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    Meshed access point - recommendation

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    • ?
      Guest
      last edited by

      Of course I know  that's not a real mesh

      And this was not clear to me! So sorry but I wouldn´t  talk about the right site and you will have a look on the left site.
      If you don´t need a real mesh, or perhaps fast roaming you can get UBNT UniFi APs and set up on all the same SSIDs
      you would be able to run through your house and you will be connected every time to your wireless LAN. That is nothing
      fancy, but if you are willing to set up a real mesh wireless network you will be able to get here and there in some trouble,
      and there for only I was writing so much.

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      • S
        Stewart
        last edited by

        Open Mesh is an extremely easy platform to use that runs on a cloud controller and has modest prices.  We've had a lot of success with them.  Ubiquiti is also a good product with an on-prem controller with good pricing and possibly a little more versatility.  The only problem we've had with them is figuring out which units come with AC adapters and which don't.

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        • JKnottJ
          JKnott
          last edited by

          @Stewart:

          The only problem we've had with them is figuring out which units come with AC adapters and which don't.

          PoE is the way to go.  You don't want to have to get AC up where the access points are.  If you have an access point that doesn't support PoE, you'll need 2 injectors for the power.  Some APs come with both a power supply and an injector to connect the power supply for PoE.

          PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
          i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
          UniFi AC-Lite access point

          I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

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          • S
            Stewart
            last edited by

            @JKnott:

            @Stewart:

            The only problem we've had with them is figuring out which units come with AC adapters and which don't.

            PoE is the way to go.  You don't want to have to get AC up where the access points are.  If you have an access point that doesn't support PoE, you'll need 2 injectors for the power.  Some APs come with both a power supply and an injector to connect the power supply for PoE.

            Absolutely, but it is something to consider.  Open Mesh can take either 802.3at/af or 24v, depending on what is available, so we can use them to replace practically any existing installation without needing to replace switches or injectors.  That's been very handy for us.

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            • I
              inquam
              last edited by

              I recently built a pfsense router and relegated my AC68U to act as an AP. But I'm thinking about trying to get Asus AI Mesh going (mesh that utilizes your left-over routers). That might be an alternative unless it has to act as a router like most other mesh solutions. Anyone tired AI mesh and could give some information if that would be a viable route to take?

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              • S
                starshooter10
                last edited by

                I've heard good things about the new asus firmware supporting mesh.

                but I have dozens of ubiquiti mesh networks in the wild, they are great.

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                • N
                  netdragon
                  last edited by netdragon

                  I found this: https://github.com/gozoinks/unifi-pfsense
                  Has anyone tried it for ubiquiti with the pfsense plugin above with an AC adapter?

                  I also read freebsd is working on a mesh solution. https://wiki.freebsd.org/WiFi/Mesh
                  I'm not sure what it'd work for

                  It'd be great to have something that works with airties. AT&T routers support them and they are
                  consumer grade and super cheap.

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                  • johnpozJ
                    johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                    last edited by

                    @netdragon said in Meshed access point - recommendation:

                    Has anyone tried it for ubiquiti with the pfsense plugin above with an AC adapter?

                    Huh? I think you misunderstand what that does - it just runs the controller software.. It has zero to do with any sort of adapters in your pfsense box.. It would be used with unifi AP.

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                    • W
                      WhitePhantom
                      last edited by

                      I know the thread is old, but this is still a relevant issue, so I wanted to suggest Eero for those who might be looking for a good solution. I have found that multiple wired Eeros in Bridge mode work fantastic as a mesh access point. I've never set them up in a building small enough to warrant only two, but using three or four has worked out beautifully for my clients.

                      0_1552670559969_Eero Bridged.png

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                      • R
                        ranadhevaraaj Banned
                        last edited by ranadhevaraaj

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                          ranadhevaraaj Banned @ranadhevaraaj
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