I am brand new to this forum and I have looked at some other similar posts here, but I thought I would list my specific situation to see what people here suggest for my needs. I am on DSL through Frontier Communications. I just performed a speed check and got got the following results:
-Download Speed: 8740 kbps
-Upload Speed: 753 kbps
This would be a pretty typical speed for my area.
Anyway, I have a Siemens SpeedStream 6520 from Frontier, which I believe is a combination modem and wifi router. The antenna is not detachable and since it belongs to Frontier, I don't want to modify it.
The Siemens SpeedStream 6520 is on the first story and provides okay coverage throughout most of the house, including the basement and second story.
Several days ago I added a 25 foot length of CAT-5 in the living room for the X-Box 360 that both of my sons use. I couple of days later my oldest son had two friends over and they were using a second X-Box 360. One was connected via wifi and the other via CAT-5.
I was considering simply buying a 4 port ethernet switch, but as I started looking at them I realized that perhaps I should consider a combination wireless access point and 4 port switch. Which brings me to my questions:
What are some good quality wireless access points that I should consider?
What is the highest power legally available in the US?
Should I select 802.11g or should I go with 802.11n?
Can I use the same SSID, password, and encryption method so that users can roam on both wifis around the farm? Would their be any reason to intentionally go with different names and not roam?
What are some good, quality antennas that I should consider to attach to the wireless access point to increase range even further?
As a practical matter, I really don't need coverage throughout the entire 5 acres, BUT I might be nice to have coverage out in my horse barn, which is about 150 feet from the house, where the wireless access point would be located?
I do have a MicroCenter within a reasonable drive to me. They do carry EnGenius, Amped, Hawking, etc. Are there any certain brands that I want to avoid? Conversely, are there any certain brands that are generally very good? Do I understand correctly that the FCC limits us to 1 watt (1000 mW) when using omni-directional antennas of less than 6 db? So, are there wireless access points rated at 1 watt? Thus, I would be able to connect a 5 db omni-directional antenna and be done with it? Or is it not quite that simple?
-Download Speed: 8740 kbps
-Upload Speed: 753 kbps
This would be a pretty typical speed for my area.
Anyway, I have a Siemens SpeedStream 6520 from Frontier, which I believe is a combination modem and wifi router. The antenna is not detachable and since it belongs to Frontier, I don't want to modify it.
The Siemens SpeedStream 6520 is on the first story and provides okay coverage throughout most of the house, including the basement and second story.
Several days ago I added a 25 foot length of CAT-5 in the living room for the X-Box 360 that both of my sons use. I couple of days later my oldest son had two friends over and they were using a second X-Box 360. One was connected via wifi and the other via CAT-5.
I was considering simply buying a 4 port ethernet switch, but as I started looking at them I realized that perhaps I should consider a combination wireless access point and 4 port switch. Which brings me to my questions:
What are some good quality wireless access points that I should consider?
What is the highest power legally available in the US?
Should I select 802.11g or should I go with 802.11n?
Can I use the same SSID, password, and encryption method so that users can roam on both wifis around the farm? Would their be any reason to intentionally go with different names and not roam?
What are some good, quality antennas that I should consider to attach to the wireless access point to increase range even further?
As a practical matter, I really don't need coverage throughout the entire 5 acres, BUT I might be nice to have coverage out in my horse barn, which is about 150 feet from the house, where the wireless access point would be located?
I do have a MicroCenter within a reasonable drive to me. They do carry EnGenius, Amped, Hawking, etc. Are there any certain brands that I want to avoid? Conversely, are there any certain brands that are generally very good? Do I understand correctly that the FCC limits us to 1 watt (1000 mW) when using omni-directional antennas of less than 6 db? So, are there wireless access points rated at 1 watt? Thus, I would be able to connect a 5 db omni-directional antenna and be done with it? Or is it not quite that simple?