this post was submitted on 17 Nov 2023
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Home Networking

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My house has a detached garage and the new garage door opener can be opened remotely with WiFi access. Unfortunately, it seems like the opener has a terrible antenna, so even though our phones can get signal much further than the garage, the opener’s connection is intermittent.

I’m running an Eero 6+ with a wired backend setup in the house and have a spare Eero 6 Extender that I’m not currently using. I’ve thought about throwing that out there to see if it would help, but I’m in the American Midwest so we get sub-zero winters and 100+ degree summers. The garage is uninsulated, so I’m concerned the temperature would wreck the extender.

I get that I could dig a trench and run a wired solution, but that’s more effort than I’m really wanting to put into fixing one crappy device.

Anyone have any suggestions or experience with a similar issue? Would the extender survive cold winters and hot summers?

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I did ubiquity point to point radios (nanostation ac loco 5) for my detached garage and another set for my barn. They have been solid in all weather conditions Maine has thrown at them for over two years now.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

We use NSM devices extensively throughout the Far North Queensland Wet Tropics Rainforest, with monsoonal rains, 38c plus temperatures with high humidity and they don't miss a beat.

The biggest problem we have is that the trees grow in to their transmission path and need pruning.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I used TP-Link units out to our garage that is ~100' away from the house, but same concept and it's been working very well. Maybe a bit overkill if the garage is directly adjacent to the house, though.