Forum Discussion

travelingbard's avatar
May 04, 2015

Wifi Boosters - New models??

Hiya! I know there have been some advances in Wifi boosters lately, so I was curious as to what people would recommend now.

More interested in a higher end model with hotspot features so a couple of computers, smart TV, etc can all access at once (not a simple USB model).

Looks like the "good" packages are in the 350.00-600.00 range +/-. Any comments about the new models that are out there??

Thanks!
Chris
  • We won a WiFi Ranger as a door prize at Escapade in Goshen last year (thank you WFR!) and it does that very well. Picks up park WiFi from a good distance, boosts it and puts out a new signal. Moving around we only need to change password on one component, phones, Kindles, etc. stay set on the Ranger password.

    I mounted the antenna on the ladder, ran cable through rear wall onto a cabinet over the rear window, wired it into the wall washer light circuit under the cabinets and removed the bulbs so I can turn it on and off with the wall switch,
  • This has worked quite well for several years. It's not a "New Model" however the firmware has just been upgraded.

    You can log on as many users as you want to without a problem.

    I have attached the antenna to my TV antenna and crank it up when I need to increase the range when parked far from the campground's WiFi antenna.

    What I use.
  • Ivylog's avatar
    Ivylog
    Explorer III
    jorbill2or wrote:
    Here
    A good example of reasonable price and what you want

    Thanks for the good link and it's something I'll buy BUT found it on Ebay for about 40% less. I've been using a USB/Yagi antenna with good results but it takes one for each puter
  • Some parks have banned these devices. When parks get busy they often limit you to 1 or 2 devices per person. And yes the router firmware can detect these devices and how many connections are going through them. A majority of the parks do not monitor their WIFI and in that case no problem using one of these.

    Connecting a smart TV in my opinion is not acceptable as streaming causes the WIFI in most parks to degrade rapidly and then we all complain.

    Pogoil.
  • Pogoil wrote:
    Some parks have banned these devices. When parks get busy they often limit you to 1 or 2 devices per person. And yes the router firmware can detect these devices and how many connections are going through them. A majority of the parks do not monitor their WIFI and in that case no problem using one of these.

    Connecting a smart TV in my opinion is not acceptable as streaming causes the WIFI in most parks to degrade rapidly and then we all complain.

    Pogoil.




    It's not always a park setting where you would want the boost. We also have Xfinity's wifi anywhere it's available, but signal strength can vary. The booster will work on that. As with anything, it's up to the user to be respectful of other people's needs with bandwidth in a full park, but wifi isn't limited to RV and state/national parks anymore...

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