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You are here: Home / General / How to extend the range of your home WiFi network

How to extend the range of your home WiFi network

Monday 2nd April, 2012 3 Comments

There are several approaches for increasing the range of your home’s WiFi network. Two basic options are:

  1. use a Wireless Access Point to add additional wireless coverage to your network
  2. use a Wireless Range Extender to increase the coverage of your WiFi

They achieve largely the same result, but via two very different methods, and both have their pros and cons.

First up, you need to understand the difference between a Wireless Range Extender and a Wireless Access Point.

A Wireless Access Point is simply a device which allows your devices to connect via WiFi to your network. Your internet router probably has WiFi capabilities, thus it already acts as a Wireless Access Point, connecting your WiFi devices to the network and then to the internet.

Typical Home Network with Wireless Router

Rather than connecting to your home network via the router’s Wireless Access Point, it is possible to move that access point to a different location in the house by connecting a long ethernet network cable to your router, running it to another room, and then connecting a dedicated Wireless Access Point device to the other end of the cable.

Creating a separate WiFi cloud using a Wireless Access Point connected to your router via an ethernet cable

This then creates a second separate WiFi cloud for devices to connect to. Of course, this requires you to either have existing cable installed in the house, or to be able to lay new cable runs through the roof cavity or perhaps under the floor.

If cabling is a problem, an alternative might be to use a paid or Ethernet over Power (EoP) adaptors to utilise your home’s existing power cabling as part of your network. EoP works by having a special power plug adaptor plugged into a power point near your router and connected to it via an ethernet cable. You then have a second of these adaptors in another room also plugged into a power point. The second adaptor is then connected to your Wireless Access Point device via a network cable.

Moving the Wireless Access Point to a new location, connected to the router via Ethernet over Power adaptors rather than a long ethernet cable run

The effectiveness of these adaptors depends on a lot of factors, including the quality of your power cabling, the distance between the adaptors, the amount of interference on the electrical circuits, the number of electrical devices connected to the power and so on. It also requires that the power points used in each room be on the same physical power circuit. Sometimes homes are divided into multiple power circuits, each separately connected to the main power switchboard. In these cases, if the two power points you wish to use are on separate circuits, the EoP adaptors might not work at all.

This solution using Ethernet over Power and a separate Wireless Access Point is what I currently use in my house to create a second WiFi cloud for me to access the network and internet. I use a pair of NetComm NP210 Ethernet over Power adaptors to extend my “physical” network to an old Billion 7401VGP R3 router which is configured to act purely as a Wireless Access Point rather than a router.

The other alternative to using Wireless Access Points is to simply attempt to extend the coverage of your existing WiFi network by using a Wireless Range Extender.

Extenders are simply a form of “repeater” in that they listen for WiFi signals and then just repeat what they find to whomever is listening.

Extending the reach of your WiFi network using a Wireless Range Extender

Wireless Range Extenders are generally much easier to set up than a separate Wireless Access Point, since there is no need to run additional ethernet cabling or rely on solutions such as Ethernet over Power to make it work.

The main downside with range extenders is that the extender itself must still be within range of the existing WiFi network (ie your router). It must be able to see the wireless signals coming from your router’s wireless access point so that it can then “repeat” them out over the range it covers itself.

Wireless Range Extender must be within range of the main Wireless Access Point (router)

This potentially limits the usefulness of a range extender in some situations where the desired range is too far for the combined router plus extender networks to reach.

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Filed Under: General, Technology

Comments

  1. Gene Reeder says

    Saturday 5th January, 2013 at 03:30 AM

    Thanks for sharing your article, How to extend the range of your home WiFi network”. Big help to a wireless novice.

    Reply
  2. Joe says

    Sunday 21st October, 2012 at 06:23 AM

    Thanks a lot for your explanation. It is undoubtedly the best explanation I have found after searching for at least 1 hour. Thank you for this good job which has helped me greatly to understand the difference.. If there is something I think could be expanded somewhat is to talk a bit about the ad/disadvantages in speed transmission using powerline adapters. I wish I could also know which design is ultimately better , access point vs range extender , assuming I install powerline adapters instead of extending an ethernet cable.

    Reply
  3. emmanuel says

    Monday 23rd July, 2012 at 02:54 AM

    this info was very informative and educative

    Thanks

    Reply

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