I agree, but with the insulation and such, how much of an effect will that have in the loft etc.
Due to house renovation I put three AC-Pros in my loft when I moved in plus one in a single storey extension loft and they've worked really well on both 2.4GHz and surprisingly 5GHz. The loft has two types on insulation so 20cm+ in total. The reason for so many APs is the house has three extensions so each AP is placed to cover one area bounded by double layer brick and block walls.
I mounted them about 90 - 100cm above the ceiling, and the only issue I note is the loft can be 45 to 50 degrees in peak summer weather at that height but three years on an no failures so far. I am now waiting on more WiFi 6 AP choice and will then mount them below the ceiling as we've renovated some areas.
Due to house renovation I put three AC-Pros in my loft when I moved in plus one in a single storey extension loft and they've worked really well on both 2.4GHz and surprisingly 5GHz. The loft has two types on insulation so 20cm+ in total. The reason for so many APs is the house has three extensions so each AP is placed to cover one area bounded by double layer brick and block walls.
I mounted them about 90 - 100cm above the ceiling, and the only issue I note is the loft can be 45 to 50 degrees in peak summer weather at that height but three years on an no failures so far. I am now waiting on more WiFi 6 AP choice and will then mount them below the ceiling as we've renovated some areas.
Currently installing Unifi equipment in our new house and having issues I'm hoping you experts can assist with. I have a UDM downstairs connected to our lounge wall port, a FlexHD on the first floor (bedroom 3), and a FlexHD on the second floor (master bedroom). I haven't tried setting up the master bedroom yet, however, when trying to set up the FlexHD on the first floor connected to the wall port, I was having issues connecting to the AP during set up.
I brought the AP downstairs and connected directly to the UDM and it worked fine, updated and configured. Since taking the AP back upstairs and reconnecting it to the wall port in the room it is showing as "disconnected" on the app despite the blue light on top.
For reference i am with OFNL so the fibre comes into the house via the front door into our media cupboard where the ONT connects to our router which then has three ethernet outs to the three wallports (Lounge, Bed 3, Master Bed) the UDM is connected to the Lounge wall port.
Help?!
You have two routers on the network. What’s the second router for? Anything plugged into that will not be on the same network as the UDM in a normal setup and anything plugged into the UDM will have double NAT.
Normally you would plug the ont into the UDM and then everything else plugs into the UDM.
You have two routers on the network. What’s the second router for? Anything plugged into that will not be on the same network as the UDM in a normal setup and anything plugged into the UDM will have double NAT.
Normally you would plug the ont into the UDM and then everything else plugs into the UDM.
Good point, I missed the mention of 'our router'.
OP - Remove the current router and move the UDM into the media cupboard. Connect a patch cable from the ONT to the WAN port of the UDM. Then connect patch cables from the LAN ports of the UDM to the wallports and your FlexHD should connect.
Is there another way? We wanted the UDM in the lounge for better wireless rather than being closed in our media cupboard by our front door, plus the ports on the UDM feed the TV/PS5 etc? If not we can reluctantly do it, and it means I also wasted £80 on a router for the media cupboard :facepalm:
There's a few ways it could be made to work but none of them are desirable. You'd be better of binning off that other router and using the UDM.
For your setup the UDM is the wrong product. You would have been better off with a switch and AP in the lounge if it transpires that having the UDM in the cupboard knackers the wireless signal.
Move the UDM into the cupboad and connect a cable from the LAN side to the wallplate that runs to the lounge. Get a small switch and connect it to the wallplate in the lounge. Connect the TV & PS5 to that switch. If the wireless downstairs suffers as a result of moving the UDM then you could put another AP onto this switch.
Edit - Another way to do it would be to move the cable from the WAN port of the UDM to a LAN port. Disable DHCP on the UDM and then the UDM isn't doing any routing, that's all done by the other router. You're then using the UDM as just a switch, AP & UniFi controller. You still physically have 2 routers but only 1 is routing. Not ideal, but it'd work.
There two ways you can do it:
1) you would need 2 cables going to the lounge, one to go from the ONT to the UDM and one to go from the UDM back to the media cupboard which plugs into a switch for and the rest of the house.
2) As the above poster said, disable the UDM's routing ability and use use it as an overpriced switch and access point.
If you wanted to go full ubiquiti and #1 wasn't an option then the UDM should be in the media cupboard and if you needed more wireless then putting an extra AP in the lounge would have been the best bet. With an AP in the same room as the PS/TV etc. WiFi would probably be fine and I doubt you would notice the difference cabling it up If you really wanted to cable it up then you would need to add a 4 port switch which aren't expensive. Can you return the other router and get another AP (if you even need it, the WiFi might be fine, especially as you have another AP in the house already)?
The UDM is pretty good value for that it is router, switch, access point and controller. Buying an equivalent access point and controller will cost as much as the UDM.
I've just started down the rabbit hole that is Ubiquiti Networks.
Apart from a minor DHCP hiccup with the AP (it was trying to serve DHCP when my old router is actually doing this already), everything went smoothly.
I would go USG but I think it's days are numbered and I don't have a requirement for a UDM because the access point and switch components would be redundant. I just need a more up to date USG!
It can get expensive quickly![]()
The AP's don't have a DHCP server in them so I don't know what the problem actually was, but it wasn't that.
I think that's a good shout. If I can get a good deal on a USG, it would at least tide me over until something more appropriate is released.The UXG-Pro is an early access but there's no indication of when it'll go GA. I'm using a USG here on my 900Mbps FTTP connection and it does the job brilliantly. If you could get a USG cheap enough then it might be worth considering. It's days are numbered but if the price is right it'd be worth looking at. I'm not going to rush to replace my USG when the UXG-Pro is GA.
It was (although my description may have been incorrect). Even though I don't have a USG, the fact that I had ticked "DHCP Server" in the Controller means it couldn't allocate an IP address (because it couldn't find the USG). As soon as I put it back to 'none', it found the existing DHCP server and all was good.
I think that's a good shout. If I can get a good deal on a USG, it would at least tide me over until something more appropriate is released.