Buy Cheap, Buy Twice - Wavlink 300Mbps Outdoor WAP

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 12. 2021
  • Thanks to Manscaped for sponsoring today's video. Head over to Manscaped.com/CraftComputing to get 20% off your Performance Package 4.0 + Free International Shipping!
    You ever find a deal for hardware that seems too good to be true? I ordered three of these Wavlink Outdoor Wireless Access Points for a project with a strict budget. What I wound up with was range anxiety. Do yourself a favor... stick to used enterprise or prosumer gear when it comes to networking and servers.
    But first... What am I drinking???
    Crux Fermentation Project - Crux Stout
    Links to items below may be affiliate links for which I may be compensated
    Check out (or don't) the Wavlink 300Mbps Outdoor Wireless Access Point (THEY'RE $50 NOW!!!?!): amzn.to/3mtFjgW
    Get these instead: amzn.to/30Yex94
    Get yourself an official Craft Computing Pint Glass and start drinking like a pro: craftcomputing.store
    Follow me on Twitter @CraftComputing
    Support me on Patreon or Floatplane and get access to my exclusive Discord server. Chat with myself and the other hosts on Talking Heads all week long.
    / craftcomputing
    www.floatplane.com/channel/Cr...
    Music:
    Shades of Spring by Kevin MacLeod
    Link: incompetech.filmmusic.io/song...
    License: filmmusic.io/standard-license
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 298

  • @marcogenovesi8570
    @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety +58

    Love the festive spin on the manscaping ad

  • @Prophes0r
    @Prophes0r Před 2 lety +38

    When I run WiFi to someone's barn, if the barn has power, I just run a point to point link.
    Get a cheap second router that will run in client mode.
    Get 2x cheap/free parabolic reflectors (satellite tv dishes aren't tuned for 2.4GHz, but they do usually work.)
    Attach one dish on each building, pointing at each other.
    replace one of the router antennae with a pigtail that goes up to the dish focal point.
    I've easily gotten +500ft (+180m) point-to-point links this way. And it can be almost free depending on where you source your hardware.

    • @markarca6360
      @markarca6360 Před 2 lety +5

      For the parabolic reflectors, you can use a Mikrotik LDF P2P/P2MP.

    • @jamess1787
      @jamess1787 Před 2 lety

      Until the power bumps reset the router and OOPS, multiple dhcp servers on one lan 😂

    • @Prophes0r
      @Prophes0r Před 2 lety +3

      ​@@jamess1787 I've literally never had a problem with a router returning to factory settings.
      That doesn't mean there ISN'T an issue, it just means that in 20ish years, over hundreds of routers, I've never seen it happen. (Though I HAVE seen all sorts of other weird stuff)

    • @Prophes0r
      @Prophes0r Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@markarca6360 I've had luck with quite a few different things as parabolic reflectors.
      As I stated, I've used discarded satellite Tv dishes (I still pick them up when I see them in the trash. But I have like 8x left over now so I should stop...)
      I've also used a particular dollar-store wok that I found to be an almost perfect parabola. And various cheap wire-basket cooking strainers.
      You could also make a yagi if you care. They aren't hard.

  • @michaelmullins8181
    @michaelmullins8181 Před 2 lety +90

    The metal gutter may be detuning the antennas. Try mounting it on a piece of wood.

    • @seedmoreuser
      @seedmoreuser Před 2 lety +15

      Yeah most likely acting as a shield, and height also affects range.

    • @stefanl5183
      @stefanl5183 Před 2 lety +11

      Yes, this was my first thought as well. Not saying this product is any good, but if that gutter is metal, it'll definitely affect the performance of those antenna's.

    • @ScottGrammer
      @ScottGrammer Před 2 lety +7

      No doubt about it. I was going to say something about it but you beat me to it. The gutter being about an inch from the antennas is DEFINITELY raising their SWR and greatly reducing their efficiency and changing their polar pattern. Get it up in the air and off the ground and keep the antennas at least a foot or two away from metal.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Před 2 lety +5

      I was thinking the same, BUT the device is also made for pole mounting. When pole mounted there's about a 99% chance it would be against metal.

    • @tobiwonkanogy2975
      @tobiwonkanogy2975 Před 2 lety

      add a bunch of the comments together and the unit might actually perform closer to advertised

  • @soniclab-cnc
    @soniclab-cnc Před 2 lety +14

    my oldest ubiquity 2.4ghz AP i installed in the shed in my back yard gives me like 150' range easily. worth the money spent. I have newer 5ghz unifi access points around the house and also well worth every bit of the money.

    • @soniclab-cnc
      @soniclab-cnc Před 2 lety

      @Kirk Eby that's what I have... very happy with them. 3200 ft/sq coverage over two floors with three UAP AC pro. I used the heat map to plan my layout. I planned for 4 but really only needed 3. Perfect coverage in every room.

