Where is a good place to order Buffalo wireless equipment? How important is line-of-sight? Would it be reasonable to get a good connection across 270 feet (~82m) from inside one house to inside another, with trees and fences in the way? Two of the homes are 5.5 lots apart (across the backyard - no lane - and down five houses). I'd rather get a better connection and not blanket the neighbourhood with our signal if possible, which is why I'm wondering about a directional antenna.
----- Original Message -----
From: Adam Thompson athompso@athompso.net
Date: Tuesday, July 3, 2007 22:59
Subject: Re: [RndTbl] Point to point wireless
To: Kevin McGregor kmcgregor@shaw.ca
Cc: roundtable@muug.mb.ca
Kevin McGregor wrote:
Does anyone have some pointers (personal experiences, URLs, etc) on
how to set up a point to point (house to house) wireless network? I
and two geeky neighbours are thinking about setting up a private
internal network to connect our houses, and we're not sure where to start.
The standard Linksys router (WRT54G-style) won't be a great choice, for
the main reason that someone else here has mentioned: crappy radios.
However, Buffalo seems to have mitigated most of the problems with the
broadcom radio - we replaced all the WRT54Gs at work with Buffalo
WHR-54s (or something like that - check out the chart at
http://www.dd-wrt.com/) and instantly got easily double to triple the
range of the Linksys units, despite being based on the same reference
design.
I would suggest buying three Buffalos (cheaper than the Linksys, by
mail-order only - no-one in the city seems to carry them), loading
either OpenWRT or DD-WRT on them [I prefer DD-WRT, it seems more
integrated], using the factory-default antennas, and EITHER putting them
all in ad-hoc mode, or putting one of them (the geographically central
one) in AP mode and the other two in client mode.
I would also strongly recommend you NOT put them in bridge mode, rather
use them as proper routers - no need for NAT, specifically, but you
really really really don't want all your broadcast and/or multicast
traffic flooding the wireless side of things.
-Adam
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