I live on the second floor of a family house that uses the same WiFi signal. The router is on the first floor, close to the center of the house. My office is on the second floor in a corner. In the last few weeks the internet connection has been super dodgy, mostly going in and out. Blocks of times it seems fine, other days it's bad for hours. It's noticed in other parts of the second floor as well on cellphones - suddenly, no internet. I'm looking for the best solution.
A brother in law lives on the other side of the second floor. Years ago (before I moved here) he had ethernet cable routed up through conduit and he uses his own router to create his own networks. He was experiencing the problem somewhat as well and replaced his router. No more problems. I was prepared to do the same but was told there's no more room in the conduit. So it was suggested I use a WiFi repeater. I also found out that connections via cable directly to the modem are restricted to 30 Mbps, WiFi up to 300 Mbps. I've been told we have the best plan offered for where we live (Argentina, small town in a developed valley, not suburb, not rural).
I'm wondering if a repeater will improve the situation, or if I might be better off connecting a WiFi booster to the router downstairs. When there is internet it's relatively responsive, but lately you never know when it's going to quit on you. Using Network Diagnostics (after messages such as "DNS Address Can't Be Found," "Connection Was Reset") sometimes works, but not always. Sometimes it doesn't and you have to wait, sometimes it does but for only a few minutes.
My other brother in law (not an expert on the topic) on the first floor says he's 100% sure a repeater placed in my office will solve my problem. I wonder if that's the case because where I'd be plugging the repeater in is only 10 feet away from my PC (which uses a USB WiFi receiver with an upgraded antenna). Right now the signal is full strength - sometimes it drops by a bar. Rarely does it drop to only one (more likely on a 12 year old tablet). I'm also able to receive a signal on my phone even farther from my office when I'm outside, but that's not as reliable.
Should I try the repeater? Skip that and go with a booster? Is my problem something else requiring a different solution?
A brother in law lives on the other side of the second floor. Years ago (before I moved here) he had ethernet cable routed up through conduit and he uses his own router to create his own networks. He was experiencing the problem somewhat as well and replaced his router. No more problems. I was prepared to do the same but was told there's no more room in the conduit. So it was suggested I use a WiFi repeater. I also found out that connections via cable directly to the modem are restricted to 30 Mbps, WiFi up to 300 Mbps. I've been told we have the best plan offered for where we live (Argentina, small town in a developed valley, not suburb, not rural).
I'm wondering if a repeater will improve the situation, or if I might be better off connecting a WiFi booster to the router downstairs. When there is internet it's relatively responsive, but lately you never know when it's going to quit on you. Using Network Diagnostics (after messages such as "DNS Address Can't Be Found," "Connection Was Reset") sometimes works, but not always. Sometimes it doesn't and you have to wait, sometimes it does but for only a few minutes.
My other brother in law (not an expert on the topic) on the first floor says he's 100% sure a repeater placed in my office will solve my problem. I wonder if that's the case because where I'd be plugging the repeater in is only 10 feet away from my PC (which uses a USB WiFi receiver with an upgraded antenna). Right now the signal is full strength - sometimes it drops by a bar. Rarely does it drop to only one (more likely on a 12 year old tablet). I'm also able to receive a signal on my phone even farther from my office when I'm outside, but that's not as reliable.
Should I try the repeater? Skip that and go with a booster? Is my problem something else requiring a different solution?