Thread: Wired/Wireless
View Single Post
  #25   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Terry Coombs[_2_] Terry Coombs[_2_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,115
Default Wired/Wireless

On 7/18/2017 2:25 PM, T wrote:
On 07/18/2017 12:20 PM, T wrote:
On 07/17/2017 05:19 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
It turns out that the roll of "speaker wire" my friend gave me
when cleaning out his shop is actually cat5e ehtenet cabling . So ,
I'm faced with a decision - I have 400 feet of this stuff , which is
plenty enough to wire my whole house for internet connections . On
the other hand , wireless is much cleaner and easier to move
computers around if we change the layout of our furnishings . Or
maybe a combination , since some comps already have a wireless card
and some don't - and the one out in the shop has a card but signal
strength is iffy at times . Not much worry here about getting hacked
, a stranger down here in The Holler would be questioned - and the
hacker would have to be in my driveway to get any kind of signal at
all so ...

--

Snag



Hi Terry,

Wired is always far more reliable than wireless.
That is, if you are good at connecting the plastic
cubes on the ends of the cables, which is an art form.

I prefer wired whenever possible.

To secure wireless, make sure you are using "WPA2" on
as you wireless security And a password of at least 12
characters.

To get your shop on wireless, a technique I use on
shopping mall sized houses to run a wire from the
router to the opposite side of the house and install
an Access Point. Make sure you install only an
access point, not a router combo unit configured as
an access point. One power hit and all hell breaks
lose when the second routers turn back into a
full router.

For access points, a home priced one would be:
TRENDnet TEW-638APB Wireless N Access Point

Check out their web site as models are always changing.

For an industrial access point, check out Watch Guard:
https://www.watchguard.com/wgrd-products/access-points
They are quite a bit more expensive than the home versions though.

-T


Oh ya, and stay away from "wireless repeaters". They are s***.


I've got so much to think about now ... my thanks to all who
responded . I think I'll be staying with the way I'm doing it now , but
will run cable under the house instead of stringing it up on the
interior walls to those locations that will benefit - shop will have to
be run under ground in conduit or smurf tube - and wireless for the rest
.. Unfortunately the Roku's don't have a wired option so they'll have to
remain on wifi . Again , my thanks to all for the help .

--

Snag