General > Random Chat
wifi booster
lukemk5gti:
--- Quote from: Pudding on October 23, 2017, 02:51:03 pm ---Used those Powerline adapters in a couple of houses I rented and they work well. But for some reason, in my own house with up-to-date building regs, they don't work...at all.
--- End quote ---
If you think about it, old houses had one single circuit that some electrician hodge podged together and daisy chained off the room next door. Effectively it was one long cable doing your entire house nearly.
New regs came in which mean that each room now runs on a single loop straight back into the board. Even large rooms are sometimes broken into separate loops.
So in an older house the signal comes in and flies straight up to most rooms in the house but in the new house it goes in, does a loop, goes to the board, does a loop and on and on until eventually it comes to you with piss poor signal.
Or so a technician told me he came out to install my broadband.
pudding:
--- Quote from: lukemk5gti on October 23, 2017, 03:16:02 pm ---
--- Quote from: Pudding on October 23, 2017, 02:51:03 pm ---Used those Powerline adapters in a couple of houses I rented and they work well. But for some reason, in my own house with up-to-date building regs, they don't work...at all.
--- End quote ---
If you think about it, old houses had one single circuit that some electrician hodge podged together and daisy chained off the room next door. Effectively it was one long cable doing your entire house nearly.
New regs came in which mean that each room now runs on a single loop straight back into the board. Even large rooms are sometimes broken into separate loops.
So in an older house the signal comes in and flies straight up to most rooms in the house but in the new house it goes in, does a loop, goes to the board, does a loop and on and on until eventually it comes to you with piss poor signal.
Or so a technician told me he came out to install my broadband.
--- End quote ---
Yeah makes sense! The houses the Powerline adapters worked in were Victorian and a couple of ~1995 vintage houses. The house I bought was built in 2007 probably has the wiring style you describe. I don't even get any handshake LEDs on the adapters in the same room the router is in, let alone on a different floor! Zero connection!
My gf's Victorian house is amusing. Ancient fuse box in a really bizarre place, with pull out fuses and rope insulation on the wiring :grin: If something blows a fuse, the whole house goes down :grin:
lukemk5gti:
--- Quote from: Pudding on October 23, 2017, 04:19:51 pm ---
--- Quote from: lukemk5gti on October 23, 2017, 03:16:02 pm ---
--- Quote from: Pudding on October 23, 2017, 02:51:03 pm ---Used those Powerline adapters in a couple of houses I rented and they work well. But for some reason, in my own house with up-to-date building regs, they don't work...at all.
--- End quote ---
If you think about it, old houses had one single circuit that some electrician hodge podged together and daisy chained off the room next door. Effectively it was one long cable doing your entire house nearly.
New regs came in which mean that each room now runs on a single loop straight back into the board. Even large rooms are sometimes broken into separate loops.
So in an older house the signal comes in and flies straight up to most rooms in the house but in the new house it goes in, does a loop, goes to the board, does a loop and on and on until eventually it comes to you with piss poor signal.
Or so a technician told me he came out to install my broadband.
--- End quote ---
Yeah makes sense! The houses the Powerline adapters worked in were Victorian and a couple of ~1995 vintage houses. The house I bought was built in 2007 probably has the wiring style you describe. I don't even get any handshake LEDs on the adapters in the same room the router is in, let alone on a different floor! Zero connection!
My gf's Victorian house is amusing. Ancient fuse box in a really bizarre place, with pull out fuses and rope insulation on the wiring :grin: If something blows a fuse, the whole house goes down :grin:
--- End quote ---
Mine is Victorian too, 1890 build but luckily the last owner had to redo the wiring and fuse board which saved me €€€
Have to say though, the structure of my 1890's build is far superior to any new build I've seen. They just don't make them like they used to.
All these new regulations and yet we're actually going backwards.
I'm watching the builders next door to me put up an extension and they've used white deal timber with no protection from rot or water ingress and standard ply (not marine). They'll get 5 years our of it.
willni:
--- Quote from: lukemk5gti on October 24, 2017, 08:18:27 am ---
Mine is Victorian too, 1890 build but luckily the last owner had to redo the wiring and fuse board which saved me €€€
Have to say though, the structure of my 1890's build is far superior to any new build I've seen. They just don't make them like they used to.
All these new regulations and yet we're actually going backwards.
I'm watching the builders next door to me put up an extension and they've used white deal timber with no protection from rot or water ingress and standard ply (not marine). They'll get 5 years our of it.
--- End quote ---
Although the circuitry would play a role in broadband/wifi distribution it's more the actual walls that influence the wifi, older homes generally had a chimney breast in the middle of the house which essentially helped to distribute the weight into the foundation so the rooms were built around this and the connecting walls didn't have to be think and so could be single brick in width.
Modern homes don't really have fireplaces (conventional heating) unless it's asked for or if they are it's generally at the side of the house for ease of alteration, therefore homes now have to have real walls down stairs which are often double block width (a block is wider a brick) so basically wifi can't travel through thick walls so it's a bollocks for wifi.
Anyway it matters about the placement of your wifi/router box as you want it to have the clearest path to access as many rooms as possible and not to just sit at the bottom of the stairs with only real visibility to one room.
FJ1000:
The circuitry comments relate to the power line adapters...they use the home's electrics to extend the internet coverage.
I've also got a netgear AC router hooked up to my virgin hub (which is set to "modem" mode to work with an external router.) Much better coverage than the virgin jobbie...can get 80-90MB in the loft where there was no signal before, yet there still seem to be dead spots in a couple of rooms, where the power line adapters are handy.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[*] Previous page
Go to full version