Configuration Guide How to place your wireless Range Extender for optimal reception and performance
Placing Tips
1. Distance
For the case that we almost got no obstacle and the Router’s signal is still good at 40 feet (like still supplying speed like 100Mbps in 5G or 50Mbps in 2.4G there), it’s recommended to put the RE with External Antenna in about 25 – 40 feet away; for the RE with Internal Antenna, better to place it 20 – 35 feet away, which is normally the proper place for the RE to stay.
For the case that there are walls or other obstacles in between the RE and main router, it’s better to place the RE like the Example we show in the end of this article.
2. Raise the Range Extender
Place the range extender at a similar height as the main router, usually is about 4 feet high. The height will help the extender receiving a better signal from the main router, and ensure the mobile devices getting a better signal from the extender.
Try placing the router high on a bookcase, shelf or other location with suitable height, instead of putting the router on the floor or corner.
3. Put the Antenna Vertically
Please put the Antenna up vertically with the ground, so that the extender can receive and transfer data at best status.
4. Avoid Obstacles
When picking your extender’s location, avoid objects that will either reflect the signal (like mirrors or large pieces of metal) or absorb it (walls, cabinets or masonry supports). It's better that if the router and the extender are in line of sight.
Another big disruptor of Wi-Fi extenders are stray radio-frequency signals from other electronics. The prime culprits here are microwave ovens, cordless phones, refrigerators or even baby monitors, which emit strong interference to the Wi-Fi signal.
5. Placing Direction
Place the extender facing towards the router as much as possible.
The front side of the extender face against the main router directly will be the best direction for the extender’s antennas to receive and broadcast the signal. And the behind clients can also get faster speed from the extender in this case.
6. Power Strip
At last, it’s better to put the RE into a Power Strip, so that you can easily adjust the RE’s height, antennas' angle, the direction or even the distance as the previous suggestions.
7. AP mode
When the obstacles cannot be avoided or the distance between the RE and router are too long to establish a stable wireless connection, you can also put the RE close to the place where the Wi-Fi signal is needed, run an Ethernet cable from the router to the RE, then turn the RE into AP mode following this FAQ1401, to ensure the devices in that place can also get a strong stable Wi-Fi signal.
Posture Examples
As the first picture showed, it’s recommended to place the RE facing towards the Router; It’s also better when there are fewer Obstacles; And also keep them at a Height of 4 feet like on a normal desktop.
As the second picture showed, we may put the antenna up to get it Perpendicular to the Ground with the help of the Power Strip.
Error Case
Position Examples
Main Router Only
With the block of the Wall and distance turns longer, we can only get 40Mbps in this room when we directly connect to the Main Wi-Fi.
Router + RE
RE’s getting 150Mbps from Router in this place, then share the network to further place in the direction that it was placed.
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Hello there,
I am having kind of a similar issue, with the Extender connecting to the 'wrong' AP.
I have one router MR600, one extender RE200, one RE300 and one RE650.
- The RE650 usually has no problem connecting to the router, as it is located in the same floor.
- The RE300 is locate in the attic, and it's hard for it to connect to the router (sometime it gets it, most times doesn't), so it is usually connected through the RE650 or one RE300 in the first floor. The performance drops but it is not a big deal because the attic requirements is very low, basically just smart phones.
- The RE200 is the problem. It is located in the first floor and I need it there because I need the Ethernet port for one device with no WiFi. When it connects directly to the router or even to the RE650 everything works fine, but sometimes, specially when I need to reboot the router or there was a power outage, as the RE300 in the attic turns on faster than the router, the RE200 of the first floor connects to the RE300 in the attic, and this will not work. I mean, it connects, you ping the router and it works ... but the performance is, expectably, terrible.
Some times even the RE650 in the ground floor connects to the attic's RE300
When this happens I need to go shutting down all the RE and turning them on in a giver order to ensure they connect to the right AP. But it's annoying, specially after a power outage.
So, I wonder if there is any way to force the RE to connect to one (or maybe few) of the APs, but not to others. I tried using the access control using the fact that the RE changes the mac of the clients when connecting through them (the DHCP sees the client mac as <RE mac prefix>:<client mac suffix>), so I blocked the mac of the RE200 through the RE300, but I only got to block the L3 traffic, not the wireless connection, so no joy.
Any idea if this can be done and if so how?
Thanks a lot!
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I think you should have a more specific plan
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@adora18 "a more specific plan"? can you elaborate what you mean with that?
The generic issue here is that having multiple RE *around* the router, placing the router in the center of an imaginary circle is great and easy, but it's quite often not realistic, and here starts the problem. The reality is that most of the times the RE will be at different distances (real distance or 'power' distance) and it can happen that for the RE1 other REx is closer than the router, so, how can we force the RE1 to connect to the router and not to any random REx?
Do you know how to have a more specific plan for that?
Thanks
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