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I live in a several flour house and needed a WiFi extender to reach all my house with my
iGears and other WiFi enabled devices.So basically, I have a "root" WiFi Network of SSID myWiFi in the basements. I then have a WiFi Extender (Netgear) that connects to the myWiFi network and extends it to another Network of SSID myWiFi_Ext. So here's my question: can I make sure my AppleTV (which will be connected to let's say myWiFi Network) will also be seen by iGears connected to myWiFi_Ext ? I mean, within my home, will any iDevice be able to Airplay on my AppleTV, regardless the network it connects to (MyWiFi or MyWiFi_Ext)? Thanks for your clever answers. |
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#2 | |
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See here: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4260 The instructions are for Apple devices, but you'll get the gist of it. |
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#3 | |
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So, I should have purchased a second Airport device, rather than that bloody extender (Netgear WN3000RP). There's one thing I don't understand in this picture (courtesy Apple): ![]() Why the hell do you connect the various routers each other via physical cables? I mean, the intent to have this roaming network is to cover lots of room space - so you don't intend to have them connected by wires, right? There might be something I miss... |
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I bet Apple shows them wired so the AE's have a better signal to them and if you have a big house, you'll have great wireless signal in the whole house this way. |
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#5 | |
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i will give my perspective based on the way i have mine now which is wireless from main extreme to a 2nd, then to an express. it seems that if they are wirelessly connected, its using that wifi bandwidth to communicate and thus sacrificing the wifi speed. I tried to do it wired and had issues, but i might take this apple article and try it again per their instructions as i have cat 6 running to each floor with an 8 port switch, so i could hang the express and extreme off each of those.
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24" iMac 2.8ghz, 17" MBP, 2.66 Mac Mini Server 2 i5 Mac Mini's, 15 inch MBP i7 2.66 2 160GB TV's 5 TV2. 16GB ipad2 whiteiPhone 4, 4s, and 5.....the ihome! |
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#6 |
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I agree with the above, as far as using an Airport Express as an access point. I did find slowed responsiveness. Yes probably due to the bandwidth being used for 2-way communication between the AEBS and AE. However, in a situation where you are getting weak signal from the main router and a wired network is not possible, it is still a very usable configuration.
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17" MacBook Pro, 2.66 GHz, 8GB RAM; AppleTV 3; iPad 2, 32GB; 2TB Time Capsule (RIP 9/12); AEBS w 1TB Seagate HDD; AE; 65" Mits DLP, Sony STR-DB1070 AVR
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#7 |
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OP, what you're actually trying to do is create an extended network, not a roaming network. A roaming network utilizes multiple base stations daisy-chained to one another via Cat5/5e/6. Essentially, this allows each base station's wi-fi to operate at full throughput.
In an extended network, the secondary wifi access points don't have a physical cable to establish the connection to the main wifi access point, so the wi-fi is pulling double duty: maintaining a connection while simultaneously transferring data over that connection. As a result, the throughput is halved. So if you have a 150Mbps wifi connection on your main router, then the remote wifi points are only capable of 75Mbps max...and that is if the two access points are relatively close to one another. When the distances between the main access point and the extenders is large, you may be looking at only 30-40% of the original throughput. But, as others have mentioned, sometimes that's the only available option.
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Macs Old & New | iPad 3 | iPhone 5 | 240GB iPod 5G | Crystalbuntu TV1 TV2 w/ Plex | 24TB of Drobo Storage | Airport Base Stations Abound
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#8 | |
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Last edited by JRoDDz; Dec 13, 2012 at 12:31 PM. |
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#9 | ||
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And you understant the situation of my extended network. Now, back to the original question: do you believe that my iOS devices might see each other as on the same Network, even if not sharing the same SSID ? ---------- Quote:
Thank you very much for your kind answer. |
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#10 |
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Out of curiosity, what is the brand of your main router? Is it also a Netgear? When I've used non-Apple routers & wi-fi extenders in the past, I've always set them up using the same SSID, password, and channel. When set up in this fashion, your device should automatically connect to the stronger signal. You shouldn't have any issues with AirPlay like this.
FWIW, Apple truly does make this easy with their Airport Extreme & Express. I have 3 Extremes and one Express in my home. Two extremes are connected via Cat6, creating a roaming network. The third AirPort Extreme is set up to wirelessly extend that roaming network, because there was simply no way to run Cat 6 to that part of the house. And the little Airport Express simply connects to the wireless network, but does not extend it -- it's connected to a pair of powered speakers. The setup works flawlessly, and I get a minimum 40-50Mbps throughput even on the wirelessly extended portion of the network. Plenty fast for streaming video & music all over the house. If you're having trouble with your Netgear setup, I'd highly recommend Apple's kit.
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Macs Old & New | iPad 3 | iPhone 5 | 240GB iPod 5G | Crystalbuntu TV1 TV2 w/ Plex | 24TB of Drobo Storage | Airport Base Stations Abound
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iGears and other WiFi enabled devices.



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