  • @yevsey169
    @yevsey169 Před 2 lety +37

    My company tried to see if these were useable... We were sadly disappointed.
    Don't try factory resetting it btw, you'll end up with it in ap mode but still broadcasting dhcp.
    Also, I love how if you go to adjust the signal strength, full signal is the image of a pregnant woman.

    • @AlexeyDnepr
      @AlexeyDnepr Před rokem

      In the end, which device did you choose?

    • @yevsey169
      @yevsey169 Před rokem

      @@AlexeyDnepr tplink's outdoor aps

    • @WilReid
      @WilReid Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@yevsey169How are the TP-Link holding up and what's the range like? My friend has a barn 150-200 feet from his house and I'm trying to figure out something not crazy expensive to recommend to him. He has power (solar + battery) in the barn if that changes the suggestion.

    • @miloulondon458
      @miloulondon458 Před 7 měsíci

      I have bought 2 TP-Link EAP225 1 Wavlink 1200 (4G/Wifi) and Wavlink 300 (not yet installed). My initial install was using the EAP225 and a Yaggi Antenna to provide access to some camera about 150m to 300m. The Wavlink is the strongest so far in long distance. I still would like to test the second 300 if it will improve the outdoor connectivity and use the EAP225 indoor. I can see some challenges with WAVLINK as it is not as advanced config as you could have with EAP225 (omada) and some default settings that are not really secured. For a cheap solution I think WAVLINK is good enough. I even noticed my local park in the UK has the WAVLINK for their cctv. I hope it gives you some answer. PS: I can monitor 6 cameras using a 4G connection with the WAVLINK setup which is very good as the site is 4000km away from me.@@WilReid

  • @gominosensei2008
    @gominosensei2008 Před 2 lety +66

    i would like to see this test repeated without the antennas being so close to the metal gutter, and the two antennas at 90 degrees to eachother.
    the reason for the 90 deg angle is so that the two antennas dont overrwhelm and desensitise eachother. diversity reception/transmission should work a lot better,
    to be thorough, an analysis of the antennas on some cheap VNA like the nanoVNA would be also a useful indicattion if they are actually any good,

    • @northerncanuck
      @northerncanuck Před 2 lety +5

      I thought the same thing! Assuming the unit wasn't tested off-camera I'd recommend doing some additional testing away from metal objects and playing with the antenna stuff a bit.
      Ham radio has a lot of material on antennas and the theory they teach might be helpful with troubleshooting this further!

    • @unmanaged
      @unmanaged Před 2 lety +2

      Take apart the antenna and check it's design... better antennas?

    • @NateTheBrewer
      @NateTheBrewer Před 2 lety +4

      Came to say this as well. While I am sure these things aren't top of the line, they likely perform A LOT better at the intended install site of a remote farm without many other interfering networks. The reason he was seeing the speed test jump all over the place was due to interference from other networks, and possible multipath distortion from all the cars, houses, and other obstacles in the neighborhood.
      Most enterprise and prosumer grade hotspots have not only higher strength radios but also routines to analyze competing local WiFi networks across all available channels, and dynamically shift to more appropriate channels to minimize interference, which is likely why his Ubiquiti one performed so much better from the same distance.

    • @primus711
      @primus711 Před 2 lety +3

      He has no clue on networking that has to be about the worst spot its literally inside a Faraday cage
      Low with roof blocking everything above gutter blocking back half who knows its sig to router is
      Anyway those r common 5db ants and he killed 80% its power

    • @UmbongoEnjoyer
      @UmbongoEnjoyer Před 2 lety

      Agreed. Though I think he was just doing what the average consumer might do - which highlights the bad design of the product, having the antennae so close in the first place. I'd bet on it being a better result if they had put the SMA connectors on the sides, rather than the top, opposite each other. The larger gap would help, even if both antennae were parallel.
      So I think he has the right conclusion overall, but for the wrong reason. If he were to mount it properly (ie, as high up as practically possible, with the antennae clear of surrounding barriers) it'd improve, even if he left them pointing straight up.

  • @haydenc2742
    @haydenc2742 Před 2 lety +67

    Wait...did you strap it directly to a huge hunk of metal right next to the antennas and not expect WIFI degradation?
    Hmm...I wonder if it does a search for wifi signal so it doesn't crosstalk with other channels
    Optimum install would be on the top of an old TV pushup pole ABOVE the roofline...the higher the signal and more line of site = better signal propagation

    • @raiden72
      @raiden72 Před 2 lety

      Unless it's inside a warehouse, then you would use patch antennas pointed at zones

    • @paulmaydaynight9925
      @paulmaydaynight9925 Před 2 lety

      a chunk of metal behind them acts as a ground plain & so makes them more directional.
      the slightly more Wavlink dual 600 & 1200 are better test them

    • @zephsmith3499
      @zephsmith3499 Před 2 lety

      @@paulmaydaynight9925 A chunk of metal CORRECTLY POSITIONED could indeed act as a ground plane, but random metal near antennas is at least as likely to mostly cancel out the signal in some directions.
      Basically, if it's not designed to be adjacent to metal, it's a bad idea to juxtapose them.
      Test it mounted to a non-metallic surface and test again, just in case.

