Forum Discussion

beetle1's avatar
beetle1
Explorer
Feb 06, 2014

park wifi woes

We are new at full-time vacationing (2months)and must report that the three parks we have been in so far have virtually no wifi even when they advertise it free or with a charge. We now just use our at&t phone as our hotspot. Anybody have ideas on this??

69 Replies

  • You might want to research one of THESE. I've heard good things about them, but I don't have any personal experience with them.

    We too, use the Verizon Jetpak...works just fine, but easy to exceed monthly capacity if not careful.

    Ron
  • RoyB wrote:
    We use the Verizon MIFI unit. Ours is older and grandfathered but gives us a 3GB dataplan for around $27 a month. This is plenty of data for us to check in with the kids, pay our online bills, and do some searching on the internet.

    The current Verizon MIFI plan is a 5GB Dataplan for around $60 a omnth I think it is...

    The stand alone MIFI units will provide a WIFI HOTSPOT for up to five of your wifi ready devices and is secure.



    If you want to get into downstreaming alot of data then the MILLENICOM 20GB dataplan would be a good setup. It uses the same verizon Network...

    Kinda neat to slip the MIFI unit in your shirt pocket and grab a beach chair and head down to the ocean if you like. You bring your WIFI HOTSPOT with you and it doesnt tie up your cellphone...

    Roy ken


    We used to use this and it works great,, We now use a JETPAK by Verizon , its about the same size , jut a bit thicker is all.... we can link up to 10 devices to it,,, never leave home without it!
  • We have stayed in a lot of RV parks advertising wifi. Most are little better than useless. Even the best were only useable for checking e-mail and light web surfing.
    If you need/want fast internet then best to get your own hot spot.
  • RoyB's avatar
    RoyB
    Explorer II
    We use the Verizon MIFI unit. Ours is older and grandfathered but gives us a 3GB dataplan for around $27 a month. This is plenty of data for us to check in with the kids, pay our online bills, and do some searching on the internet.

    The current Verizon MIFI plan is a 5GB Dataplan for around $60 a omnth I think it is...

    The stand alone MIFI units will provide a WIFI HOTSPOT for up to five of your wifi ready devices and is secure.



    If you want to get into downstreaming alot of data then the MILLENICOM 20GB dataplan would be a good setup. It uses the same verizon Network...

    Kinda neat to slip the MIFI unit in your shirt pocket and grab a beach chair and head down to the ocean if you like. You bring your WIFI HOTSPOT with you and it doesnt tie up your cellphone...

    Roy ken
  • jnharley wrote:
    You just cannot depend on campgrounds providing adequate wifi. Bring your own by using a hotspot or a mifi device. We do not use campground provided wifi for any personal business anyway because most are not secure.


    X-2

    I use a AT&T WiFi and have not looked back. My experience is that most campgrounds are barely adequate at the best and not secure.
  • Realtech makes a booster that will enhance the strength of the signal and help manage the use of adjacent wifi hot spots that are not password protected.

    Band width which affects the number of online users in a hot spot is fixable only by trying to get on when the rest of the campground is asleep.

    Many times the campground wifi machine will simply be down, asking the CG office to rest the machine fixes the problem.

    Ask for a site closer to the transmitter if you do not have a booster.

    Plan to get date critical transaction done several days before due to allow searching for another hot spot.

    NSA, Snowdon, and the Belarus folks assure me that there are no absolutely secure transactions. My bank account numbers were snatched 2 years ago in a bank to bank transaction completely unrelated to transactions that I had requested. You must have other means of protecting your critical info.

    pops
  • There are several threads on the subject - most in the Technology Corner section of this forum.

    There are multiple problems involved in setting up good WiFi for a campground.

    One is that it takes a good bit of expertise to set up the various antennas and repeaters necessary to ensure good consistent coverage of a large physical area. It usually takes an expensive professional to do such a setup properly.

    Another is that many RV parks don't have a very high bandwidth access portal to the internet. When 50 or 100 RVs try to connect at the same time - and RV park need to have a T-1 line or higher - something costing a couple hundred dollars per month. If the RV park is not located in a major metropolitan area - that may be impossible, no matter how much money the RV park owner is willing to spend.

    The third big issue is how people use WiFi these days. A shared system like an RV park will not be setup for streaming movies, videos, music by dozens of people at the same time. They simply don't have the bandwidth available. So when a few people get on the WiFi system and start such high usage links - everyone else trying to get on either can't or has very poor speed.

    Another thing. I never check my e-mail or do any serious on-line stuff over an open public system like a park WiFi. It is always over a secure connection such as my AT&T Phone or my Verizon MiFi.

    The nice thing is that yesterday AT&T cut my data plan costs by 1/3 with their new lower rates to compete with T-Mobile's recent plans.
  • You just cannot depend on campgrounds providing adequate wifi. Bring your own by using a hotspot or a mifi device. We do not use campground provided wifi for any personal business anyway because most are not secure.
  • If you really need access to the internet, you're better off with your own hotspot or air card. Campgrounds are typically in business for recreation and many of them do not have the expertise or money to provide reliable WiFi access.