The best 802n wireless accesspoint?
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We use:
http://store.netgate.com/Ubiquiti-UniFi-Long-Range-Single-Unit-P1683C139.aspxGreat range. They work well and have the typical features in much costlier enterprise grade APs. And cheaper than some of the higher end consumer-grade routers.
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I haven't tried it personally, but I've heard great things about the Asus EA-N66 Access Point. It's a little cheaper than than RT-N66U and you wouldn't be wasting money on features you won't use…
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@cmb:
We use:
http://store.netgate.com/Ubiquiti-UniFi-Long-Range-Single-Unit-P1683C139.aspxGreat range. They work well and have the typical features in much costlier enterprise grade APs. And cheaper than some of the higher end consumer-grade routers.
Thank you, CMB, actually, a brand like that would be precisely what I would be looking for, it doesn't appear to be the cheap plastic I can buy in the retail stores over here. But it appears it is PoE (?) I don't have any gear that could give power to the AP (the V1910-16G switch I have isn't PoE), so that would be a problem. I will have to dig further ;D
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I haven't tried it personally, but I've heard great things about the Asus EA-N66 Access Point. It's a little cheaper than than RT-N66U and you wouldn't be wasting money on features you won't use…
Thank you RJ, I will take a look at it ;)
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@Hollander:
@cmb:
We use:
http://store.netgate.com/Ubiquiti-UniFi-Long-Range-Single-Unit-P1683C139.aspxGreat range. They work well and have the typical features in much costlier enterprise grade APs. And cheaper than some of the higher end consumer-grade routers.
Thank you, CMB, actually, a brand like that would be precisely what I would be looking for, it doesn't appear to be the cheap plastic I can buy in the retail stores over here. But it appears it is PoE (?) I don't have any gear that could give power to the AP (the V1910-16G switch I have isn't PoE), so that would be a problem. I will have to dig further ;D
http://dl.ubnt.com/guides/UniFi/UniFi_AP_AP-LR_User_Guide.pdf
Says the package contains a PoE-brick, which you would plug in between the unit and your switch. The switch used doesn't have to be PoE capable.
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@Hollander:
@cmb:
We use:
http://store.netgate.com/Ubiquiti-UniFi-Long-Range-Single-Unit-P1683C139.aspxGreat range. They work well and have the typical features in much costlier enterprise grade APs. And cheaper than some of the higher end consumer-grade routers.
Thank you, CMB, actually, a brand like that would be precisely what I would be looking for, it doesn't appear to be the cheap plastic I can buy in the retail stores over here. But it appears it is PoE (?) I don't have any gear that could give power to the AP (the V1910-16G switch I have isn't PoE), so that would be a problem. I will have to dig further ;D
http://dl.ubnt.com/guides/UniFi/UniFi_AP_AP-LR_User_Guide.pdf
Says the package contains a PoE-brick, which you would plug in between the unit and your switch. The switch used doesn't have to be PoE capable.
That's great, Fragged; thank you very much for this help :P
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If Ubiquity's control software webgui ever got turned into a package then the choice would be a no-brainer really. ;) Especially for a deployment with a number of APs.
http://forum.pfsense.org/index.php/topic,46342.0.html
Steve
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If Ubiquity's control software webgui ever got turned into a package then the choice would be a no-brainer really. ;) Especially for a deployment with a number of APs.
http://forum.pfsense.org/index.php/topic,46342.0.html
Steve
A most stupid question from me, Steve ;D
Being: why would I want to have a 'Unify server' running for an AP ??? What does that need to do? I mean, I plug it into the switch, and both the Pfsense and the switch take care of the rest ???
I know I will be the laugh of the day now :-\
Ok, drinks on me, laugh away, I'll remain here, ignorant :D
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It's a system for managing a full network of those Ubiquiti AP's. For a single one you probably don't need it, you can just configure it via web gui or something. When you have hundreds of them, you want a centralized option :)
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It's a system for managing a full network of those Ubiquiti AP's. For a single one you probably don't need it, you can just configure it via web gui or something. When you have hundreds of them, you want a centralized option :)
That makes a lot of sense; thanks for the explanation, Fragged ;D
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@Hollander:
@cmb:
We use:
http://store.netgate.com/Ubiquiti-UniFi-Long-Range-Single-Unit-P1683C139.aspxGreat range. They work well and have the typical features in much costlier enterprise grade APs. And cheaper than some of the higher end consumer-grade routers.