    • @Sbark2179
      @Sbark2179 Před 2 lety

      I have had this unit for 2 plus years in southern Ontario (down to minus 30 C). I test from about 100 yards from the antenna tower it is mounted on. It is also on a Ethernet connection of about a100 feet using the POE. The cable is connected to a port on a the third router connected in series to the internet (needed the ports, it works). I routinely get 8 to 10 Mbits. When I visit my friend across the lake (1000 plus feet) I can still get 2 Mbits (it is painful). In all cases it it nearly a clear line of site. (My background it IT and networks). I benchmark the speeds frequently and it is reliable and consistent. When I am 50 feet from the unit I can get much higher speeds (30 plus). Your advice for mounting it high and open is a good start. Not sure why this fellows speed are so terrible but I would most certainly move it away from the metal down spout for a start and retest. I tested it once with it on my starlink connected thru a wireless extender linked to Starlink (only option till they deliver a Ethernet connect) and it ran a 30 Mbit at 100 yards. I was quite surprised. Hope to retest this once Starlink Ethernet arrives and I reduce the number of routers etc.

  • @Banner1986
    @Banner1986 Před 2 lety +17

    I've deployed 8 tp-link N300 LR's across 5 different locations, and they been friggin stellar - surviving torrential downpours, 112 degree heat, all while never encountering a single issue with them, I cant see myself ever using something else (as long as theres no high bandwidth requirement).
    Used to get them for 37 bucks, probably a little more these days, but worth it - I've got two of these as point to point at my parents place just under a half mile apart, and get about 120Mbps between the two. I couldnt believe it tbh... but we now have 4 video feeds streaming from the barn to the house a half mile away, and I cant argue with that!

    • @methanoid
      @methanoid Před 2 lety +1

      which ones? they offer a few.. N300 is just the WiFi spec.. whats the model numbers, please?

    • @Banner1986
      @Banner1986 Před 2 lety +4

      @@methanoid they only make one N300 based outdoor long range model. It's called the CPE210, in case you're having a hard time finding it 👍
      For anything over 500ft, I've always set them up in linked pairs, though that's honestly probably not necessary unless they're being set up in somewhat crowded locations (e.g. lots of other SSID's available in the area from other users)... I've never had to deal with that though personally, as the locations where I've ended up using them have always been extremely rural with very low population density.

  • @jafizzle95
    @jafizzle95 Před 2 lety +3

    I'm normally an ad skipper, but I do not skip Craft's Manscaped ads, as a personal rule.

  • @brada-unfiltered
    @brada-unfiltered Před 2 lety +2

    As a professional installer I need to point out that the antennas should be in a Y configuration. They are distorting each other right now :-).

    • @CraftComputing
      @CraftComputing  Před 2 lety

      I can only test as they delivered.

    • @inactivated0
      @inactivated0 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CraftComputing can you retest, including all the optimisations people have suggested in these comments?

    • @CraftComputing
      @CraftComputing  Před 2 lety +1

      I'm considering it, though this video isn't exactly performing well. I might save it for a rainy day next month.

  • @pioneersmokehouseschannel

    Good info, I was having issues connecting my detached garage 3 years ago. I ran an outdoor cat6 to a TP-link in and outdoor rated poly box with an extension cord; what an S-show. Then I switched to an ASUS gaming router mesh network, and I am good. I would like to upgrade my antennas and get a bit more coverage.

  • @Timi7007
    @Timi7007 Před 2 lety +9

    I'm running Ubiquiti UAP-MeshACs in outdoor scenarios and they're great. 80-100€ usually. TP-Link also offers some equipment in multiple product lines. The Omada ones are a good alternative. If a directional antenna is fine TP-Links CPEs and Ubiquitis Nanostations are awesome for around 50€.

    • @Azlehria
      @Azlehria Před 2 lety +2

      I've been astounded by the UAP-AC-LR that I bought to hold us over until a proper multiple-WAP system could be set up.
      Over 5 years later, we still just have the single WAP. It's not even mounted properly (it's vertical, on a wall, instead of horizontal) but our devices don't disconnect until we're over 100m away. The signal is a bit _flaky_ at that distance, but still usable!

  • @RoastBeefSandwich
    @RoastBeefSandwich Před 2 lety

    I helped my father-in-law set one of these up to give additional coverage for his backyard shed and motorhome parking pad. It works OK for those uses for him.

