Correction, should say UAP-AC-HD or UAP-AC-PRO, though there's another
model I was only a letter off on ;)

- Josh

On Jun 20, 2017 9:33 PM, "Josh Reynolds" <[email protected]> wrote:

> I would put a single UAP-AC-HD with MU-MIMO or a UAP-AC-HD up against that
> for coverage and performance any day of the week. That said, a single AP is
> normally a poor design choice for a larger home.
>
> I'm using between 4-6 APs at my hose at any one time depending on what I'm
> messing with at the time. Low tx power, and more units normally means
> superior coverage. UniFi does support 802.11r as well.
>
> For router, either a mikrotik or an edgerouter X.
>
> - Josh
>
> On Jun 20, 2017 9:03 PM, "David Milholen" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Depends on composition of wood..
>
> Getting on my soap-box with WIFI understanding. I am using my RF goggles
> for this one.
>
> Just good signal(bars) isnt going to tell you how well performance is.
> Adding more connected devices and other caveats like walls,
>
> floors, furniture, people and pets(lol) will degrade wifi access solutions
> anytime anywhere.
>
> There is hope though. With better higher gain antennas and better mimo
> radios along with a little magical beam steering and 802.11r modes
>
> magic performance can occur.
>
> I would look at the CN-pilot line like the E400/E500 and R201P units.
> Currently the R201 and E500 that I mention have Dual band AC access.
>
> The E500 is an outdoor wifi access point to cover larger areas outside.
>
> We are really liking these products for Wifi access solutions.
>
> We once used the same Mikrotik gear even doing some tweaks on the wireless
> configs still did not out perform the R201P
>
> Throw in an E400 to add complete coverage and viola wifi access with
> superior performance connectivity.
>
>
> On 6/19/2017 1:56 PM, Matt wrote:
>
> We have used both the RB951Ui-2HnD and RB952Ui-5ac2nD on occasions
> when we provided a managed router but was wandering if the more
> expensive RB2011UiAS-2HnD-IN with actual antennas performed much
> better?  Have customers blame us when there wifi does not reach
> everywhere in there house.
>
> Is placing the router in the basement of a wood frame house going to
> drastically reduce range?
>
>
> --
>
>
>

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