Extending internet to our outbuilding

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  • čas přidán 17. 12. 2022
  • Today's episode is a bit of a departure from being in construction mode inside the He Said - She Shed (our outbuilding) or doing gardening projects or other outdoor stuff. We needed a solution for extending our home network and internet service to the outbuilding so I thought I'd share what we came up with.
    In case you're interested in the Ubiquiti Nanostation units we installed, here is a link direct to where I found them: amzn.to/3vzzKBN
    Props to a fellow CZcamsr "Crosstalk Solutions" where I found a ridiculously easy tutorial for setting up the gadgets I bought to create a wireless bridge. Here is the link to his video:
    • NanoStation M5 Setup a...
    Thanks for watching!
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    #DIY #newblog #homesteading #woodworking #garage #networking

Komentáře • 68

  • @deanwilliams7051
    @deanwilliams7051 Před rokem +12

    Yes, David, this was worthwhile content. You won't be the only folks who need to spread wifi connectivity beyond the walls of their residence.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      I definitely appreciate the affirmation, Dean. Thanks for being a faithful watcher! Happy new year to you and yours!

  • @jenniferolton1230
    @jenniferolton1230 Před rokem +2

    I love the diversity! I like that you guys do videos together and separately.

  • @robbensonmslpc1349
    @robbensonmslpc1349 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Exactly what I needed to hear, and I was even looking at how you framed out windows, so super helpful in different ways.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 3 měsíci

      Great! Glad it was helpful. Thanks for watching!

  • @LauraG313
    @LauraG313 Před rokem +5

    Ok, I am totally impressed with both of you! I have an IT/PM background and totally appreciate how well produced/edited these videos are! I can certainly see your technical writing and Renee’s PM skills being used here! ❤ I have loved all the variety of content! 👍🏻

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the affirmation! We'll keep up the variety for sure. In a past life, my technical background was telecommunications related but I've forgotten much more of that than I retained at this point. I enjoy projects like this and putting that hat back on from time to time. Thanks for watching, Laura!

  • @Theguyinthefez
    @Theguyinthefez Před rokem +2

    Very great content! You can tell this subject was really well researched and concisely presented.

  • @lauragrandgenett
    @lauragrandgenett Před rokem +3

    David, that was extremely helpful. Our neighbor needs this information to connect his garage to his house because he installed a whole house Generac that automatically kicks on when power is lost. I have that also but mine is close enough to my house to see the wifi so it sends me texts and emails when it exercises each week, needs maintenance or if we experience power loss and it takes over. Since our neighbor actually lives in Chicago, he wants that communication and needs exactly this set up you describe.
    Also, we want wifi in our barn so we can install a camera to check on our chickens. Something periodically treats our place like KFC and starts dragging off our hens. We need to know who needs to be dealt with. Also interested in installing a way to open and close their door via wifi.
    So thank you SO much for this! Loved it!

  • @LisaB_at_Pine_Ridge
    @LisaB_at_Pine_Ridge Před rokem

    Perfect timing! We are finally (after forever) finally getting fiber to the house and we’re wondering best way to get to barn. Love the content - thanks!

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem +1

      Excellent! I'm super happy to learn that you (and others) are finding value in this info. The more feedback we get (either positive or negative) really helps us understand what ya'll might want to see more of. Thanks for watching, Lisa!

  • @kaylakitty3814
    @kaylakitty3814 Před rokem +1

    This was very helpful and useful, especially the bit about the Power Over Ethernet device! I didn’t know something like that existed.

  • @terridiamond7862
    @terridiamond7862 Před rokem +2

    Project of the day. I like variety

  • @boatchild1
    @boatchild1 Před rokem +1

    This was perfect, we are struggling to get our internet working at our shop too! Now I understand better why and where i might try some new options

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Fantastic! So glad people are finding this helpful.

  • @crystallbell5545
    @crystallbell5545 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing that information very interesting.

