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the basic idea of this system is a meshed network. all of the units connect to each other as long as they are within certain distance of each other (this will vary depending on the layout of your home and the various materials in your walls). The set up process provides guidance on placement and will tell you if the mesh connection is good or less good. I elevated mine as much as possible and placed them about 25-30 ft apart, but not in a line-of-sight arrangement, and they set up easily and have been working great since the day I installed them.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Each unit works off the nearest. Ideally, they should be close to the base, but they're able to work off each other to extend the range
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.My house is similar. The system works in hops. Hub to #1 to #2 To #3. But I did not notice any latency.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The short answer is, because it creates a mesh network, all satellites and the OnHub receive their signals from each other and intelligently decide which is the most powerful connection to route back to the router which is the gateway sending traffic out over your modem to the Internet and visa versa. In your scenario, it will likely be relaying from the OnHub through each node (satellite point). Here's a really great article that explains mesh networking in detail: http://www.androidcentral.com/how-wifi-mesh-networks-work
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Based on what Google claimed, these hubs are smart enough that it would pick the hub with the best signal to communicate. Typically speaking a mesh network, all the hubs has the ability to connect to one another, so I would say in your case the hub will connect to which ever one that is the closest.
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