1-4 of 4 Answers
Concrete will affect any router, and while I haven't used this specific one in such an environment, I HAVE used much worse routers in my warehouse with no noticeable issue. I have multiple offices 20-40ft from the router, which is in a concrete warehouse with steel doors. I've had almost zero hiccups in 1.5yr. (a few thousand aluminum cubes miiiight be the cause) I get proper speed/ping/etc, and have even used the WiFi to play a few games when I had to stay late and had no issues. Ironically, ping was actually better there than at my house. :( Sorry I can't give a proper 1-1 comparison, but I'd assume this one will be just fine, as it has notably better signal stability/range than my work routers. (that I've also used in normal office environments) AAAAAND if it's not quite up to it, just add another.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I believe this will work with the concert walls as it did for us but you'll need to strategically place them to connect.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes. It will. You can wire them together via Ethernet for max speed, or buy more mesh units to increase signal. Concrete will, however, Significantly impact your Wi-Fi signal.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes it blocks the range. I bought the 3 Google mesh package and theres a step when you're connecting the wifi asking that if thou have concrete walls or brick walls it will block the signal.
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