DanielCoffey
Regular Contributor
I am in the fortunate position of being able to move out of a small (75m2) brick flat (with brick internal walls) in a built-up (wifi-congested) area to a more rural (wifi-quiet) location in a larger (130m2) timber-framed new build single-storey dwelling and I was wondering about where to position my router or whether I need to plan for router plus AP.
The new dwelling will be on a concrete deck all on one floor, roughly 18m by 9m. The main living room is at one end, the main bedroom at the other, connected by a wide central corridor. Kitchen and utility room hang off one side of the central corridor. Spare bedroom and bathroom hang off the other side. The principal construction will be exposed green oak timber frame with thick external encapsulation covered with thick oak weatherboard. Roof is encapsulation covered in natural slate. Internal walls will be typical plasterboard over timber.
While the main PC, NAS and AppleTV will be wired to the router, we do have several wifi devices (iPhone, iPad, printer, possibly some wireless security devices, home monitoring devices and two wifi speakers). It is these speakers that are making me want to think ahead about how the wireless will reach through the building. While one can be anywhere in the living room, the other will almost certainly be at the far end of the bedroom on the far wall.
The router is (currently) an ASUS RT-AC87U. Would you advise wall mounting it in the central corridor or is its expected range in this dwelling good enough that I can just site it with the PC at the far living room end and trust it will reach the speaker at the opposite end? If it didn't have line of sight, the signal would have to pass through three plasterboard walls, two of which would be tiled (bathroom). The speakers are 2.4GHz only. The household security/monitoring devices are likely to be 2.4GHz too but the other phone/tablets would be 5GHz.
Nearer the time when my Architect is asking about wiring I will of course come and ask about network cabling, switches and patch panels but for now where would you put a router in a dwelling like that?
The new dwelling will be on a concrete deck all on one floor, roughly 18m by 9m. The main living room is at one end, the main bedroom at the other, connected by a wide central corridor. Kitchen and utility room hang off one side of the central corridor. Spare bedroom and bathroom hang off the other side. The principal construction will be exposed green oak timber frame with thick external encapsulation covered with thick oak weatherboard. Roof is encapsulation covered in natural slate. Internal walls will be typical plasterboard over timber.
While the main PC, NAS and AppleTV will be wired to the router, we do have several wifi devices (iPhone, iPad, printer, possibly some wireless security devices, home monitoring devices and two wifi speakers). It is these speakers that are making me want to think ahead about how the wireless will reach through the building. While one can be anywhere in the living room, the other will almost certainly be at the far end of the bedroom on the far wall.
The router is (currently) an ASUS RT-AC87U. Would you advise wall mounting it in the central corridor or is its expected range in this dwelling good enough that I can just site it with the PC at the far living room end and trust it will reach the speaker at the opposite end? If it didn't have line of sight, the signal would have to pass through three plasterboard walls, two of which would be tiled (bathroom). The speakers are 2.4GHz only. The household security/monitoring devices are likely to be 2.4GHz too but the other phone/tablets would be 5GHz.
Nearer the time when my Architect is asking about wiring I will of course come and ask about network cabling, switches and patch panels but for now where would you put a router in a dwelling like that?