  • @FixitAgain69
    @FixitAgain69 Před 2 lety

    This manscaping add is GOLD! I hope they have a you bonus for that creativity!

  • @donnism.59
    @donnism.59 Před 2 lety

    Hey Craftman, Greetings from Kuala Lumpur Malaysia. Wishing you happy holidays and happy new year! Your video have been helpful for me in getting around with tech and better understanding on my machine. Keep up the good work, I like your videos very much. I always try to pop up my beer bottle cap at the beginning of your video and most of the attempt was successful in getting it popped in sync! Stay blessed and cheers!

    • @CraftComputing
      @CraftComputing  Před 2 lety

      Thanks very much! Glad you're enjoying the channel. Cheers! 🍻

  • @6LordMortus9
    @6LordMortus9 Před 2 lety

    You always have the best script for Manscape :)

  • @endykun
    @endykun Před 2 lety +1

    Best manscaped ad I've ever seen.

  • @enekuda05
    @enekuda05 Před 2 lety

    Easily the best landscape commercial I think I've seen in a very very long time lol

  • @DaveSomething
    @DaveSomething Před 2 lety +1

    last time my cat got outside it was raining... he was an outdoor WAP.
    hapve a happy merry and a merry happy!

  • @ryanreich7635
    @ryanreich7635 Před 2 lety +10

    Wifi is only half-duplex. The 150mbps loss isn't due to overhead. It's due to the radios only being able to send or receive at one time. I'm a Senior Network Engineer that maintains campus networks.

    • @jamess1787
      @jamess1787 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, somehow the marketing departments are allowed to market HALF DUPLEX speeds over a span of more than 1s.... As speed/bits per second, pretty ludicrous if you as me. Not sure how the lawyers haven't caught on yet.... (I mean, comeon, they went looking for the other 24bits per kilobyte years ago....)

    • @franklincerpico7702
      @franklincerpico7702 Před 2 lety

      Tell me about it, wifi can be a pain. My boss was running Aerohive, now Extreme WIFI cloud managed access points. They perform all the nitpicky stuff automatically for best throughput.

    • @ryanreich7635
      @ryanreich7635 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah I've had the explain to way too many Executives that you can't cram 150 students into a classroom with 4 Cisco 3802's. Just doesn't work. Each student has at least 3 devices.. a laptop, a phone, and a watch or a tablet. So we are talking 450 devices. "But the students are complaining of slowness" okay... Tell them to turn off their phones...

  • @seanstechworld
    @seanstechworld Před 2 lety +1

    I like the TP-Link access points for outdoor. Love the Ubiquiti NanoStations as well.

  • @iamstartower
    @iamstartower Před 2 lety +1

    Those xmas decor look smooth

  • @blahmeh242
    @blahmeh242 Před 2 lety

    What a legend! - I love tech and beer too!
    Great review of the product.

  • @SmokeytheBeer
    @SmokeytheBeer Před 2 lety

    That festive ad-spot was hilarious!

  • @Chris173972
    @Chris173972 Před 2 lety

    I was setting up WiFi at my uncles and considered one of these. I then switched and bought Unifi Flex HD... So much better! Thank god for that

  • @RyanSmiddy
    @RyanSmiddy Před 2 lety

    I just want to say that is the best manscapped add I have ever seen, and I dont have cable, so I have seen a lot

  • @gandi69
    @gandi69 Před 2 lety +1

    I run the wac link 600 unit with openwrt on it, it’s ok for the money and the fact that it’s outdoor/weather resistant. It’s not in the league of the more expensive stuff but you get what you pay for

  • @jasonflt
    @jasonflt Před 2 lety

    best intro EVER!!! manscape!!

  • @joels7605
    @joels7605 Před 2 lety

    The ad at the beginning... You nailed it buddy. I think that's the only entertaining product placement I've seen on a channel that isn't Rich Rebuilds.

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Před 2 lety +1

      You don't watch Ageing Wheels?

    • @joels7605
      @joels7605 Před 2 lety

      @@SianaGearz Okay you win. That guy is ridiculous.

  • @calholli
    @calholli Před 20 dny

    A plug will definitely fit through the "gasket" at the bottom. If you just pop the gasket out, you will see that the hole in it has a slit over to the side so that you can just slide the gasket/foam over your cord, even if it has an existing plug already on the end of it. (9:00)

  • @renewinnik568
    @renewinnik568 Před 2 lety

    Love the sponsor add. Very well done.

  • @Knirin
    @Knirin Před 2 lety +3

    The better signal further away is not a surprise. Many cheaper outdoor access points can overload the receiver at short ranges which leads to packet corruption.

