weirdjim
Ejection Handle Pulled
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2008
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- 4,171
- Location
- Grass Valley, CA (KGOO)
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weirdjim
I'm getting reasonably good internet (6 down, 1.5 up) in the lab, but inside the house the wife is only getting 3 down and 1 up. There is consternation in the family that she can't watch her Roku without it continually buffering in the middle of the movie. Unhappy wife, unhappy life.
Here is the setup:
(200' cedar tree) (dish in the tree pointed at a local ISP dish ten miles away) (Cat 5 cable from the dish to a TP-Link N600 that broadcasts the wireless signal) (N600 is on the second floor of my electronics lab with big windows on the other side of the room from the N600 about 20' away from the windows, but my test equipment racks are between the N600 and the windows.)
(TP-Link TL-WN822N Wireless Access Point about 5 meters from the N600 wireless broadcaster) (USB cable) (Jim's WIn 7 machine.) As I said above, I getting everything my ISP says I can get from their equipment.
(Linksys RE4000W inside the house on the second floor with a perfect window view to the lab. It is rebroadcasting the wireless signal from the lab transmitter throughout the house with a very strong signal any place we go to look. DIstance from lab transmitter to house receiver is about 100 meters across open grassland.) As I said above, bandwidth is about half at this house end as I am getting at my end in the lab.
I have the following equipment that is sitting around unused. I'm thinking that some sort of relay station near my lab windows with a visual line of sight to the receiver in the house might be the answer, but can't find any information on how to make an intermediate broadcast transceiver.
(*) The Trendnet units use the house wiring for transmission. The only problem is that they will have to transmit over power cables that are buried to bring house power out to the lab a good 100 meters away.
There are some immoveables. I can't move where the N600 broadcaster resides. I can't move the equipment racks. I can't move where the Linksys receiver in the house resides.
Please, treat me gently. I'm an RF cat in a room full of digital rocking chairs. Yes, I've designed power and signal amplifiers from DC to 13.3 Gigs, and more analog stuff than should be allowed, but if you start telling me to do digital and wireless stuff that a competent history major can't comprehend, I'll be way-lost.
Thanks,
jim
Here is the setup:
(200' cedar tree) (dish in the tree pointed at a local ISP dish ten miles away) (Cat 5 cable from the dish to a TP-Link N600 that broadcasts the wireless signal) (N600 is on the second floor of my electronics lab with big windows on the other side of the room from the N600 about 20' away from the windows, but my test equipment racks are between the N600 and the windows.)
(TP-Link TL-WN822N Wireless Access Point about 5 meters from the N600 wireless broadcaster) (USB cable) (Jim's WIn 7 machine.) As I said above, I getting everything my ISP says I can get from their equipment.
(Linksys RE4000W inside the house on the second floor with a perfect window view to the lab. It is rebroadcasting the wireless signal from the lab transmitter throughout the house with a very strong signal any place we go to look. DIstance from lab transmitter to house receiver is about 100 meters across open grassland.) As I said above, bandwidth is about half at this house end as I am getting at my end in the lab.
I have the following equipment that is sitting around unused. I'm thinking that some sort of relay station near my lab windows with a visual line of sight to the receiver in the house might be the answer, but can't find any information on how to make an intermediate broadcast transceiver.
DLink DIR-515 Switch/Router
(2) Trendnet TPL-480E (*)
Asus WL330gE WIreless Access point
(2) Trendnet TPL-480E (*)
Asus WL330gE WIreless Access point
(*) The Trendnet units use the house wiring for transmission. The only problem is that they will have to transmit over power cables that are buried to bring house power out to the lab a good 100 meters away.
There are some immoveables. I can't move where the N600 broadcaster resides. I can't move the equipment racks. I can't move where the Linksys receiver in the house resides.
Please, treat me gently. I'm an RF cat in a room full of digital rocking chairs. Yes, I've designed power and signal amplifiers from DC to 13.3 Gigs, and more analog stuff than should be allowed, but if you start telling me to do digital and wireless stuff that a competent history major can't comprehend, I'll be way-lost.
Thanks,
jim
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