1-10 of 10 Answers
It depends on a number of factors (placement, number of connected devices, etc), but the Orbi system generally covers approximately 4,000 sq. ft. If you’re able to place your Orbi satellite or Orbi router in the area in your home closest to the RV, it may allow you to access the WiFi signal from your RV.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I have a 3200 sq ft home that has walls like a fort and I can get a great signal from all throughout the house and my entire yard (which is admittedly not in proportion with the house). If you put the main base station in your home and the satellite system in the RV, the system will tell you if you have a good signal (which you should), and then you will be bathed in glorious wi-fi.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The Netgear Orbi router will easily cover you house and RV. I have a house and barn on a one acre lot and I get great serve everywhere.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Very likely. I have a 4500 sq ft home, and the two of these cover the whole house and the outside are immediately around the home.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes. Please make sure that you place Satellite device close to your garage and you will get superior wifi speed outside of the home. My home is 2766 square feet and i am getting 200+ mbps through out homein Wifi.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I'd say it's very likely to do so as long as the RV isn't too far away (I haven't tested the boundaries too far - my interest was vertical extension between floors, which it handled well). I would think it would do well anywhere within an acre of land without too many obstructions.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.This is dependent on lots of things, the layout of your house, where the router is placed, the amount of concrete between the router and the RV, how far the RV is from the house etc. You might give it a try and return it if it doesn't work.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I think that this can help you as long as nothing is blocking or interfering with the signal from the house to the RV, if you can get the satellite close to the RV. It only needs to plug in, so look for a good spot with a free plug that you don't mind having it showing.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I believe it could as I had no problem with coverage in an 1800 square foot home. However, it could also largely depend on how noisy the wireless spectrum in that area is.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.This is a very powerful pair of router devices that need to communicate with EACH OTHER using a Wi-Fi channel. Out-of-the-box the Orbi is setup to address your issues. MAYBE! The primary router should easily saturate your home with both its Wi-Fi bands. Frankly, it ought to provide service to the RV without the Satellite router. The issue is how to get unimpeded Wi-Fi to the RV where you might place the other half of this kit --- the satellite router that also uses the same Wi-Fi radio channels. I don't know the "skin" material in your RV and how transparent it is to the Wi-FI radio waves. I don't know the distance. If I were you, I'd call Netgear customer service and talk to them with some information like what I asked. They may conclude these are ideal devices for you. They may conclude that you are better off using their Powerline devices if the RV is connected to your house electrical service. This can work perfectly IF the house wiring is on the same circuit as the RV when plugged in.
I would recommend:
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