  • @MactelecomNetworks
    @MactelecomNetworks Před 2 lety +2

    Lol that was a great ad 😂

  • @guywhoknows
    @guywhoknows Před 2 lety +2

    The placement is bad.
    Metal gutter, metal overhang, and low.
    I used to run a wisp (gwisp) and we did testing and could get connections up to 35 miles.
    Not feet...
    Here is a few things to note.
    Pre 2007 hardware has higher power, the .gov limited the power by 90% due to the uptake and the wave noise... (Too many users , too few bands (3)).
    One of my faves was the Cisco AP's you attach a antenna cable and outdoors antenna. I still have some, the antenna cable has a 4cm dia. And a 8mm2 core.
    This was then attached to the ap and power dialed in. I also made antennas. (They're easy to make) and ran tests and found that it worked. However the goal back then was a 11mb trans rate. With a backhaul of 150mb (unhread of speeds back then)
    Antenna, are beasts to deal with, they can cancel themselves, be untunned and cause more problems than they resolve.
    A cheap, quick and easy WiFi would be to use the ESP32, and get some firmware.
    At £6 a ap. You can go out there and make a mesh, however the quality is not uniform in the WiFi power. Apparently they have resolved the issue on the new esp. but as they are tiny,a solar powered one works and they fit under light data.
    I think the price and look is great, however with problems like power signals, then it's not all good. It's a to good to be true.
    Try again moving the antenna.
    And bunny those antenna. And move of off of the metal and from the over hang. Don't forget the signal reflects and this cancels or confuses adding to drops and bad packets as well as ping times.
    And of hand, I think anywhere between the antenna poles is going to be very bad.
    As a side note I had a ap that was really bad when you were close to it and fantastic far away
    Try WiFi analysis app. That will show you where signals are best and there are other apps that you can use to plot a site.
    Obviously check the thing works first lol.

  • @arkadiusz.chrzastek
    @arkadiusz.chrzastek Před 2 lety +1

    I use compact TP-Link CPE710 (5GHz 867Mbps) directional parabolic antenna to transfer network to a distant location. Working great over a year with full available speed 250 Mbps.

  • @MrMawnster
    @MrMawnster Před rokem

    I need for my big and little barn for lambing and calving...better to keep an eye on critters. Have looked at a few videos for different ones, stopped in to watch this, thanks for doing the review!

  • @tobiwonkanogy2975
    @tobiwonkanogy2975 Před 2 lety

    The manscaped ad again perfectly on point .

  • @robwulz3493
    @robwulz3493 Před 2 lety

    I have been buying old Apple Airport devices from cash converters and CEX in the UK for about £10 each , and they're fantastic value .
    Mac loves em and they work great , cheap enough to put in outhouses , garage and the loft .
    WiFi heaven everywhere baby .

  • @NickFortag
    @NickFortag Před 2 lety +1

    I had one but it was the AC1200 one and it did a little better. But it died in a month so it was kinda pointless. I switch to TpLink Omada out door access point and they perform amazing!

  • @jaybrooks1098
    @jaybrooks1098 Před 2 lety

    The p2p unifi works great for long range p2p and local wifi accesspoint.. they are not 30$ though.. a pair is about 350$. Not cheap but I have had them struck by lightning and after changing out the cat5/6 cable function fine. (Milage may vary) .. this was on a 4.5 mile connection across a farm in NC. We even hooked up neighbors to the link up. Very cool devices

  • @jjones503
    @jjones503 Před 2 lety +1

    Used this same wavlink at my parents property for them. Works ok, but had some issues, like the injector overheating and melting lol.

  • @skug978
    @skug978 Před 2 lety +4

    I expect that radio interference from all the other wireless equipment in your neighbourhood is stifling the data transmission of this device. A remote farm that is situated distant from neighbouring property would alleviate that problem. Back in the early days of wifi I was using 802.11a and 802.11b at distances of 300m from my home, admittedly at not particularly fast speeds, but there was no interference from neighbours (i.e. No one had smart phones with wifi back then).
    EDIT: Turn off your Ubiquiti kit and try again. Heh.

  • @madwaxer83
    @madwaxer83 Před 2 lety +1

    Try grounding the AP's earth\Grnd terminal to the gutter drain. It's absorbing some of the RF from the AP. Mount it to wood instead.

  • @jason-budney7624
    @jason-budney7624 Před 2 lety +1

    Another classic Manscape ad! I think I'll buy $35 in Crux Stout instead of that WAP.

  • @TheNightquaker
    @TheNightquaker Před 2 lety +4

    What can I say, a good WAP is not cheap!

  • @gerowen
    @gerowen Před 2 lety

    3:25 My ISP started storing their batteries and media converters in a box on the pole outside. The first year we lived here after our house got set up the internet went out one day. I walked out and opened their box and it was absolutely inundated with ants; a can of bug killer and canned air to clean it all out and it was all good. Every spring I go spray a liberal coat of spectricide all over the pole and wires around the box to keep insects out and we haven't had any issues since I started doing that.