  • @yarning4asmile
    @yarning4asmile Před rokem +1

    Hahaha, I feel this video so much! We have been working on figuring out how I can get super fast internet service out there and I have not even got the shed yet that I will be finishing out! We use Orbi system and have it all ready to go now!

  • @mymerrill8496
    @mymerrill8496 Před rokem +3

    Yes, content is appreciated

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Glad to hear it. We have a variety of projects in the queue so it's nice to have the affirmation that our audience is up for some variety as well. :-) Thanks for watching!!

  • @cherylcranford8908
    @cherylcranford8908 Před rokem +2

    Thanks David ever suggestions help

  • @scrapretroetc6775
    @scrapretroetc6775 Před rokem +3

    Love this info☺

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Outstanding! Glad you found is to be of value. I've got a few other home networking and home automation sorts of projects in my queue. Y'all'z feedback here is helping me gauge whether I document those projects or not. Thanks for watching ScrapRetro Etc!

  • @scrapretroetc6775
    @scrapretroetc6775 Před rokem +3

    Keep the diversity.

  • @darrellcook6940
    @darrellcook6940 Před rokem +1

    super helpful content. thanks

  • @richc.3100
    @richc.3100 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Dig your trench 3 feet wide. Lay power to one side, data and water on the other side.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 6 měsíci

      That's a good variation that no one has mentioned yet. Thanks for dropping by and joining the conversation!

  • @Andrea-si2vs
    @Andrea-si2vs Před rokem +1

    Our power had to be deeper, so we were able to get an Ethernet line to the outbuilding spaced higher up in the trench. That said, I may want to get WiFi to the hoop house this year, so this was helpful for thinking about options for that task. Thanks!

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Interesting to hear about your experiences to date. Glad to hear that my little documentary here is of use to someone. Thanks for watching!

  • @asdlfk3
    @asdlfk3 Před rokem

    Fortunately I dropped some direct bury CAT6 into the electrical trench from our house to our outbuilding. I ran coax as well but I’m yet to use that.
    Nice building by the way. I thought ours looked kinda big sitting 75’ from the house.

  • @Browningate
    @Browningate Před rokem +1

    Oh wow. These things (the 5AC; not the crummy 2.4Ghz ones) are actually back in stock now after 3 years.

  • @mscroggi
    @mscroggi Před 4 dny

    I would tweak your process a little. I had to extend my wifi to a back building like your scenario. I could not run a cable. I had a TPLink CPE device in the outbuilding pointed at the main house and it was able to connect to the household WIFI and extend the WIFI to my outbuilding with its own local WIFI broadcast. This worked fine for about a year or so, until recently the antenna died.
    I needed to replace the TPLink so I decided to go with Ubiquiti, and bought the loco and also the WIFI cube to use for WIFI in the outbuilding. For some reason the loco had issues getting an IP from the house network.. I worked and worked but finally gave up and decided to change my tactic.
    Instead of using the loco as a sensitive receiving antenna, I moved it to the house and set it up as a WIFI access point blaster aimed at the outbuilding. This is working just fine. I did NOT install another loco at the outbuilding. I simply use one at the house. I would recommend anyone attempting to set up this kind of connectivity, to buy only one loco and see if it delivers what you need at the remote location. You can always get a second loco and install it at the outbuilding later if needed.
    Evidently powerline technology has come a long way too.. I used powerline extension many years ago.. and it mostly worked.. but it was unreliable.. Reading about current powerline adapters.. they seem to be pretty solid. I wish I had a current powerline combo to test it. It might have been a good alternative.

  • @ghostsintheforum
    @ghostsintheforum Před rokem

    This is actually becoming big business. As more rural and backwoods areas are getting hooked up with fibre and starlink, there has become a demand for expansion into outbuildings. Many try to do it with simple range extenders only to find out that such equipment is not sufficient. While hard wired backhaul (wired bridge) will always be best, a wireless bridge is the next best way to expand to outbuildings. After running aerial ethernet to my shed, my neighbor wanted their's ran to their greenhouse and then the guy down the road wanted it done and then...

