If you're in a typical CBR structure (outer walls block, inner stick
construction, footprint maybe ~30x30') you should get good range indoors
depending on major appliance placements etc. Outdoors might depend on
amount of rebar in the CBR walls, and router antenna placement (window
proximity, windowsill's best). Wire screens can be a problem.
Between 2 structures on my property about 60' apart foliage on a
grapefruit tree between prevents a link between an upstairs window near
a PC and the windowsill cable modem router in my ofc (with the rest of
the LAN, and cable service, out here). Solved with a 100' Cat5e cable
off the upstairs house PC's ethernet card and a downstairs windowsill
bridge, clear window-to-window line of sight under that tree.
Linksys WCG200 router in ofc, WET11 bridge in house. Nice old
through-the-floor ventilator I could drop that cable downstairs through.
House may be 80 years old but it has its advantages.
If you're in the Keys, stilts or not shouldn't matter much, though rebar
in a concrete pad on the stilts might make through-the-floor links to
any downstairs spaces iffy.
Wherever you are humidity likely doesn't matter much unless you want a
200-300' link between structures in a Cat 5 hurricane, and you shouldn't
be anywhere near home then anyhow.
Best and fastest ride I ever had from Big Pine all the way up to Sebring
was the morning before Andrew arrived. Me, cat, a little food/drink, and
precious docs in briefcases. Must've been the last person out, but I was
in a few hurricanes in a few places some years ago, and it's really
really dumb to play the denial game. Keep an up-to-the-minute eye on the
forecast tracks is our motto.
Kevin Altizer wrote:
> Someone told me that concrete block walls would inhibit wireless networking.
> Is this true?
>
>
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