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Question from Johdel
“I have had poor results gettering sufficient wireless reception in my old house. The house itself is over 90 years old and has walls made of either concrete or mortar and lath. I have tried 802.11a and 802.11b as well as hardware from Linksys and Microsoft Networking. Does anyone know of a good way to overcome this problem besides running wires into every room? At this point, I am so fustrated cost is irrelvant. Does any one protocol (a,b, g, etc.) perform better in this “hostile” wireless environment? Does any one hardware solution perform better? Are their any repeater type hardware devices that can boost signal strength without having to run CAT5 to? Are there any industrial strength devices designed for offices or factory floors that might do the trick? “
Answer from jbolene
“Not sure why you are having these problems.
You might also have phones running on the same spectrum.
B and G are better than A, with G being the best.
Try and get the base wireless unit higher in the house, put it on top of the closet shelf, not on the floor.
Repeater units are available from Linksys to extend the range.
Also watch out for florescent lights, light dimming controls, and motor speed controllers, they cause quite a bit of radio interference. “
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