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I bought the box with 3 units. Each is exactly the same. One is attached to my existing router with an ethernet cable and the other 2 have to be in range of another one. So by putting one farther out from the first and the third farther from the second you can extend your range. My problem wasn't distance, but having to get the signal through concrete and rebar walls and floors and it seems to have helped a lot. Now I can install security cameras where I couldn't get a signal before. But my application may be different from yours. When I explained what I wanted to do this is the system recommended by the guy in the store and he seemed quite knowledgeable.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Hi, Nightowl. Each Velop Node acts as a parent node or a child node and they provide their own bandwidth once successfully configured in the Velop network.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Each node provides its own bandwidth with 1 channel from the node to communicate back to the unit plugged into your internet Ethernet. The system automatically load balances as you move from node to node and you can assign device priority.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.One of the nodes has to be connected to the internet via an ethernet cable. The other nodes then connect to this parent node. The nodes communicate with each other via a dedicated channel, so the speed to your devices is not affected.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Each node will communicate back to the primary unit via the 5Ghz back-haul path. When you place the nodes, you place them so that you create clouds (coverage areas) and each node expands the coverage.
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