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Thanks for the engagement on this topic, ghostintheforum. That's some very interesting datapoint from your locale. When you put it that way, it make a ton of sense that there is no shortage of people with this scenario in search of a decent solution. Thanks for watching!!

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 Před 11 měsíci

    If you take fiberglass you can put that in the trench with the AC Line.
    Fiberglass insulates and is ideal for connecting scattered buildings. Then you have no problem with different potentials.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 11 měsíci

      Fiberglass? I'd never heard that before. Fascinating! So are you talking about fiberglass batting as used for insulating walls or fiberglass in some other form. Obviously its good at insulating from heat and cold but I've not heard it to be a good shield for electromagnetic interference (EMI).

  • @timothystockman7533
    @timothystockman7533 Před 11 měsíci +1

    You might have run a fiber pair for your ethernet. Fiber does care about being next to power lines.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 11 měsíci

      Another vote for fiber optics! Thanks for adding to the conversation timmothystockman7533.

  • @mspencerl87
    @mspencerl87 Před rokem

    There exists an option of aerial cables for RJ45 and also I would say it would be safe to run the data cables with the power underground as long as you get some shielded cable rated for outdoor..
    But you live and you learn.
    You could also done fiber and got a media converter to convert it back to RJ45 which would have probably worked well also.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Hey there! Thanks for adding your expertise to the conversation. I especially like the fiber idea!! Don't know why I didn't think of that. The cost would probably have been comparable. Thanks for watching!

  • @danflaherty1132
    @danflaherty1132 Před 5 měsíci

    Great, easy to follow video! Do you need a PoE injector at both ends or just the barn?

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Ah, good question. I'm using a PoE injector to power both devices. The one in the house as well as the unit attached to the barn. These units don't have a separate, dedicated power input anyway.

  • @skyacefox5690
    @skyacefox5690 Před 3 měsíci

    can you take the cord from the power of either that goes in to the wifi thing and just plug it in to a PC ?

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 3 měsíci

      Hmm. I've not actually tried that but in theory it would work. There are likely some specific settings in the Ubiquiti device but unfortunately, I don't have the exact details for that application.

  • @scooterjes
    @scooterjes Před 11 měsíci

    I know this is a little late but for future projects is you really need/want more speed next time you could run a fiber connection between the buildings and you wouldn't have to worry about interference. I know fiber sounds scary but it isn't. BTW fiber can go for MILES with the right equipment.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 10 měsíci

      Thanks scooterjes. Miles indeed! Don't know why I didn't think of that. Fiber has been a popular suggestion in this thread. Thanks for watching and joining the conversation!

  • @rayc6685
    @rayc6685 Před 10 měsíci

    Thanks for your video. Is the wifi network in your barn the same as in your house, or is it a different SSID (e.g., ssid_ext).

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 10 měsíci

      Great question! I chose to make the barn have a separate SSID but you could definitely make them the same in your installation. Thanks for watching!

  • @One-Eyed-Willly
    @One-Eyed-Willly Před měsícem

    wouldn't fiber work along the power cable?

  • @misteraon
    @misteraon Před rokem +1

    Instead of ethernet in the trench, you should have just ran a conduit while the ground was open. You could have run a fiber cable through it which is impervious to EMI from the electrical. The. You could put ethernet to fiber converters on both ends. And probably for the same or less than the radios.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Love this idea! Wish I had thought of fiber at the time. I’ll bet you’re right about the cost with the converters. Thanks for joining the conversation!

    • @misteraon
      @misteraon Před rokem

      @@hesaid-sheshed hopefully it gives the next person inspiration.

    • @misteraon
      @misteraon Před rokem

      Conduit is also fairly cheap comparatively. It never hurts to run one or two spares for future use.

  • @CharlesLScofieldJr
    @CharlesLScofieldJr Před rokem

    First off I though you did an excellent job of explaining your WiFi setup. This is something I may suggest to my sister since she recently switched over to fiber internet from cable. Her situation is that My Mom has an apartment that is separate from my sisters house. The two buildings are only separated by about 75 feet and they share the internet. I'm going to be visiting them in about a month or so I plan to see what sort of signal My Mom is getting since both building have brick veneer so that may effect the signal. The one question I have is did the PoE power sources come with the units or did you have to by those separately?