  • @Graham_Rule
    @Graham_Rule Před 2 lety

    That last throwaway line made me wonder if you were about to go into a show and tell about your sponsor!

  • @donffrank
    @donffrank Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome job on this test, but now I'm wondering if the Poe wattage could be at choke for that AP

  • @stargatedoom
    @stargatedoom Před 2 lety

    I just set up 3 of these for a client. They were cheap and didn't preform well. For the cost they wanted to spend it kinda works. However, I feel ill he back to replace them with something that works

  • @darrenjones5885
    @darrenjones5885 Před 2 lety

    I ordered two Wavlink outdoor APs and after experience with one they were returned, with the other still unopened. The one I opened could only be configured over wifi and not on the ethernet port. The ethernet port was the only one with some kind of security, physical access required, but couldn’t be used to configure the device. That was enough for me to declare it not fit for purpose.

  • @user-fb7tp7kg1s
    @user-fb7tp7kg1s Před měsícem

    Just wanted to comment on this i am also a technical geek and when i got my wavlink ac600 i being so smart i dident need instructions well come to find out after testing and testing i discovered i had the 2.4 antenna on the 5g hookup and 5g on 2.4 side felt so stupid worked great after switching it around. Went from a few feet signal to 200 to 400 feet easy. Also there is a power setting once logged in to the device to turn it up or down i think there is a three power setting just food for thought. Happy testing

  • @AndyMelton
    @AndyMelton Před 2 lety +1

    It began with some manscaping and ended with "one thick head." My kind of video! LOL! :)

  • @SianaGearz
    @SianaGearz Před 2 lety +2

    I have a feeling, something went wrong here, and i'm not willing to entirely blame these devices, i think you should try a few more mounting positions for it, like maybe higher up, maybe different antenna orientation, maybe away from ductwork. I'm getting better performance out of a garbage TP-Link pocket router that looks like a wall wart and is a wall wart that sits indoors in a steel reinforced concrete building while 400 other APs are also shouting along and work as jammers, that's city life for you. I have my home WiFi while waiting for a bus on the opposite side of an adjoining street separated by gardens.

  • @phr3dmcc0y
    @phr3dmcc0y Před 2 lety

    that ad was worth it

  • @Dean_Smith
    @Dean_Smith Před 2 lety +1

    Go up to the AC600 version and you can re flash with openwrt. Much more flexibility and security.

  • @draconightwalker4964
    @draconightwalker4964 Před 2 lety

    ive got two older (EOL) Ubiquiti Aps set up to run as a mesh with eth backhauls to both. tried tplink and a few other brands but NONE have been as good as these 2nd hand, ebay special Ubiquiti units. slowly swapping out all my switches for Ubiquiti gear as well from a hodge podge of cisco and tplink

  • @Arek_R.
    @Arek_R. Před 2 lety

    Wow a youtuber using "fast" website instead of those stupid cluttered websites with ads in every corner, what a miracle!

  • @justwantedtoreply
    @justwantedtoreply Před 2 lety +2

    I would love to see you use like 2nd hand enterprise AP's (Ruckus/HPE-Aruba/Cisco/Engenius etc) I use 4 x Ruckus R510's (Unleashed firmware) and i'm amazed by how great they work, the setup/expanding network etc is a breeze. Then there's the build-in tools.... HPE-Aruba also amazing stuff and if you look around you can get them quite cheap, sure they are older but overall they are better compared to newer/more recent consumer stuff.
    And to give an idea about the power they got, when i drive in my street my phone/tablet/laptop picks up my wifi right away. This at a range of at least 80 meters/ 262 feet. The AP's are by no means positioned to give a good signal outside. If i do need good wifi outside i got a Engenius ENH500 (which i used to setup bridged wifi locations with largest distance being 450 meters/1476 feet.

  • @PatrickWillcox
    @PatrickWillcox Před rokem

    Thank you for saving my money and time. Amazon seller is using half of your video but they conveniently cut off the performance test.

  • @DiyintheGhetto
    @DiyintheGhetto Před rokem

    Metal guttet piper can also block or scadder Wireless signals if a wireless device is attached to it. Another this if your wireless is in back of the house outside and you are in front of the house is can lower the speed of the wireless device being it needs to go through and around the house to get to it. I know this much from wireless testing my-self.

  • @hughsparks4572
    @hughsparks4572 Před 2 lety +3

    Can we please get a booting over the network video?

  • @mobilecommunicationsnetwor5268

    Similar results for myself, I also tried extending a cable at the 70-ft mark and the power over ethernet would not drive the access point.

  • @-a6833
    @-a6833 Před 2 lety

    Do you have any suggestions for bridging an access point wirelessly? Something that can be hung outside with an ideally with a unidirectional antenna to aim at the access point for internet access, and 1 omnidirectional to function as the access point?

