peaks
Occasional Visitor
Hi Everyone! I've been a fan of SNB for years--maybe over a decade--but I've never shared my network. Since I'm very proud of it and I think YOU could easily replicate it, I wanted to take you through it.
For starters: I have an EE degree so I can get in the weeds, but I will make it as simple as possible to understand. I have 400Mbit Spectrum service, and I live on a hill. To get good performance everywhere, I use 5 APs. We live in LA so 2.4 is pretty useless for anything but IOT, there's so much interference. With 5GHz there is less interference, but the default 36 and 149 80MHz channels are pretty crowded. They work well indoors, but not out. My property is 7000 sf and we use all of it from the garage at the top to the pool at the bottom. Outdoor speed is just as important as indoor, as we spend much of our time outside doing WFH. With the current all Wifi 5 network, I get a minimum of 250Mbit and a max of 470mbit (Spectrum provides 400+) everywhere on my property from my iPhone 13 Pro Max and my MacBook. And my network only cost me a couple hundred MAX.
Ok here's a pic:
As you can see I use every single 80MHz channel in 5GHz, and in 2.4 I have 3, but the center channel should be on 6; its hosted by an AP that will only do AUTO CHANNEL (bleh).
All of the gear on my network is purchased USED for as little as possible on ebay or Amazon (just for the sake of it! and I'm cheap lol). Whenever possible, I flash it with DD-WRT or another Open Firmware, so I always research old routers first to make sure there's a working build out there before I buy it. EG I got my TP C7 for $35, it's running LEDE; $34 for my Netgear AC1450 that I first flashed to R6300v2 (makes it AC1750) and then put a Kong build of DD-WRT. All APs have 1GBE connections. Most of the APs are old routers from 2016 or earlier; I even have a 2015 cable modem and the core WAN router is a 2013 AirPort Extreme that's still also running Wifi 5. Because the gear is so cheap I can do things like mount the TP c7 under an awning and voila, its a 3-antenna AC1750 outdoor AP...for $35. I put directional antennas on it so it beams signal to the pool area from the deck. You get the idea--its cheap gear that I do not baby at all, and it never has any hiccups aside from when Spectrum goes out.
As a result, I have 5 APs running 6 different 80MHz channels (one AP is TriBand, hosting 1/36/149) covering my property, 2-stream or 3-stream, and this is how I get excellent bandwidth everywhere, for all our devices, at the same time. I can use the DFS channels fully because of the power of open firmware. Why is it better than wifi 6? Well, no wifi 6 routers support open firmware, and most seem to be very stingy with DFS, either ONLY providing 36/149 (the horror!) or making DFS an uncontrollable all-auto thing or at the very least something that resets itself to ch 36 all the time (damn airports!) and never goes back to the DFS channel. As a result, if I ran 5 wifi 6 APs, they would mostly be stumbling over each other on 36/149, and the multi-AP architecture would not perform nearly as well due to my own interference. Yes, there might be a benefit to running the faster wifi 6 protocols, but when they are all running on 36, you will get better performance from a clean wifi 5 channel, say ch 100.
And wifi 6E? well, the focus is on the 6 GHz channels of which there are more than ever, and that's cool but...literally NOTHING I own runs 6E (and I have so many many devices). So all those clear channels will only be usable by FUTURE gear, and pretty much only within the same room as the router, due to the worse through-wall performance of 6Ghz. And the 5GHz section on 6E routers is basically the same issue I outlined above with Wifi 6 routers. No open firmware, stingy DFS, and with 6E, EXPENSIVE AS HELL.
Using wifi 5, you can use old gear with open firmware to get a cheap 6-channel 5Ghz network that works with all (well, most) of your existing gear AND it goes through walls. I get great performance for my needs; I don't have anything I do that even requires 470Mbit, so I don't care about higher performance yet, and don't foresee it being an issue for...maybe 5-8 years. Its been a real joy building/managing this network and getting futuristic performance from throw-away gear. I highly recommend this path if you are so inclined, you get 5 APs for less money than 1 fancy router, and really more APs on clean, separate channels is the ULTIMATE way to make a great network.
Thanks for reading, I hope this was useful. If anyone has any questions, lmk.