Thank you, CMB, actually, a brand like that would be precisely what I would be looking for, it doesn't appear to be the cheap plastic I can buy in the retail stores over here. But it appears it is PoE (?) I don't have any gear that could give power to the AP (the V1910-16G switch I have isn't PoE), so that would be a problem. I will have to dig further ;D
http://dl.ubnt.com/guides/UniFi/UniFi_AP_AP-LR_User_Guide.pdf
Says the package contains a PoE-brick, which you would plug in between the unit and your switch. The switch used doesn't have to be PoE capable.
Even if it didn't, POE Injectors aren't too expensive, $20 - $25 on Newegg.
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i'm looking for an AP that can deliver wifi from the first floor of the typical townhouse to the second and third floor. how good the range of these Ubiquiti AP's in this situation?
waf wouldn't let me install any equipment on the second and third floor :( -
how good the range of these Ubiquiti AP's in this situation?
Probably depends on a number of factors including material between floors, interference from neighbours etc.
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Trying to hit three floors can be a problem depending on the antenna radiation pattern, some antenna setups give you a flattened dome pattern that sacrifices vertical coverage for extended range.
Putting the AP on the central floor can help but finding an AP with a more even signal distribution would help too. Using a WiFi signal strength meter (or app) and fiddling with router placement and antenna angles can help to even out the signal.
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the UniFi is OK but you would end up mounting it on the upper most floor in your house on the ceiling…
here again ive NEVER used a UniFi in a home enviroment. have used them in our commercial enviroment
at work but ended up using a different product in the end for Reliable AP's in our warehouses and office space.now there is a custom compiled version of AirOS (ubiquiti regular software) you can load on these to avoid the
Controller software situation, though i know it doesnt work on the UniFi Pro (dual band AP).now if you got the money to spend ($300ish) i wouldnt use anything OTHER than a Cisco 1252 AP.
range on this particular AP just BLOWS away the consumer stuff... i can get close to .9 mile away from mine
and still have signal and be able to surf and do my regular stuff.other ubiquiti products to consider Provided you DONT need dual band N capability is....
Nanostation M series.... there reasonably cheap and work great (yes usually the POE adapters come with these)
and DONT require the controller software.Good Luck
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how good the range of these Ubiquiti AP's in this situation?
Probably depends on a number of factors including material between floors, interference from neighbours etc.
wooden structure, insulation, some plastic water pipes in the walls
right now i'm using d-link dir-825 (open-wrt) as my ap and it's acceptable though i had to add wifi deflectors on each antena. i can even get 5ghz on the second floor, third floor only 2.4.
but this setup looks ugly and sometimes slow and i was wondering if i can get something with higher power and better looks. -
ASUS RT-N16 - A serious workhorse but only 2.4ghz ~$70 refurb
ASUS RT N66U - Dual Band workhorse ~140 refurb
ASUS RT AC66U Dual band plus 802.11ac technology (may be one of the fastest routers available right now) ~$180
would WAF allow you to place the WAP inside a 2nd floor closet above the door. That may get you the coverage you need.
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ASUS RT-N16 - A serious workhorse but only 2.4ghz ~$70 refurb
ASUS RT N66U - Dual Band workhorse ~140 refurb
ASUS RT N66AC Dual band plus 802.11ac technology (may be one of the fastest routers available right now) ~$180
would WAF allow you to place the WAP inside a 2nd floor closet above the door. That may get you the coverage you need.
I've owned many different wifi routers over the years of many differnent brands. None beats my last upgrade of the N66U. The range in my house is the best I've ever seen it, as well as performance. Also configuring as an access point is a breeze. I never knew it could be this good.
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ASUS RT-N16 - A serious workhorse but only 2.4ghz ~$70 refurb
ASUS RT N66U - Dual Band workhorse ~140 refurb
ASUS RT AC66U Dual band plus 802.11ac technology (may be one of the fastest routers available right now) ~$180
would WAF allow you to place the WAP inside a 2nd floor closet above the door. That may get you the coverage you need.
I've owned many different wifi routers over the years of many differnent brands. None beats my last upgrade of the N66U. The range in my house is the best I've ever seen it, as well as performance. Also configuring as an access point is a breeze. I never knew it could be this good.
And flexible . . . They will use tomatoUSB and DD-WRT and are FAST! I've only read specs and graphs on the AC66U but it looks amazing.
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with 32M of flash and 256M of RAM, I wonder if pfSense one day could run on the 66 ;D