hj2k_x
Honorary Master
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2006
- Messages
- 32,115
Good people, I'm hoping someone can assist with a mesh wifi issue I'm having.
Trying to stretch the wifi signal in our house from downstairs (where it is strong) to upstairs (where it is intermittent / non existent) is proving difficult.
I have tried the cheapest mesh wifi solution. These pods from Mercursys:http://www.mercusys.co.za/product/details/halo-s3(2-pack). They were good value - 4 pods for just over 1000 bucks from Takealot. I thought they would relay the signal to each other, so you have one connected to the router via lan cable, then the next one connects to that one, and the next one connects to that in a kind of daisy-chain, but it seems all the nodes connect back to the main node which is connected to the router, so the max distance from the main node cannot be too far otherwise the signal is weak / unreliable.
I've managed to connect a powerline adapter as well. This one here: https://www.incredible.co.za/tp-lin...gAFqqqgQnP2_R1l8ihiPT1WsI-r6C0FBoCZ8cQAvD_BwE. That will give me a mostly reliable wired connection upstairs (currently plugged into a Mi Box) and a slightly more reliable wifi connection upstairs (albeit by connecting to the powerline adapter directly via wifi, not the unified mesh wifi setup)
Long story slightly shorter-I see the mesh wifi solutions range in price up to almost 10 grand for a premium solution. Our house is quite large and old, with thick walls and various things which interfere with wifi signal. Is it worth throwing some more money at the problem and buying a better mesh wifi solution? Any recommendations?
Supersonic (from whom I get my fibre) have some kind of offering involving Plume https://www.plume.com/ which also seems quite pricey and has a monthly subscription fee.
I see there are powerline mesh wifi hybrid solutions available (in the US at least). Anyone try any of those out?
Trying to stretch the wifi signal in our house from downstairs (where it is strong) to upstairs (where it is intermittent / non existent) is proving difficult.
I have tried the cheapest mesh wifi solution. These pods from Mercursys:http://www.mercusys.co.za/product/details/halo-s3(2-pack). They were good value - 4 pods for just over 1000 bucks from Takealot. I thought they would relay the signal to each other, so you have one connected to the router via lan cable, then the next one connects to that one, and the next one connects to that in a kind of daisy-chain, but it seems all the nodes connect back to the main node which is connected to the router, so the max distance from the main node cannot be too far otherwise the signal is weak / unreliable.
I've managed to connect a powerline adapter as well. This one here: https://www.incredible.co.za/tp-lin...gAFqqqgQnP2_R1l8ihiPT1WsI-r6C0FBoCZ8cQAvD_BwE. That will give me a mostly reliable wired connection upstairs (currently plugged into a Mi Box) and a slightly more reliable wifi connection upstairs (albeit by connecting to the powerline adapter directly via wifi, not the unified mesh wifi setup)
Long story slightly shorter-I see the mesh wifi solutions range in price up to almost 10 grand for a premium solution. Our house is quite large and old, with thick walls and various things which interfere with wifi signal. Is it worth throwing some more money at the problem and buying a better mesh wifi solution? Any recommendations?
Supersonic (from whom I get my fibre) have some kind of offering involving Plume https://www.plume.com/ which also seems quite pricey and has a monthly subscription fee.
I see there are powerline mesh wifi hybrid solutions available (in the US at least). Anyone try any of those out?