  • @Phil-D83
    @Phil-D83 Před 2 lety

    Buddy uses one of these to get wifi on his camper trailer (from the park provided wifi) as it works well as an external antenna. Runs to an old router to give him wifi around his camper.

  • @beachroadfilms
    @beachroadfilms Před 7 měsíci

    thanks for your review. Almost bought one of these.

  • @sjoervanderploeg4340
    @sjoervanderploeg4340 Před 2 lety

    I still had that Wavlink on my shopping list!

    • @sjoervanderploeg4340
      @sjoervanderploeg4340 Před 2 lety

      And no, you should account for link budget... less link budget equals less bandwidth.
      Almost 50% of the link budget is lost in the first few cm around the antenna, it has nothing to do with 50% overhead lol :D

  • @proximateo
    @proximateo Před 2 lety

    Not saying this device isn’t terrible but it’s also important to consider other outside interference. No channel selection or planning was done and it’s very reasonable that the AP selected an overlapping channel (since it’s 2.4GHz only). It’s also possible that it choose a non overlapping channel, and when you got further from it, your SnR went into the gutter due to interference from the neighbor where your phone saw a better margin from your home SSID and channel.

  • @markdjdeenix6846
    @markdjdeenix6846 Před 2 lety

    This is interesting video I was thinking mount it higher on a chimney or something like that the higher the better is good

  • @DonaldMolter
    @DonaldMolter Před 2 lety

    This man clearly does yard work 😂

  • @PTReDaLeRtPT
    @PTReDaLeRtPT Před 2 lety

    Would checking the 2.4GHz spectrum up first, be a better approach, while using it at an urban area?

  • @333theeE
    @333theeE Před 2 lety

    So I used those access points for nearly 2 years to go about 500 yards it was a different use case I use them to connect to each other when I was living off grid I'm not going to say it was a perfect experience but it did work when other wireless routers wouldn't but shot equality was definitely a problem

  • @TheDiabeticWay
    @TheDiabeticWay Před rokem

    I seem to be having issues with this Wavlink with mobiles auto connecting to it any tips or help on why? Thanks for your video share!

  • @donavonsimonette8927
    @donavonsimonette8927 Před 2 lety

    on the wave link do have to change the ip address or leave the default if to hook it up to your network using the lan setting

  • @bobbyprimeau3254
    @bobbyprimeau3254 Před rokem

    Hi , question
    What would you recommend for boosting wifi in concrete basement for gaming !
    Ugh thanks

  • @VincentEllisD
    @VincentEllisD Před 2 lety +1

    Yeah there is a reason I only buy Ubiquiti when I'm running wireless outside. But I have also bought some cheap APs that worked "okay" for personal use, But I would never install them for my commercial customers. Although Ubiquiti has made some annoying business decisions as of late, such as removing the ability to configure their Nano stations as PTMP for client devices.

  • @patrickbraden1667
    @patrickbraden1667 Před rokem

    What would you recommend for a wireless access point for a long distance. Like a football field. Trying to stream. It is based at a lower elevation with some trees etc In path. Any help would be greatly appreciated

  • @GotWire
    @GotWire Před 2 lety

    you could use power line if they share the same power meter the 2 buildings that is

  • @madness1931
    @madness1931 Před 2 lety

    One thing I learnt, a long time ago. To never buy cheap networking equipment. They either don't work great, or don't work in the heat of summer. At a minimum, pay about £100 ($130USD, I think), and get a decent, low-end product. Anything else will just cause headaches for the end-user, and ask you to fix the problems (that they might blame you for, for not setting up correctly). Can they be overkill? Yes, but they're often better designed, too.
    Edit:
    Oh... I love me a stout. Makes me look forward to what I have saving for tomorrow.

  • @pauly871
    @pauly871 Před 2 lety

    @Craft Computing can you use iperf to test the max throughput.

  • @BadIdea1123
    @BadIdea1123 Před 2 lety

    Like the other guys have pointed out you probably have a reflection issue. Lots of expensive access points can do beam forming. Cheap ones usually don't and have a big reflector so close is probably degrading it. Lift it up so the antenna's are not shrouded in anythinf

  • @frostbite1991
    @frostbite1991 Před 2 lety

    What I don't understand is there's so many wifi devices out there that claim something like 300Mbps and then only have a 10/100Mbps RJ45 like this one -_- When trying to get internet to my shop on a half acre, I ultimately just got a couple SMA passive outdoor antenna's connected to a linksys wrt1900ac as the transmitter and a wrt1200ac as the receiver. It works good enough to stream YT in HD inside the shop. Back then I didn't know of Mikrotik, so later I will get their point to point antennas if need be.

  • @roppongi765
    @roppongi765 Před 2 lety

    Why did you do a speed test roundtrip the Internet versus using iperf to test it in your LAN?

