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Whoa! This is a broadband ROUTER, not a BRIDGE or GATEWAY or REPEATER
No, it CAN be a device like that. If you load some other firmware is can quite readily be used as a client device. I know, I've done it and it works quite well. Same thing goes for other devices capable of loading the dd-wrt firmware. Easy, reliable and cheap. You can't connect a wifi router to a wifi access point, then repeat what it says to another wifi box like a laptop. Again, not correct. You CAN use one as a WDS device. It's basically a repeater of sorts. And in the process of doing this wastes half the bandwidth. Listens on the radio, processes the packets, then retransmits on the same radio. It's not a full duplex operation. Thus while you CAN do this it's generally a waste of effort because it's slow. Then there's also the limitation that some networks won't interact with repeaters. Not to mention the fact that the type of antenna you'd likely use up on the mast won't give decent coverage down to the deck and cabins below. The data flow is from the Ethernet WAN port. It has no way to connect to a wifi hotspot. It's a ROUTER, it can be configured to sling the packets around in any direction. Assuming you'd want to, which I'd recommend against. Why bother using an AC inverter? Many wifi devices work quite well off 12vDC. Now....to get faster service....you need to buy a high powered Access Point Higher power is a myth. Higher power often gets you more signals than you want, thus degrading the available bandwidth to the actual networks you need. I can crank my WRT54GS to 250mw but found it works best at about 30mw. What's most important is to get a device that lets you adjust the power settings and to keep them as low as possible. Both from a noise and a heat perspective. Cranking a router up to it's full wattage often makes them unstable. Couple that with being up on the mast in direct sunlight and you'd have troubles. If you put another router on the other end of that Ethernet cable, you end up with the problem of the second router inside the boat, which wirelessly would connect to your laptop, INTERFERING with the receiver up the mast talking to the hotspot....slowing us down to repeater speed, or worse as it's not synchronized if the hotspot can't hear your laptop direct to avoid crashing the signals simultaneously transmitting. RF on the air ISN'T clairvoyant or magic...it's ANALOG. Bull**** all around. The point is to set your boat's access point to a different frequency and to use a low power setting with proper antennae. I found our on-boat network worked best at about 10mw with just the regular rubber duckie antennae on it. No interference whatsoever. That and it doesn't interfere with the up-mast router because that antenna's radiation pattern (donut shaped on the horizontal plane) doesn't extend downward to the cabin. And since the on-boat access point is set to a low power it doesn't interfere with the shore networks either. Same thing goes for the on-boat laptops, they're also configured to use a lower power setting and thus only see the on-boat SSID. Now, THIS product solves running TWO wires up the mast because it adds the DC power to run the AP at the remote location (mast top) to the Ethernet data on the Ethernet cable. Power over Ethernet (PoE) is nothing new. Most routers support it or you can use an adapter to split the cable to support it. Bear in mind the further you push DC voltage the more drop you'll have due to skinny wire. I found it was more reliable to just run 16ga for power right to the router. This is because the WR (wireless router) has no facility to connect to another wireless access point. It is not an access point, itself. You got the wrong box....WAP54GPE or my little wireless repeater box is the box you need. Sorry.... Or you need advice that's accurate. Loading up new firmware opens quite a few more options for some models of router. Try it, it works quite nicely. -Bill Kearney |
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