MortarThePoint Posted Friday at 07:13 Posted Friday at 07:13 I want a product that consists of two mains powered units: 1. Connects to WiFi and has a wireless bridge 2. Connects to wireless bridge and has a WiFi access point (WAP) Clearly the units could be the same hardware configured to different roles. Ideally, you'd tell end (1) the WiFi credentials and end (2) would automatically use those for it's WAP. Then any WiFi device moved between locations (1) and (2) would easily connect. I've seen loads that connect to wired LAN, but not spotted ones that connect to WiFi. This has to be the most common consumer level requirement.
-rick- Posted Friday at 11:50 Posted Friday at 11:50 Is this to create one big network? Sounds like it. If so, the modern way to do this is with Wifi Meshing and it's supported by many many devices. Best to use them all of the same brand though to avoid any issues. You can often get them in multiples bundled together. Not recommending anything in particular but: https://www.currys.co.uk/computing/networking/whole-home-wi-fi-systems
crispy_wafer Posted Friday at 11:59 Posted Friday at 11:59 I wonder if Ubiquiti would have something, without looking I dont know. But for the record I've just put in a couple of Wave Pro @ work to bridge a LAN to two in buildings that are on different sides of a road. Most bridge units use POE so the wired LAN is made use of for more than just comms.
MortarThePoint Posted Friday at 12:37 Author Posted Friday at 12:37 43 minutes ago, -rick- said: Is this to create one big network? Not so much. It's to connect between two buildings about 100m apart which is a common requirement (e.g. garden office, garage, workshop, barn etc). 36 minutes ago, crispy_wafer said: Most bridge units use POE so the wired LAN is made use of for more than just comms. A good approach, but I have convenient mains sockets and not ethernet sockets. This must be a common scenario for the domestic market as most people have housewide WiFi rather than ethernet.
-rick- Posted Friday at 12:41 Posted Friday at 12:41 3 minutes ago, MortarThePoint said: Not so much. It's to connect between two buildings about 100m apart which is a common requirement (e.g. garden office, garage, workshop, barn etc). Oh in that case the Ubiquiti suggestion is a good one. Building to building links is one of their business focuses. A number of other companies in the space too but the names escape me right now. 1 1
-rick- Posted Friday at 13:02 Posted Friday at 13:02 Microtik is the other name I was thinking of, not necessarily for the non-technical. https://mikrotik.com/products You can do this on a lot of home routers too but its not necessarily well documented. OpenWRT supports doing it if your hardware does so a router that can have that installed is an option. But if you have 100m to traverse you should be looking at specific point to point antennas which pushes you towards the ubituiti/microtik type options.
Alan Ambrose Posted Friday at 17:47 Posted Friday at 17:47 100m sounds more like a microwave link rather than wifi - I can’t imagine you would get the bandwidth you want with wifi. Maybe I’m wrong: https://www.broadbandbuyer.com/products/47399-ubiquiti-lbe-5ac-gen2-ptp-pnp/specifications/#content
-rick- Posted Friday at 17:50 Posted Friday at 17:50 2 minutes ago, Alan Ambrose said: 100m sounds more like a microwave link rather than wifi - I can’t imagine you would get the bandwidth you want with wifi. Maybe I’m wrong: https://www.broadbandbuyer.com/products/47399-ubiquiti-lbe-5ac-gen2-ptp-pnp/specifications/#content That is just a point to point antenna for wifi. I agree that you likely need a directional antenna each end for a good link over 100m but 100m isn't that far in the scheme of things. People are running wifi links measured in kilometers at decent speed. Psst: wifi signals are microwave signals 😛
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