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16-01-2024, 05:02 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jul 2018
Location: Australia, Tasmania
Posts: 431
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Wifi booster for Observatory question
Hi, I am not sure if i have this posted in the correct section, but will ask here hoping it is correct.
My roll off roof observatory is about 80 meters from the house, so i will round it up and say 100 meters.
What i am hopefully planning to do is put my Laptop out there and remote access it from my home desktop pc.
i have done the testing inside the house and it all works fine, but in the Observatory it can't pick up anything.
I have very limited knowledge on what is good, bad, hopeless for increasing the signal to go that far.
Ideally i would like it to be waterproof so i can install it on the side of the observatory.
I was looking at Wavlink AC1200, but again, not really sure if it is good, bad, or just rubbish.
Any advice on what i should be looking for or anything that you can recommend would be greatly appreciated or just where to even start looking at options would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Peter.
Last edited by bluesilver; 16-01-2024 at 05:22 PM.
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16-01-2024, 05:48 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: Sydney and South Coast NSW
Posts: 6,625
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Peter,
Most may disagree, but to future proof your Astro communications I recommend a hardwired connection to your house with Cat 5e or Cat 6 cabling
It’s a pain in the butt initially but peace of mind for the future
My Dome is 30m from the house and I went hardwired ( underground trench with conduit) and never had an issue in 3 years so far. Ran power and multiple Cat 5e cables in separate 25mm conduits.
No need for routers , hubs , repeaters and so on ………either end
My 2 cents
Cheers
Martin
PS: Cat5e data cabling is good up to 100m (100mbs data )
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16-01-2024, 06:43 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Cecil Hills (Sydney)
Posts: 557
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There's no doubting that hard wiring is the best way to go - I agree with Martin. If you can manage it, definitely go that way. Just get yourself an RJ45 crimping tool, and a small bag of RJ45 pass through connectors (pass through makes the job very easy IMO) and a spool of CAT5 / CAT6.
However, if you can't manage that then WiFi is going to be your next stop. You might need a high gain antenna for the obsie for the range you're considering. I have a Wavlink AC1200 here and it provides a stronger signal than any other piece of networking gear in the house. I have mine downstairs, hardwired to the router through the walls etc upstairs. I'm not sure how stable it would be as a strict WiFi only repeater, but in the configuration that I have it in, it's as solid as a rock and has been going for about a year so far.
Others here might be able to assist regarding whether the distance you need to cover would be doable via WiFi. You might need a directional antenna / point to point style setup to manage it.
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16-01-2024, 06:46 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: Lithgow, NSW, Australia
Posts: 1,444
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On top of Martins mention, Cat5E cable isn't overly expensive on a 305 metre (from memory or was it 305' (100 metres, more likely), I'll never know). I'm a hard-wired fanatic too.
My son and I ran Cat5E and fibre optics from my shed in the back yard (plus electrical) for a switch and security camera, plus access to the internet for other crap in the shed. It's not the same distance but the connection NEVER fails like everything WiFi seems to do, repeaters or not (we have pro Rukus equipment purchased used at auction).
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17-01-2024, 01:36 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jul 2018
Location: Australia, Tasmania
Posts: 431
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Appreciate the replies and advice.
I was looking at hardwiring, but unfortunately for me i think that may very well be a issue.
I have quiet a few underground water pipes running in different directions in and around where the observatory is ( i am on a farm )
I could possibly set it up so that i plug one end in and run it out each and every time i want to use it though, a bit like rolling up an extension cord each time.
A booster sounds like a better option at the moment, but will keep researching to see if there are any other options.
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17-01-2024, 03:56 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jul 2018
Location: Australia, Tasmania
Posts: 431
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Appreciate those links,
Hard wired may still be an option, I will have o have a bit more of a look into that and see if i can find out where i have my underground poly pipes.
I have 240v out at the observatory, but that was only by luck as i had the power out there for another project before i had even thought of building the observatory.
Lots of options there to think about.
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17-01-2024, 04:19 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Rylstone, NSW, Australia
Posts: 1,499
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I would try this before going wired:
https://www.amazon.com/Ubiquiti-LBE-...ct_top?ie=UTF8
They are available locally. I put the Amazon link for the reviews. Seems to work quite well over a considrable distance.
Peter
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17-01-2024, 08:57 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: Sydney and South Coast NSW
Posts: 6,625
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bluesilver
Appreciate those links,
Hard wired may still be an option, I will have o have a bit more of a look into that and see if i can find out where i have my underground poly pipes.
I have 240v out at the observatory, but that was only by luck as i had the power out there for another project before i had even thought of building the observatory.
Lots of options there to think about.
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I took no chances with my 30m long trench an hired a technician to use GPR scanner to check for underground services
From memory cost me under $2K for piece of mind
The radar can penetrate to at least 30m underground
There are cheaper options like thermal testing
Alternatively you could use hardwood posts / poles and a catenary wire support system but this may be too obtrusive
If you’re looking to keep your Obs for many many years , underground is the best long term solution by orders of magnitude. “Initial Pain for long term Gain”
Cheers
Martin
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18-01-2024, 01:43 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Aug 2019
Location: Darwin
Posts: 90
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I have a Wavelink 1200. It works great. I have it hard wired to my Telescope PC and Wifi it to my house router. For the sake of about $100, I can recommend it.
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