@chevy lee What is the enviroment like (area covered, building construction) where you have eight routers in operation?
@HuskyHerder Same question to you.
@thiggins
Mine well, I am in a single family home, early 1950's (ish) construction with plaster walls and chicken wire mesh for backing (super small spacing in the mesh). So between rooms you have plaster, wire mesh, dead space, wire mesh, plaster. Plaster ceiling and wire mesh there as well. The only place there is not wire mesh is the floor. Add to that the age of the home and you have foil backed insulation on the exterior walls as well as the ceiling between it and the attic space. As I have said before its a huge faraday cage.
For the few rooms that have an open door way between them the WiFi signal is very tolerable. For those that do not it's almost abysmal.
I have my 5300 sitting in the living room, one room away in the guest room (diagonally away from the living room). Which translates to 2 full walls, the WiFi is almost useless. Oh lets not forget the old chimney thats also between the two.
The bedroom directly behind the router, fares a lot better. WiFi is usable but very slow.
The kitchen/dining area again diagonal from the living room, is also a huge dead spot. It's funny it shares the same side of the home as the guest room.
Thats the original house, the addition, is a master bed/bath and utility room, about 15 years later. The reason I mention that is, that the exterior wall foil paper and wire mesh is between the 5300 and those rooms. The home is approx. 1200-1400 ft. Including the addition,
Throw in my Garage which is about 50' from the home. We spend a lot of time outside in the cooler months. So WiFi outside the home is a plus too. I cannot even pickup the signal from the 5300 that far away and the almost unusable signal that I get is from one fo the 68U in the Bedroom. So an AP is placed in the garage. Now let's not count it has some metal siding on its exterior as well.
I have often wished I could remove the plaster walls and ceiling and go with straight sheetrock or something else with no wire mesh.
Don't get me wrong, some of the WiFi is marginally usable in certain areas from the 5300, without AiMesh. But you pay a cost in speed of transfers or sometimes even simply getting a page to load. Better no get up and change rooms or you'll pay for it.
I am a huge fan of wired, always have been since installing wired/wireless security systems in many a homes just like mine. Countless times always having issues with signal penetration. So I learned quickly if you can get a wire to it do so. It may be hard but it will reward you with befits. Like no go backs, aka non paid service calls. Way back then we often wished we could do other receivers.
The Garage AP, I will not consider for the most part because it cannot be seen inside the home from my devices. Its kinda in its own world.
In my attached diagram, there are additional closets and or storage rooms not accounted for. Which add to the reduction in signal strength etc because of the number of walls the signal needs to penetrate. The brown box is the chimney for the furnace.
Right now I am happy with my 4 node setup, and 1 AP. The green lines represent about the useable area for each device. You can catch the WiFi signal sometimes at the neighbors house. Thats not common though, and even if you do you cannot use it or it reports the password is incorrect due to so low signal strength.
For the record, Verizon has a huge issue getting a signal into my home, as often 1 bar is reported. We cannot walk through the home and talk on the phone. Thank god for WiFi calling.
There are no wireless devices in my home, like corded phones, or the such. Just my computers and iOS devices. I literally have 85% of everything hardwired including the nodes, AP's etc.
No comments on my lack of scale and rudimentary stick drawing.