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 11 měsíci

      Thanks for the affirmation CharlesLScofieldJr. Sounds like you've got a good project on your hands and I'm glad our video offered a bit of direction. The PoE adapter does indeed come in the box with the NanoStation M5.

  • @fishingfrenzytv1555
    @fishingfrenzytv1555 Před rokem

    Does this support dual band WiFi? I’d like 5GHz for phones and stuff, but need 2.4 for my security cameras. Thanks

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Hey there! Apologies for the laggy reply. According to the specs found at the link below, it shows the the device to be 802.11n based. I believe that means it can will support both 5Ghz or 2.4Ghz WiFi. However, that just dictates what is used for the wireless bridge between the two Nanostation M5 devices. What's important is the capability of the access point you choose to connect downstream of the Nanostation in the remote building. You'll want to ensure THAT device supports both 2.4 and 5Ghz WiFi if indeed that's a requirement for your application.
      Since you bought up phones though, I'll throw in one more thing here just for good measure. You're likely familiar with this I'll just mention that 5Ghz WiFi is a very different animal than "5G" cellular.
      Thanks for watching!!
      www.amazon.com/Ubiquiti-Networks-LOCOM5-NanoStation-loco/dp/B004EHSV4W/ref=psdc_1194486_t3_B00HXT8FFI

    • @fishingfrenzytv1555
      @fishingfrenzytv1555 Před rokem +1

      @@hesaid-sheshed awesome, thank you for that detailed reply! I’m going to give your set up a try!

  • @demos113
    @demos113 Před rokem

    Shielded CAT6 ethernet cable is a thing.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Greetings demos113! Indeed, shielded cable is commonplace but it's not necessarily as bulletproof as you might think. It's effective with stray RF garbage in the airwaves but it will be outmatched when running parallel to AC lines. It's definitely a best practice to make other arrangements in commercial situations but if you have a residential scenario thats less demanding, the diminished bandwidth from the AC interference might not be a deal breaker. It'll definitely still work, but just hamstrung a bit. At the end of the day, the performance might still be on part with the wireless bridge we put up -- but I'm not certain as I've done no such side-by-side testing. Your scenario may have other variables to consider too so the solution we landed on may or may not be your best option. YMMV. Thanks so much for watching and joining the conversation!

  • @ncironhorse8367
    @ncironhorse8367 Před 8 dny

    holy crap, just tell what you did in the first in two minutes. I don't need a dissertation on the subject

  • @mskmsk7174
    @mskmsk7174 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Not if you use fiber along side power.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před 6 měsíci

      That's been the popular alternative that several have suggested. Dunno why I didn't think of it at the time. Thanks for joining the conversation!

  • @gerrymcerlean8432
    @gerrymcerlean8432 Před rokem

    Your power cable needed to be 2 feet deep but not the ethernet cable. Surely you could have buried your power cable 2 ft. 6 deep and the ethernet cable 6 inches deep.

    • @hesaid-sheshed
      @hesaid-sheshed  Před rokem

      Thanks for joining the conversation, gerrymcerlean8432! You have a point there, I suppose I could have buried it shallow as there wouldn't necessarily have been an electrical inspection involved at that point. The sub panel in the barn had to be inspected though and those guys are pretty sharp eyed. They likely would have seen some low voltage stuff poking into the building at that same location and questioned it.
      I'm noodling on your input here just a bit and it does make me wonder where the 2' rule comes from for buried wire. My best guess about that standard is that it's considered the minimum safe depth to hedge agains it actually being dug up and thus that utility getting damaged/taken out of service. As I recall, even when Comcast drew coaxial cable up to the house, it was a pretty respectable trench too. I didn't pay enough attention to measure it but I'm betting they are bound to the same sorts of rules for burying any sort of utility.
      Thanks for watching!