-PEAKS
Here's the network with all my neighbors visible too. Smooth sailing in 5Ghz! 149 is only inside so I can't actually see the other 149s from there; this scan is outside:
For starters: I have an EE degree so I can get in the weeds, but I will make it as simple as possible to understand. I have 400Mbit Spectrum service, and I live on a hill. To get good performance everywhere, I use 5 APs. We live in LA so 2.4 is pretty useless for anything but IOT, there's so much interference. With 5GHz there is less interference, but the default 36 and 149 80MHz channels are pretty crowded. They work well indoors, but not out. My property is 7000 sf and we use all of it from the garage at the top to the pool at the bottom. Outdoor speed is just as important as indoor, as we spend much of our time outside doing WFH. With the current all Wifi 5 network, I get a minimum of 250Mbit and a max of 470mbit (Spectrum provides 400+) everywhere on my property from my iPhone 13 Pro Max and my MacBook. And my network only cost me a couple hundred MAX.
Ok here's a pic:
As you can see I use every single 80MHz channel in 5GHz, and in 2.4 I have 3, but the center channel should be on 6; its hosted by an AP that will only do AUTO CHANNEL (bleh).
All of the gear on my network is purchased USED for as little as possible on ebay or Amazon (just for the sake of it! and I'm cheap lol). Whenever possible, I flash it with DD-WRT or another Open Firmware, so I always research old routers first to make sure there's a working build out there before I buy it. EG I got my TP C7 for $35, it's running LEDE; $34 for my Netgear AC1450 that I first flashed to R6300v2 (makes it AC1750) and then put a Kong build of DD-WRT. All APs have 1GBE connections. Most of the APs are old routers from 2016 or earlier; I even have a 2015 cable modem and the core WAN router is a 2013 AirPort Extreme that's still also running Wifi 5. Because the gear is so cheap I can do things like mount the TP c7 under an awning and voila, its a 3-antenna AC1750 outdoor AP...for $35. I put directional antennas on it so it beams signal to the pool area from the deck. You get the idea--its cheap gear that I do not baby at all, and it never has any hiccups aside from when Spectrum goes out.
As a result, I have 5 APs running 6 different 80MHz channels (one AP is TriBand, hosting 1/36/149) covering my property, 2-stream or 3-stream, and this is how I get excellent bandwidth everywhere, for all our devices, at the same time. I can use the DFS channels fully because of the power of open firmware. Why is it better than wifi 6? Well, no wifi 6 routers support open firmware, and most seem to be very stingy with DFS, either ONLY providing 36/149 (the horror!) or making DFS an uncontrollable all-auto thing or at the very least something that resets itself to ch 36 all the time (damn airports!) and never goes back to the DFS channel. As a result, if I ran 5 wifi 6 APs, they would mostly be stumbling over each other on 36/149, and the multi-AP architecture would not perform nearly as well due to my own interference. Yes, there might be a benefit to running the faster wifi 6 protocols, but when they are all running on 36, you will get better performance from a clean wifi 5 channel, say ch 100.
And wifi 6E? well, the focus is on the 6 GHz channels of which there are more than ever, and that's cool but...literally NOTHING I own runs 6E (and I have so many many devices). So all those clear channels will only be usable by FUTURE gear, and pretty much only within the same room as the router, due to the worse through-wall performance of 6Ghz. And the 5GHz section on 6E routers is basically the same issue I outlined above with Wifi 6 routers. No open firmware, stingy DFS, and with 6E, EXPENSIVE AS HELL.
Using wifi 5, you can use old gear with open firmware to get a cheap 6-channel 5Ghz network that works with all (well, most) of your existing gear AND it goes through walls. I get great performance for my needs; I don't have anything I do that even requires 470Mbit, so I don't care about higher performance yet, and don't foresee it being an issue for...maybe 5-8 years. Its been a real joy building/managing this network and getting futuristic performance from throw-away gear. I highly recommend this path if you are so inclined, you get 5 APs for less money than 1 fancy router, and really more APs on clean, separate channels is the ULTIMATE way to make a great network.
Thanks for reading, I hope this was useful. If anyone has any questions, lmk.
-PEAKS
Here's the network with all my neighbors visible too. Smooth sailing in 5Ghz! 149 is only inside so I can't actually see the other 149s from there; this scan is outside: