Hi all,
I am aware that this post will be judged as perhaps trivial or quite unfounded.
I hope some will stick with me. Let me make clear from the beginning that I am not a net enthusiast, but for pretty much everything in life, I like to have the best that my budget allows and thus I like to research and understand matters.
I bought a couple of years back a TP-LINK TL-WPA8630P KIT AV1200 Gigabit Powerline Dual Band AC1200; this has served me well to have good wireless throughout the house (two storeys), however the coverage has never been too great, at least for my purposes: the signal at the back of the house at the ground floor is quite weak and in the back garden we basically have no wifi.
In conjunction with some home building work, I had the chance of laying some network cable in the kitchen/back of the house so I went and bought the Netgear Nighthawk X4S R7800, with the idea of plugging it there in the future.
I have done extensive readings, especially on here, and it seemed to me that even though the Netgear router is not the newest out there, it is still a solid contender!
I do not recall seeing some stats in particular with regards to coverage (I don't think there is such one on the SNB router ranker?), but seeing as it is rated best in a lot of other metrics, I thought to go with this one and that it would offer a strong coverage.
Now that it finally arrived, I run some very simplistic coverage checks. Here is why I am apologising for the triviality of the post, as it is quite far from being scientific!
I basically stood with my phone only (I am aware that to have a stronger real-world test I should probably use at least another device, if not two) in some different points of the house and particularly the garden and recorded the results with the Wi-Fi SweetSpot app.
The router and the powerline adapter are now positioned in the same room, two metres away from each other (if anything the Netgear is closer to the back garden).
I think in all of the outdoor and indoor tests carried out at a certain distance from the devices (when I stand in the same room, coverage is excellent for both, but speed is extremely outstanding for the Netgear!), the TP-Link powerline adapter performed better than the Netgear: if both signals were retrievable, the Tp-link would have marginally better speeds, or otherwise the tp-link would have a very weak signal and the Netgear would have been nowhere to be found.
Surely, I bought the router also because of the additional LAN ports, because (I would imagine that) it can handle multiple devices at the same time without bottlenecking them and because of the option of connecting an USB drive. But maybe seeing as coverage is an issue for me, rather than going out and buying a router (with a future view of getting a second one) and then laying network cables and then going through the hassle of converting them to Access Points, maybe the easiest solution in the first place would have been what I have done till now, powerline adapters!
Does it sound like I had set my expectations too high? Is the Tp-link powerline actually a much better product than I thought it was?
Is coverage something that is broadly speaking quite similar across different devices of different pricetag (but same 802.11 standard?)
I know it is a very vague and un-scientific post, but I hope someone will throw some nice reflection points at me.
Thanks
I am aware that this post will be judged as perhaps trivial or quite unfounded.
I hope some will stick with me. Let me make clear from the beginning that I am not a net enthusiast, but for pretty much everything in life, I like to have the best that my budget allows and thus I like to research and understand matters.
I bought a couple of years back a TP-LINK TL-WPA8630P KIT AV1200 Gigabit Powerline Dual Band AC1200; this has served me well to have good wireless throughout the house (two storeys), however the coverage has never been too great, at least for my purposes: the signal at the back of the house at the ground floor is quite weak and in the back garden we basically have no wifi.
In conjunction with some home building work, I had the chance of laying some network cable in the kitchen/back of the house so I went and bought the Netgear Nighthawk X4S R7800, with the idea of plugging it there in the future.
I have done extensive readings, especially on here, and it seemed to me that even though the Netgear router is not the newest out there, it is still a solid contender!
I do not recall seeing some stats in particular with regards to coverage (I don't think there is such one on the SNB router ranker?), but seeing as it is rated best in a lot of other metrics, I thought to go with this one and that it would offer a strong coverage.
Now that it finally arrived, I run some very simplistic coverage checks. Here is why I am apologising for the triviality of the post, as it is quite far from being scientific!
I basically stood with my phone only (I am aware that to have a stronger real-world test I should probably use at least another device, if not two) in some different points of the house and particularly the garden and recorded the results with the Wi-Fi SweetSpot app.
The router and the powerline adapter are now positioned in the same room, two metres away from each other (if anything the Netgear is closer to the back garden).
I think in all of the outdoor and indoor tests carried out at a certain distance from the devices (when I stand in the same room, coverage is excellent for both, but speed is extremely outstanding for the Netgear!), the TP-Link powerline adapter performed better than the Netgear: if both signals were retrievable, the Tp-link would have marginally better speeds, or otherwise the tp-link would have a very weak signal and the Netgear would have been nowhere to be found.
Surely, I bought the router also because of the additional LAN ports, because (I would imagine that) it can handle multiple devices at the same time without bottlenecking them and because of the option of connecting an USB drive. But maybe seeing as coverage is an issue for me, rather than going out and buying a router (with a future view of getting a second one) and then laying network cables and then going through the hassle of converting them to Access Points, maybe the easiest solution in the first place would have been what I have done till now, powerline adapters!
Does it sound like I had set my expectations too high? Is the Tp-link powerline actually a much better product than I thought it was?
Is coverage something that is broadly speaking quite similar across different devices of different pricetag (but same 802.11 standard?)
I know it is a very vague and un-scientific post, but I hope someone will throw some nice reflection points at me.
Thanks