- Jul 3, 2005
- 594
- 0
- 0
I manage the network at our house full of University students, on a volunteer basis. This house has about 20-25 computers connected to this network. We recently swtiched to a 1.5 Mbit DSL line, and tried to improve the reception of the wireless signal in the house by getting a second router 802.11g ; this new router, we placed on the second floor, and is supposed to have a more powerful signal than the first.
One of the things that I found is that the there are a number of other networks in the neighborhood. I have detected 30+ other routers' SSIDs, and some of them project a fairly strong signal. Most of them are clustered around channel 6 or 11. So I set the two routers on channels 1 and 4 respectively, trying best to avoid interference.
But the new router on the second floor always seems to be on or off in terms of reliably transmitting signals, and at certain times of the day it would hardly work at all, while at other times it seems to be flawless.
There is also a lot of problem getting a clear transimission if the computer is near the periphery of the house, such as a room on the corner of the third floor, which would get fairly good signal, but sometimes not being able to access the web.
I have tried a number of different things to try to adjust the performance; moving locations of the routers (they are connected by LAN cable, with the downstairs old router being the root); I tried to use a number of different channels (the higher channels are absolutely atrocious); and also adjusting MTU and fragmentation sizes. Sometimes it works well, but other times I can't even get on to the router administration page.
Does anyone have any other suggestions. I'm sure that there are a lot of you who may have some good ideas.
Please let me know anything, I mean anything; I'm getting exasperated.
One of the things that I found is that the there are a number of other networks in the neighborhood. I have detected 30+ other routers' SSIDs, and some of them project a fairly strong signal. Most of them are clustered around channel 6 or 11. So I set the two routers on channels 1 and 4 respectively, trying best to avoid interference.
But the new router on the second floor always seems to be on or off in terms of reliably transmitting signals, and at certain times of the day it would hardly work at all, while at other times it seems to be flawless.
There is also a lot of problem getting a clear transimission if the computer is near the periphery of the house, such as a room on the corner of the third floor, which would get fairly good signal, but sometimes not being able to access the web.
I have tried a number of different things to try to adjust the performance; moving locations of the routers (they are connected by LAN cable, with the downstairs old router being the root); I tried to use a number of different channels (the higher channels are absolutely atrocious); and also adjusting MTU and fragmentation sizes. Sometimes it works well, but other times I can't even get on to the router administration page.
Does anyone have any other suggestions. I'm sure that there are a lot of you who may have some good ideas.
Please let me know anything, I mean anything; I'm getting exasperated.