Need some home networking advice

Bigman38

Well-Known Member
Jul 27, 2010
18,898
17,955
113
39
Council Bluffs, IA
Moved a few months ago into a 2 story house. The internet coax is on the top floor in the middle of the house, which I'd like to keep there if possible. The signal gets bad on the ground floor bathroom, and immediately outside. I also have my Xbox in the basement(downloading, streaming) where the signal is poor and drops out from time to time.

Right now we just have the default wireless router from Cox. So I know I need to upgrade, I'm just not sure the best way to do it. Does anyone have any experience with signal boosters? Or is it worth the extra money to just upgrade my wireless router. And what brand/model?

On a quick glance I saw boosters around $50, and new routers around $75-$100.
 
It probably would be better to upgrade to a better wireless router. That may solve the problem. The other option is to just use an older router in repeater mode. I used dd-wrt for my routers and have setup bridge mode on an old router, so my desktop would have network without having to run a network cable.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: ruxCYtable
Moved a few months ago into a 2 story house. The internet coax is on the top floor in the middle of the house, which I'd like to keep there if possible. The signal gets bad on the ground floor bathroom, and immediately outside. I also have my Xbox in the basement(downloading, streaming) where the signal is poor and drops out from time to time.

Right now we just have the default wireless router from Cox. So I know I need to upgrade, I'm just not sure the best way to do it. Does anyone have any experience with signal boosters? Or is it worth the extra money to just upgrade my wireless router. And what brand/model?

On a quick glance I saw boosters around $50, and new routers around $75-$100.
This might be a little more than you want to spend, but here's how my 2 story house is set up:

Basement: Asus RT-AC87U
Amazon product ASIN B00MPI5N7U
Main floor: Router from Centurylink

2nd floor: Netgear powerline adaptor
Amazon product ASIN B01929V7ZG
I bought an additional, cheap powerline adaptor from monoprice to run to the basement router.
Just have to make sure its Homeplug AV2 compatible.

Not the perfect setup, but I have really good coverage throughout my house. I don't have cable and get good wifi service to all my devices for streaming.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Bigman38
Moved a few months ago into a 2 story house. The internet coax is on the top floor in the middle of the house, which I'd like to keep there if possible. The signal gets bad on the ground floor bathroom, and immediately outside. I also have my Xbox in the basement(downloading, streaming) where the signal is poor and drops out from time to time.

Right now we just have the default wireless router from Cox. So I know I need to upgrade, I'm just not sure the best way to do it. Does anyone have any experience with signal boosters? Or is it worth the extra money to just upgrade my wireless router. And what brand/model?

On a quick glance I saw boosters around $50, and new routers around $75-$100.

I'm assuming your router from Cox is also your modem? That seems to be the typical configuration nowadays..

If that's the case, and you buy a new router, unless you (or Cox) can disable the wireless signals from the default modem/router, you'll have extra wifi signals just causing needless interference. It's not a huge deal because you can avoid it based on the channel.. but still something to consider.

When it comes to signal boosters.. Are you referring to a signal extender? That's certainly an option, with the tradeoff being you're adding an extra step into the signal path, so it will hurt performance, and it's not ideal from a gaming perspective. Granted, this only really matters if your internet speeds are in excess of 20-30 Mb.

As far as buying a new router goes, it probably won't make that much of a difference unless you invest specifically in a high-powered router (even then, check the reviews to see if people experience what the marketing claims). If you have a router which has external antennae, probably the best thing you can do to extend that router's range is to purchase new high-gain antennae to replace the stock ones.

Of course, all this assumes that you're not trying to get wifi signals through brick walls and sheets of metal.. cause that isn't gonna go terribly well no matter what you do.

Another option to consider is power-line wifi. Do a search for it -- basically you transfer ethernet over your home's power lines. So you'll have two hookups, one that gets internet from your router, and then another where you want to have an internet hookup (or wireless access). As long your wires aren't super old, this could be perfect for you.
 
Thanks for the help. Seems like I'm looking at an extender or power line adapters.

I knew internet over power lines existed but I didn't realize it was that common or affordable.
 
Question of my own if nobody minds.

Ranch style house, Mediacom cable modem/wifi router on the main level. Also have my own N-Dual band router hooked up and sitting next to it. I have a ethernet cord from my router run down through to the unfinished basement. We have both our cells, Roku, smart TV (not active) and laptop all connected to my router. We often have to switch off one or more of the devices when streaming on the Roku, such as my phone or laptop, my wife typically leaves hers on. I'm no expert but I'm guessing we're using up the channels on my router, but I don't really notice much improvement if I set half of them on the Mediacom wifi. Is this interference or what?

I'm pretty much set on getting my own modem (no wifi) and a new AC router. Trying to figure out if I should look at a 3 or 4 band router in that case to limit the clutter. Any ideas? How many devices do you typically have on one router?
 

Help Support Us

Become a patron