To get the best results, you have to plug the extender into a power outlet midway between your router and the troublesome area. The extender then picks up the WiFi signal from your router and pushes it deeper into your home.

By contrast, mesh routers use two different frequency bands, which limits the speed loss to roughly 10 percent. They also allow you to move the satellite units around your home, steering a WiFi signal around obstacles.


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This issue needs serious consideration, with a signal distance I understand capped out at 300', with loss of strength seriously degraded when you aren't even 1/3 that range, with consideration of obstructions such as trees, walls, furniture, placing the Arlo Router in the front of the house but trying to secure camera's around the entirety of the outside of your home plus on structures such as shops or watching entry points to your property or your mailbox at various locations of your home... ARLO MUST provide boosters.

t-Mobile for example has provided a FREE booster for cell signal at my home, prior to that AT&T, however I would for a reasonable price purchase signal boosters if it meant I could without concern place cameras in any location on my property whether I was on a small piece of land or more than a half acre.

it is clear to me that the new Arlo Ultra cameras I have, while they do have improvements over the Arlo HD, does lack the same signal strength that the HD system had for some reason. Additionally; I have now dead zones due to poor strength that didn't exist previously. That said, even with my Arlo HD system, I still had a strong desire to have a booster, I don't want a 3rd Party, I want an Arlo design and tested product that will work seemlessly.

Use a second (or third) base. That has always been the method to boost signal to specific cameras. Position the bases appropriately and sync specific cameras with each base. If the Ethernet connection is an issue, a WiFi or powerline extender can be used.

A note about signal strength: Poor connectivity and offline issues can be caused by environmental issues like WiFi interference or poor signal due to range. If you're experiencing this, you might try elevating your SmartHub and moving it away from any other devices that emit a wireless signal (routers, baby monitors, telephones, etc.).

The engineering team is looking into reports of signal strength concerns. I understand that when elevated, this may make the location less ideal but this is a valid step for improving signal strength for any WiFi device. If it's down low, underneath an entertainment stand or something similar, the signal strength will be significantly weaker.

Are you having issues with connections/recordings due to the apparent low signal levels? If not, I wouldn't be concerned - perhaaps it's more of a display issue. WHat's the distance between base and cameras and how many walls, etc. does the signal pass through?

3 Cameras are within 10 to 20 meters and the signal passes through 3 wooden (hard wood) walls and plaster. The signal shows 2 bars rather than the 2 expeded 3 bars. I get connection issues on one of the cameras which is less than 15 meters away from Smart Hub which is in a high prominent position.

The disappointing thing with the Arlo Ultra SmartHub design is that it does not leverage existing infrastructure (ie 3 existing Wireless N routers which expands the WiFi signal - like a Wireless Mesh Network). My assumption is that I need to purchase another Arlo Ultra SmartHub to gain better wireless coverage?

I was very surprised to find that when I mounted a camera outside approx 1 mtr above the garage door, and within about 2-3 mtrs of the hub (outside wall in between), the signal dropped to lowest orange dot...

Totally opposed to this, I also have a camera on the rear wall of the house looking into the garden...and the wifi bars are FULL???? This is about 7-9 mtrs away with internal walls/ kitchen/ external wall in between, so how the heck do you reconcile that????

Concrete walls are probably the big issue. I'd bet there are rebars in the walls to help support them - both the metal and concrete will have an effect on the signal being able to penetrate. Not much you can do other than to keep the base close to the cameras and maybe use a second base for cameras that have a weak signal due to the positioning of the first base.

My guess is that the main router and Ultra base were interacting and the Ultra base would switch over to 5 ghz ( which has less range )... moving away solved this and increased the signal as now it stays on 2.4ghz ( better range ) giving a better camera signal.


I've just bought a Netgear mesh extender and unfortunately, I've learned the hard way that it isn't compatible as the base station has its own wifi which doesn't get extended from the mesh extender. very disappointed. Maybe another Homebase would work but not keen to spend another couple of hundred for a test hoping that it works.

That said, keep an eye out for client devices (phones, laptops and so on) that automatically connect to whichever network offers the best signal at the time. If you've used a device like that on both your main network and the extender's network, then it's possible that your device will jump from one to the other without you realizing it. For instance, if your laptop is on your main network and you move a bit closer to the extender than the router, then your laptop might lose its connection and jump over to the range extender's network for the stronger signal strength, even though the speeds on that extender network might be slower.

There is no functional difference between a Wi-Fi signal booster and a network extender. Manufacturers use different terms to describe the same products, and all of these devices work the same way -- by re-broadcasting your router's signal through a wired connection (your power outlet). A Wi-Fi repeater is slightly different. It connects to your router wirelessly and re-broadcasts the signal in another room.

The best approach is to plug the extender in somewhere close to the dead zone you're trying to fix, but not within that dead zone. That's because you need the extender to have a decent connection with your router in order to put out a worthwhile signal of its own.

The performance is particularly sharp, too. In my tests at the CNET Smart Home, an RE605X in the basement was able to extend the router's signal from upstairs just fine, giving my upload and download speeds a significant boost in every room I tested. Throughout the entire 5,800-square-foot-home, among all the extenders I tested, the RE605X delivered the fastest average upload speeds to both Wi-Fi 5 and Wi-Fi 6 devices, the fastest average download speeds to Wi-Fi 6 devices and the second fastest average download speeds to Wi-Fi 5 devices.

It's a little long in the tooth at this point, and it won't wow you with Wi-Fi 6 speeds, but the strong ease of use and the steady, dependable level of performance it offers mean it's still an absolute steal. It's not as fast as the top models I've tested in the years since, and I haven't had a chance to retest it at the CNET Smart Home just yet -- but it's still a great choice if you want to boost the signal from the Wi-Fi router to a back room that sits beyond the router's reach, but you'd like to pay as little as possible to get the job done.

Also called a Wi-Fi signal booster, a range or Wi-Fi extender is a compact, plug-in device that is simple and hassle-free to implement. Wi-Fi extenders use built-in Wi-Fi radios and antennas to pair wirelessly with your router. No Ethernet cable is required. Plug in one near the edge of your router's wireless range and pair it with the network, and it'll start rebroadcasting the signal farther out for significantly faster internet speeds throughout your home.

With my control speeds established, it was time to start adding in the range boosters and seeing which ones improved things the best. Pairing each one with the router only required me to plug it in nearby and press the WPS button on both devices -- after that, I relocated them downstairs, to the basement rec room, which was the farthest point from the router that still had a decent signal and speeds. Whenever you're using a Wi-Fi range extender, that's typically the best place to put it: just shy of the edge of your router's range, where it will still receive a strong enough signal to put out a strong signal of its own. The best way to find that spot? Grab your phone or laptop and run some speed tests.

For my first batch of range extender tests a few years back, I tested four bargain-priced models to see which one offered the most bang for the buck. It was the start of the pandemic and people were scrambling to bolster their home networks -- I wanted to be sure we could point them to a good, budget-friendly pick that would do the best job as a signal booster offering an extra room's worth of coverage in a pinch.

My top pick, the TP-Link RE605X, makes it easy to tweak settings via TP-Link's Tether app on an Android or iOS device. Again, the features make for slim pickings, but you can check signal strength or turn on High-Speed Mode, which dedicates the 2.4GHz band for traffic from the router to the range extender, leaving the 5GHz free for your normal Wi-Fi network traffic. That mode actually wasn't as fast as sharing the 5GHz band like normal when I tested it out, because those incoming 2.4GHz speeds are limited, but it still might be a useful option in some situations. 0852c4b9a8

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