โSep-24-2014 07:49 PM
โSep-25-2014 04:50 PM
โSep-25-2014 03:22 PM
Flapper wrote:
You likely will not see much improvement overall. Especially for WiFi, you are at the mercy of what the campground has installed. Even if your signal strength can be increased, you will see little change in performance. That depends on the total bandwidth the CG has contracted for and how many other campers are sharing that bandwidth. Early to mid mornings are usually best - many are packing up to leave and are not on line. Evenings, especially after dark, are the worst, as everyone gets on line to browse the web or check e-mail.
I just retired from managing part of the wifi connections for a major University, and the only way it really can be improved is if the owner contracts with a higher speed/bandwidth provider, buys more capable equipment, and install more access points. It is only the last item that you might be able to improve on by buying your own booster - but if the coverage is that bad, you can count on the fact that the CG saved money on the overall amount of traffic their connection can handle, meaning it will still be slow. Your only real alternatives are to consign yourself to "primitive" camping...or piggyback on your cell phone service to use it's Internet connection instead of the CG.
โSep-25-2014 03:18 PM
โSep-25-2014 11:05 AM
โSep-25-2014 06:10 AM
โSep-25-2014 06:06 AM
Acampingwewillgo wrote:I used to have the Millenicom service which was $90/MO for 20GB of data and it was on the Verizon towers. I recently cancelled that account and bought a Straight Talk hotspot at WalMart. I bought the 4GB plan for $40 that is good for either 4GB of data or 2 months whichever expires first. I am not sure what service it uses and it is only 3G but it works fine for what I use it. Not as fast as the 4GLTE from Verizon but I was leaving 10-15GB on the table each month with Millenicom.
I am currently using a pay as you go (internet on the go) device that is on the Sprint network(works less frequently that frequently). My cell is on the Verizon network but with Straight Talk there can be no tethering. Since we frequent Thousand Trail parks(need to get my monies worth)..often a trip to the Lodge provides less than stellar internet service on their network but being able to capture what little signal there is from the rv would be so much more doable that trekking over and then finding out you still can't connect.
No doubt, a hot spot cell phone or air card would be a viable solution but for our usage, a monthly cost just doesn't seem worth it. Honestly, I can do most everything on the phone but my wife wants to use the laptop.
โSep-25-2014 05:55 AM
โSep-25-2014 05:28 AM
Gulfcoast wrote:
This might work.
โSep-25-2014 12:52 AM
โSep-24-2014 11:41 PM
โSep-24-2014 10:51 PM
โSep-24-2014 10:24 PM
โSep-24-2014 09:11 PM
โSep-24-2014 08:40 PM
โSep-24-2014 08:30 PM