Using spare router to boost wireless signal

Soldato
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8 Jan 2003
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I'm setting up my spare 360 in the bedroom as a Media Center Extender. When configuring it in WMC, it stated that network performance was poor and showed only two bars of the umpteen that were there.

The spare 360 has the original wireless adapter in it. My router is downstairs in the livingroom and is a D-Link DIR-655. It's connected via Gigabit ethernet to the media "server".

I have a spare D-Link DIR-615 (got it from Virgin). I was wondering if it would be possible to put this on the stair landing and use it to boost the wireless signal? Or would it have to be connected by cable to the main router?

Would I be better investing in the wireless N adapter for the 360?
 
You would have 2 wireless networks this case.

It's a case of disabling DCHP on the second router and making sure they have a different ip adress.
You connect the routers with each other on the ''switch'' ports using cat5...
I have 3 routers:

Orange livebox ( modem/router with 2 switch ports) - connected to 1pc & linksys wireless router - 192.168.1.1, dchp enabled and the standard gateway.
Linksys wrt54g wireless access point & 4 port switch - connected to 2 pc's wired and 2 laptops and a phone wireless and a cheapo no name router upstairs - 192.168.1.2 dchp disabled.
Generic cheapo router upstairs - connected to the linksys and my own pc - dchp disabled and 192.168.1.3...

So basically the 2 other routers are just used as a switch and wlan access...

PC's and other devices start from 192.168.1.10, usually up to .18 is in use...
If the no name router would be a wireless access point it'd have a different network name than the linksys network, however, as long as you set the default gateway to the first modem/router ( eg. the one with the Internet connection) it should be fine.
 
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I'd rather avoid running cable between the two routers. It looks like I can use something called WDS to allow wireless repeater bridging between the two routers. However it also appears the bandwidth is limited using this approach.

At any rate, to be able to do anything useful with the spare router, looks like I'll have to flash it to use DD-WRT :rolleyes:

Bricked router coming up....
 
If you have a 54gl, you could just flash tomato and use WDS and put it anywhere near a socket. Just make sure and enable STP, seems to have problems without it.

Anyway, the 615 doesn't have WDS to my knowledge. You could use it as a bridge (I think) with stock firmware, or, install dd-wrt and use wds. I'd try bridging first, but if no cables is a requirement dd-wrt is the way to go imo.
 
Update, I gave up on the wireless bridging/repeater approach and ran a cable up the outside wall of the house (took hours to drill through concrete walls!).

So I've got the downstairs router (a DIR-655, SSID: downstairs), connected to the upstairs router via cable to it's WAN port (DIR-615, SSID: upstairs). I've got it setup as a wireless access point (folowing the guide at http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Wireless_Access_Point) and all is working well.

However, there are devices such as laptops which will be used upstairs and down. They seem to remain connected to the AP they last connected to, whereas I'd like them to connect to the AP with the strongest signal. So if I'm in the livingroom and then go upstairs to the bedroom with my laptop, it should then "connect" to the upstairs AP. Is this do-able? Would it be better to just give the two AP's the same SSID and security settings?
 
Should be the strongest signal, automatically.

Although I have to ask (and I'm glad it works :)), if you had a signal upstairs already, why did you drill holes in the walls instead of simply using it as a wireless repeater?
 
Should be the strongest signal, automatically.

Although I have to ask (and I'm glad it works :)), if you had a signal upstairs already, why did you drill holes in the walls instead of simply using it as a wireless repeater?

I plan to stream media to the upstairs 360 so I wanted that connected via cable.
 
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