  • @denvera1g1
    @denvera1g1 Před 2 lety

    I've had 3 different outdoor APs. I've actually had the best luck with a TPLink deco P9, Yea, its garbage as a mesh access point system, but it has an ace up its hole of being able to use EthernetOverPower, also know as PowerLine. Wifi only gets like ~12Mbps, but add in powerline, and combined it gets as much as 70Mbps(normally 30). Because this is an off building that crosses the breaker pannel, the Powerline itself isnt fast or reliable, but neither is the WiFi, so chances are that as one drops, the other will still be working. Using both together has been extremely reliable. I just wish there was a version like this with directional antennas, or external antenna ports
    Edit, this solution comes with alot of caveats, if you dont have good wifi signal, or dont have the off building on the same transformer, then it wont work well.
    The first 2 outdoor APs i tried were both POE(powered by my switches) but both sets used directional antennas on both ends, the first was a no-name chinese brand that had issues with external external antennes, the second was a name brand, IIRC TPlink or Dlink, they werent outdoor's per-se but they were meant for long ranges because they were a tube style AP with a parabolic antenna that closed around the tube. These were faster than the original setup(just a regular old AP in bridge mode) but even with purpose built directional antennas it wasnt reliable.

  • @adriansuhr
    @adriansuhr Před 2 lety

    The height make all the difference, the best speed coverage is on top of the house or a big pole.

  • @pauljr4706
    @pauljr4706 Před rokem

    I got different results. At 30ft 87.9 mbps in download and 75.0 mbps in upload, with a ping of 2ms. I need to be in direct line of sight though. But it's perfect for my need in my situation.

  • @hillppari
    @hillppari Před 2 lety

    Outdoor wifi seems strange to me when i have unlimited 5G data at my backyard

  • @johncnorris
    @johncnorris Před 2 lety

    I wonder if trying good quality antennas might shed some light on why the range and quality of the signals were poor? The load of cheap antennas can reflect a high percentage of the signal back into the transmitter and spoil the results.
    PS - The deal breaker for me is the lack of a WPA-Enterprise option fed by a RADIUS system.

  • @Bogomil76
    @Bogomil76 Před 2 lety

    In Germany it is allowed to send with higher rates indoors vs outdoors. So to compare an indoor AP with outdoor is may be not fair? Have you looked into advanced settings if theres an option to change this setting?

  • @Steve-dr7rr
    @Steve-dr7rr Před rokem

    Would it be better if you wanted it for extended range to get to a workshop about 30 meters away give or take a few

  • @TAGMedia7
    @TAGMedia7 Před 2 lety

    Have you ever looked into Yagi antennas? I have one hooked up to a repeater and it gives me just under a quarter-mile of coverage.

  • @luar2521
    @luar2521 Před 2 lety

    I have Starlink and I bought this after watching your video, it worked for a couple days then it started interfering with my Starlink modem, causing Starlink to block wifi access to pretty much every device. Even screwed wired connections. I order a 2nd one just in case but no the same issue. I wonder if you have notice issues with your network after a while

  • @MrDarkDragone
    @MrDarkDragone Před 2 lety

    Metal gutter might be affecting the signal, also maybe the antennas aren't as good as they seem? Did you try any others?

  • @TheWebstaff
    @TheWebstaff Před 2 lety

    Have a like not for the video but for the very original into ad! :D

  • @nicholasmistry4954
    @nicholasmistry4954 Před 2 lety

    Have you considered channel contention? Is there too much interference from your existing network?

  • @fubufb420
    @fubufb420 Před 11 měsíci

    Sum1 doing an antenna review video should know how to properly mount said antenna😂

    • @fubufb420
      @fubufb420 Před 11 měsíci

      Expectations as well... Price point. Got ya thru the wall and on the porch... That's it😢

  • @GregTheHun
    @GregTheHun Před 2 lety

    I just want to know where you found the linux mac and windows wallpaper where mac looks like a hipster

  • @FireFalcon
    @FireFalcon Před 2 lety

    Maybe if the house was a 5ft thick concrete box with no windows it would be a better purchase

  • @lee-annewalker3430
    @lee-annewalker3430 Před 2 lety

    MikroTik for the win.
    In my side of the world down here in the Southern Hemisphere l, good luck with lightning and copper cable…

  • @unmanaged
    @unmanaged Před 2 lety

    Can you swap the antennas out and try again?

  • @madix124
    @madix124 Před 2 lety

    Hey, what are you thoughts on Mikrotik's CAPsMAN system? I plan on setting up mesh wifi at my place (a 2 story building of concrete construction) and the consumer grade wifi mesh systems dont cut it for me

    • @unmanaged
      @unmanaged Před 2 lety +1

      As long as your religious about firmware updates for security purposes...

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety

      @@unmanaged good thing Mikrotik is still pushing updates to devices that are more than 5 years old