (which IMHO, would be the cheapest way to guarantee a solid speed)
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If you've just had the power installed, then it's not too late to get someone in to install some CAT6 cable.
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A couple of Ubiquiti Nanostation AC Locos should do it.
https://linitx.com/product/ubiquiti-nanostation-5ac-...
We have a couple of these going 50m or so through walls and achieving a 300mbit link speed.
They are rated up to 10km (although that's at the top of a pole with nothing in the fresnel zones between them) and thanks to the directional antennas get a lot more range than you think.
If you don't have a 24v passive PoE switch at each end (like a US-8-150W ) you will need some gigabit passive POE injectors.
https://linitx.com/product/ubiquiti-poe-gigabit-powe...
Edited by nemeth782 (Thu 08-Feb-18 09:22:25)
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A couple of Ubiquiti Nanostation AC Locos should do it.
https://linitx.com/product/ubiquiti-nanostation-5ac-...
We have a couple of these going 50m or so through walls and achieving a 300mbit link speed.
They are rated up to 10km (although that's at the top of a pole with nothing in the fresnel zones between them) and thanks to the directional antennas get a lot more range than you think.
If you don't have a 24v passive PoE switch at each end (like a US-8-150W ) you will need some gigabit passive POE injectors.
https://linitx.com/product/ubiquiti-poe-gigabit-powe...
I'd go NanoBeam over NanoStation due to the better beam performance, neater look and easier to mount on wood (if using the NBE-WMK wall mount kit) and POE injectors are included with it
but either way, Ubiquiti Wireless will easily deliver 200mbps ona 40mhz channel at that distance.
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Thanks for your reply- looks promising! Please excuse my ignorance but how do these work?
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Thanks for your reply- looks promising! Please excuse my ignorance but how do these work?
They are basically just wifi transmitters/receivers that have a much more focused beam and allow you to send and receive a signal over a much greater distance. I regularly use the larger versions of there (PowerBeam and Rocket Dish) to send signals over distances up to 50km
the manufacturers website www.ubnt.com has a lot of good information.
If you are buying a pair, spend the extra cash and go for something in the AC line of products. the older M5 stuff is pretty obsolete now and soon to be discontinued,.
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I installed two Ubiquiti NanoBeam NBE-5AC-16 5 GHz AC 16dbi https://www.senetic.co.uk/product/NBE-5AC-16?gclid=E... 30 meters apart with clear line of sight as I could not run a cable between the two buildings and I get on DSL16Mbps 2.45GHz throughput with the output power reduced to 10dBM because of the short distance and I am very satisfied with the results.
These radios come with their own POE injectors but must order UK power cords and wall mounting brackets separately.
My setup https://s19.postimg.org/nn0300cbn/Final_topology.jpg
Edited by deleted (Thu 08-Feb-18 16:38:34)
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Hi, I've installed the ring doorbell cam. For the price I'm fairly satisfied with it. I'm now thinking of buying a wired cam for the end of the back garden, a run of approx 2000 feet including the inside of the house.
Recently moved from PlusNet to Sky package fiber and talk. The router they supplied just reaches my back room so no hope of it reaching the other 100 feet to the back gate.
The camera I would like to install is Spotlight Cam Wired .Presently I use the tp-link system, TP-LINK�s AV500 Nano Powerline Adapter for use in my attic and it is also installed in the garage. All working ok (fingers crossed) so far.
My question is : would it be possible to use the TP Link WiFi range Extender - Wifi Repeater setUp & reView - WiFi ExTender , or has any one had experience with this sort of set up?
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