robgendreau
New Around Here
I need to build a small net for mobile outdoor use. I’m a noob so bear with me.
The internet source, when we have one, is gonna be wifi from a public source, like a campground. Or maybe something further away, depending on the antenna's reach.
The internet data would then have to be redistributed via wifi to clients like phones and computers. And this WLAN would also have to work when there is NO internet connection (so simply bridging or repeating the internet/LAN source isn't sufficient in all situations).
It would seem this is analogous to the WISP situation, like in some places where the internet is provided to a home and the box that receives the WAN connection has a router function that redistributes that via wifi and/or ethernet, just like the boxes that Comcast or ATT provides, the difference being the WAN connection is wifi, not ethernet, ADSL, etc.
My existing routers, like my Airport Express, won't do this. They can act in "client mode," but that only means they act as a wifi client only and can't at the same time act as a router to redistribute wifi (again, not interested in bridging or repeating).
I've been seeing some outdoor WISP router/access points/WISP CPEs (they don't seem to all use the same nomenclature) that seem to be able to do this, to receive internet via a high gain antenna and then act in "AP client router mode" (eg TP-Link TL-WA5210G) or "client router mode" (Engenius; they say "AP client mode" is for a wired WAN connection). Advantages of these are that they include high-gain antennas, are build for outdoors (hence no long cable run), and can work with PPOe if necessary. There's also the small little Alfa R36, to which you can attach a AWUS036NHR USB wifi adapter, which is a 2W dongle that can also use a high-gain antenna, and it can act to receive say public wifi and then redistribute it via its routing function to wifi clients.
Before I plunk $$ on them, though, I wanna make sure I'm on the right track. In the documentation it seems that there is a standard term for a router that receives a broadband internet feed via wifi and then creates its own network with its own wifi clients; "access point" meant to me simply a connection to an existing network without doing anything but passing on the data. Or am I confused?
And any recommendations for gear would be appreciated.
The internet source, when we have one, is gonna be wifi from a public source, like a campground. Or maybe something further away, depending on the antenna's reach.
The internet data would then have to be redistributed via wifi to clients like phones and computers. And this WLAN would also have to work when there is NO internet connection (so simply bridging or repeating the internet/LAN source isn't sufficient in all situations).
It would seem this is analogous to the WISP situation, like in some places where the internet is provided to a home and the box that receives the WAN connection has a router function that redistributes that via wifi and/or ethernet, just like the boxes that Comcast or ATT provides, the difference being the WAN connection is wifi, not ethernet, ADSL, etc.
My existing routers, like my Airport Express, won't do this. They can act in "client mode," but that only means they act as a wifi client only and can't at the same time act as a router to redistribute wifi (again, not interested in bridging or repeating).
I've been seeing some outdoor WISP router/access points/WISP CPEs (they don't seem to all use the same nomenclature) that seem to be able to do this, to receive internet via a high gain antenna and then act in "AP client router mode" (eg TP-Link TL-WA5210G) or "client router mode" (Engenius; they say "AP client mode" is for a wired WAN connection). Advantages of these are that they include high-gain antennas, are build for outdoors (hence no long cable run), and can work with PPOe if necessary. There's also the small little Alfa R36, to which you can attach a AWUS036NHR USB wifi adapter, which is a 2W dongle that can also use a high-gain antenna, and it can act to receive say public wifi and then redistribute it via its routing function to wifi clients.
Before I plunk $$ on them, though, I wanna make sure I'm on the right track. In the documentation it seems that there is a standard term for a router that receives a broadband internet feed via wifi and then creates its own network with its own wifi clients; "access point" meant to me simply a connection to an existing network without doing anything but passing on the data. Or am I confused?
And any recommendations for gear would be appreciated.