That is interesting....so can a device on one router see a another device on another router, so you can use home networking?

On 1/14/2012 3:38 PM, [email protected] wrote:
Not sure if this will help but I have three wireless routers going here.
One for my internal network. One for my external network (guests - clients).
One for my free wi-fi hotspot. I choose different channels for them to operate
on across the spectrum. So router X is on ch 3, Y is on ch 7, and Z is on ch 11.
Looking at them with a wi-fi analyzer shows three signals that only bleed over
around ch 5 and ch 9 and ever so slightly. This really made a difference in
their performance and usability. Hope this helps.

On January 14, 2012 at 2:36 PM "Anthony Q. Martin"<[email protected]>  wrote:

I bought one of these made by Diamond...it was pretty easy to set
up...one of my android tablets detects both the ssid of the router and
the receiver (using wifi analyzer)...and I can see the signal strength
of one drop while the other rises, but both end up on both locations. My ipad won't connect to the signal of the repeater at all. I tried
giving the repeater a different SSID just to see if that would help the
connection issue, but it didn't.  I'm not convince this thing will help,
either.  Oh...seems like the repeater signal would drop to zero and then
come back, periodically.  That doesn't sound good.

Any thought or ideas?  I'm thinking of sending this thing back.
--
Regards,
joeuser - Still looking for the 'any' key...

"...now these points of data make a beautiful line..."

Reply via email to