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From my experience it can go 10,000 sq ft without interruption (we have a large warehouse we tried it in). If you have walls in the way (like if you are trying to get a signal on your patio) it can go roughly about 50 feet outside of our brick walls and not lose any strength, but once you get around 250 feet it starts to die off. But this does not necessarily mean you will see the same results.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Under most circumstances, a wireless router will not reach another street. The house next to you may be able to pick up signal, depends on how close they are.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I have a 3600 sq/ft home and I'm able to catch my signal between 2 or 3 houses away.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Well, I can only answer subjectively as I didnt do any measurements, and this type of question depends so much on placement within your house and what kind of obstructions are between you and the router. I live on an average sized suburban street, and I can definitely get a good 2.4GHz signal from across the street. 5GHz is completely gone at this distance. My router is located in an upstairs room and my house is basic wood frame / vinyl siding construction. The 5GHz signal isn't nearly as strong so I wouldn't expect to get any kind of crazy range on the 5GHz side. I am also in a fairly wifi congested area with at least dozens of other access points around me that I can see. Hope that helps some.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The EA9500 is designed for very large household and tested to be more impressive at 100 feet away.
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