1-5 of 5 Answers
I live in a 2-story condo, 1,800 SF with brick construction on 3-sdies. Ended up getting a 3-pack of the AC1200 to pair with my On-Hub router. This solved my connectivity issues where I would drop wifi calls.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.My home has three floors. I had constant dropouts and dead zones even though i was using the most powerful router I could find and range extenders. I expect that the Google WiFi with four modules would work. My router is on the middle floor of the house, and I put two modules upstairs and one downstairs, and I have full coverage everywhere. The modules apparently connect with and feed off of each other such that the range is constantly extended from one to the next, so depending upon placement, I have no idea about the concrete walls, but if any system can solve your problem I would think that the Google system will be the ohne.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.If you are struggling with Eero then will likely struggle with Google unless you add an additional one to make it 4
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.In my house, the signal didn't penetrate my exterior concrete block walls very well.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The eero and google wifi are roughly the same system. You are creating a mesh by having them overlap and these wifi points automatically adjust to the best signal for your device. Physics, not brands is what matters when trying to get radio signals through walls. That being said - there are minor upsides and downsides to each brand (Luma also is a brand) . If you are looking to watch movies and surf some siites- the least expensive option would be the best for you
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.
