Not really. His scenario is a hundred to one shot or more. If your house is properly grounded the chance of your losing everything like that is pretty much nil.Wow that's good to know. Guess we've just been lucky.
Not really. His scenario is a hundred to one shot or more. If your house is properly grounded the chance of your losing everything like that is pretty much nil.Wow that's good to know. Guess we've just been lucky.
This.Ubiquiti - Simplifying IT
They have outdoor options too. Their systems are a dramatic step up from base consumer shit like Netgear and ASUS.
Not an expert but I run an Eero Mesh system in my house that was easy to setup and I have a strong wifi connection throughout my house and well into the backyard. Haven't had a single problem with it in the 3ish years I've had it installed.
Hopefully I'm not giving any bad info here but I always thought repeaters just repeat the weak signal. The mesh nodes you place throughout your house and they each create their own signal. You could have one node as far back in your house as possible and another in your shed.
Mesh vs wired access point - which is best? I would think a wired AP should outperform anything else and max out the limit of the wifi system in each router.Repeaters are 'dumb' and just repeat, like you said. Mesh will backhaul the traffic on another radio band so it doesn't interfere with wifi.
I don't know if the 'mesh' systems are a true mesh where they self-heal and can route traffic around failed nodes, it seems like it's just a marketing term now.
Ok that's good to know. We have good grounding with copper rods in the ground near two panels. I also wired up a whole house surge protector at the main house panel.Not really. His scenario is a hundred to one shot or more. If your house is properly grounded the chance of your losing everything like that is pretty much nil.
That’s important as hell here with the storms we get.Ok that's good to know. We have good grounding with copper rods in the ground near two panels. I also wired up a whole house surge protector at the main house panel.