Pulling some Ethernet wires and buy some simple switches are not super
expensive , the pliers and kit to terminate cat cable is also cheap .
One major pint I had .
Is the server wired yet ?
Main hifi: Touch + CIA PS
Same here. Wouldn't touch a"lifestyle" product if it was free, and have
yet to find something that compares to LMS for everything else. Pity it
is just that little bit too hard to setup to recommend to anyone who
isn't at least a bit techie.
-Transcoded from Matt's brain by Tapatalk-
--
drmatt wrote:
> If you go all in, Sonos runs its own mesh and you bridge it with a
> cable.
>
> Sonos are on the way out anyway.. lack of support for hi-res and lack of
> bit-perfect digital output is killing them in audiophile circles, cost
> is killing them everywhere else.
>
>
>
If you go all in, Sonos runs its own mesh and you bridge it with a
cable. I'm pretty sure Sonos are on the way out anyway.
-Transcoded from Matt's brain by Tapatalk-
--
Hardware: 3x Touch, 1x Radio, 2x Receivers, 1 HP Microserver NAS with
Debian+LMS 7.9.0
Music: ~1300 CDs, as 450 GB of
drmatt wrote:
> (Sonos runs its own mesh network.)
>
>
> -Transcoded from Matt's brain by Tapatalk-
To stream from the internet ?
*Players:* SliMP3,Squeezebox3 x3,Receiver,SqueezeLiteX,PiCorePlayer
x3,Wandboard
*Server:* LMS Version: Latest Nightly on Centos 7 VM on ESXi 6.5.0U1 on
Dell
Jeff07971 wrote:
> And put the Sonos on an unreliable WiFi ?(Sonos runs its own mesh network.)
-Transcoded from Matt's brain by Tapatalk-
--
Hardware: 3x Touch, 1x Radio, 2x Receivers, 1 HP Microserver NAS with
Debian+LMS 7.9.0
Music: ~1300 CDs, as 450 GB of 16/44k FLACs. No less than 3x
I too use a TPLink Archer C7 and find it to be an excellent router. I
used to have frequent interruptions and inability to connect to the
server when I ran LMS on my Windows 7 then 8 then 10 PC. Since I
switched to using a Raspberry Pi 3 running PicorePlayer I have had
basically zero issues.
Have you tried unplugging the SB1 to see if its 802.11b only is
affecting either network and in some cases LMS behaviour.
bpa's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=1806
View this thread:
> Not ready to build a commercial network, it's cheaper to buy a Sonos
> system frankly.
And put the Sonos on an unreliable WiFi ?
*Players:* SliMP3,Squeezebox3 x3,Receiver,SqueezeLiteX,PiCorePlayer
x3,Wandboard
*Server:* LMS Version: Latest Nightly on Centos 7 VM on ESXi 6.5.0U1 on
Dell
Cheaper to build Sonos? Not likely. One Sonos box will cost you more
than a professional router, and I've found that reliable 2.4ghz wireless
G beats unreliable 300/900Mbit AC and N networks every day.
The time basis for these issues is classic cheap router syndrome, sorry
to say.
-Transcoded
I think you mentioned something about a wireless bandwidth of 300mbps?
I would suggest to set the 2.4GHz band to wifi-g only (54mbps, 20MHz
channel width).
The SBs won't see the 5GHz band so you can set this one to wifi-n or
wifi-ac with channel bonding and all that.
3 SB 3 Libratone Loop,
Mnyb wrote:
>
> Get an even better router that can run two wi-fi networks one 5ghz ac
> and one 2.4 ghz you can dedicate to legacy stuff .
> Or maybe dedicated access pionts a mest network or whatnot .
>
> What about router placement ( read up on that google is your friend )
> worst case its
gstalnaker wrote:
>
> When I first set all this up with the SB Classic and LMS on a Linux
> desktop years ago, I used WiFi on the SB Classic with an enet cable to
> the LMS desktop. But I had odd network behavior, like what you report.
> When I signed up for Uverse CableTV and the AT guy came
Streaming devices also tend to expose the weraknesses one have in a
network .
Even a crummy network is fine for intenet browsing and email .
But the crakcs are showing when you want continius troughput 24/7
Main hifi: Touch
I would concur with this. 50% is not good WiFi. My set of five players
never drop below about 70% for years now. Definitely you want LMS on a
static IP, and hopefully you can just assign a static DHCP IP on your
router.
But I'd also say that tp-link is not a super high quality aftermarket
And I forgot . Squeezeboxes does not have the very best WiFi especially
compared to other more modern stuff . So youd need a solid network.
Btw 3 of my 4 players are wired .
Main hifi: Touch + CIA PS +MeridianG68J
Boulderguy wrote:
> No chromecast or android anything. There's a Roku that's rarely used.
>
> Switched 2.4ghz to a fixed ch 6 & updated router firmware. We'll see
> what that does.
>
> Thanks for the ideas so far.
I got this information from an AT Tech. I have AT Uverse with one of
their
No chromecast or android anything. There's a Roku that's rarely used.
Switched 2.4ghz to a fixed ch 6 & updated router firmware. We'll see
what that does.
Thanks for the ideas so far.
Boulderguy's Profile:
Do you have any Chromecast devices on your network? Android phones
qualify as chromecast. There's a known issue with Chromecast causing
some routers, TP-Link and Netgear both suffer from this, to drop their
2.4Ghz network. The SSID will still show, but devices can't connect.
Some router brands
Boulderguy wrote:
> Hmm, maybe 18 months on this router. No extenders, no atypical settings
> (meaning mostly default router settings). From this router I have 3
> wired connections - printer, desktop, NAS. And probably 10 wireless
> connections from SB's to Tivo to tablets & phones. WAN
garym wrote:
> How old is router? is it provided by the ISP? Do you have extenders of
> any kind in your network (if so, it is easy to get IP address overlap if
> you have more than one router/extender handing out IP addresses at the
> same time). Describe the detail of your network setup,
Thanks for the input guys. Router is this -
https://www.tp-link.com/us/products/details/cat-9_Archer-C7.html - it's
aftermarket, not all-in-one or ISP-supplied. Before that was a Netgear,
before that something else. I get a new one every 3-4 yrs to update
tech.
No static IP's, all dynamic.
The SB1 only support 802.11b and so if it ised in a network with V2 abnd
V3 on 802.11g - it may be dragging the network down to slower speeds.
see
http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?42853-Wireless-performance-on-mixed-networks-answers!
If you can disable IPv6 stuff if it is not being
definitely sounds like a network problem and not a squeezebox hardware
problem (particularly because it is the same even if not using LMS).
How do the players and computer get IP addresses? Provided
automatically via the router and DHCP? Or have you given anything static
IP addresses (bypassing
I never, ever hear from people having random connectivity issues when
they built their own router and use a dedicated access point as two
separate devices, only from those using an all in one router, usually as
supplied by some ISP.
Do some ping tests, make sure your router's DNS server is any
Boulderguy wrote:
> Happens using any router & any signal strength (all are good & well over
> 50% signal on a very fast home network).
If you need to reboot your router you should know the point of the
issue
A router / all in one device doesnt need to reboot unless there is a
realy bad
Hi guys, I've been using squeezeboxes since the early days of V1
SlimStuff. In fact I still have one working. And 4 others from
Logitech, V2 & 3.
They've always been plagued by stream interruptions stating, "Cannot
connect to server," even when not in use, then they'll reconnect.
Sometimes
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