On Jul 15, 7:30*am, seaweedsl <seaweedst...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jul 14, 7:39*pm, benn <benn...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> > I have 3 wired devices that are connected to a network switch. * I'm
> > looking to connect each device (or the switch) to a wireless device
> > that can connect to my existing wireless network (A netgear WPA2-AES
> > encrypted wireless router).
>
> > I'm not sure if I need a wireless extender, or a wireless access
> > point, or a bridge, but I'm looking for *SOMETHING* that connect the
> > wired devices (or the switch) via RJ45 port(s) to connect to the
> > wireless network?
>
> What Bill said, with one comment. *You can buy client adapters and
> they are not all limited to one client such that you would need
> three. *They are also called wireless ethernet adapters, or ethernet
> bridges. * Check on Newegg for reviews. *Typically they are sold as AP/
> Client adapters and will do both.
>
> Going back to Bill's recommendation- really that is the simplest
> approach. *Get a Linksys WRT54GL (there are others, check the DD-WRT
> supported routers list), which will flash to linux most easily and put
> DD-WRT (linux) on it. *Select client mode in the interface. Follow a
> few more instructions at the DD_WRT wiki and you can then plug all
> three pcs into it. *If you need more, plug your switch into one of
> it's ports and then into the switch.
I wouldn't mind flashing DDR-WRT (I've also heard Tomato (
http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato) is pretty good), but the Linksys
WRT54GL is more expensive than I was hoping to spend...
For example, a Belkin Wireless G Universal Range Extender (F5D7132)
costs less than $40 on ebay, but the WRT54GL is about double!
If a "Range Extender" is what I need, does anyone know if the Belkin
Range Extender's 1 RJ45 port can be connected to a swich?
http://catalog.belkin.com/IWCatProdu...duct_Id=278082