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Low or no signal in same room?

Author
7 Mar 2005 5:49 AM
Brad Funk
I am new to wireless routers, and networking in general.
So i am wondering if this is normal.

I have cable high speed internet, and it always works very well.
Today i hooked up a linksys wireless router to my pc, and a card to my wifes
laptop.
It worked great for awhile, "very strong" signal.
After a bit it went to low signal, then no signal.
It is still going up and down.
I have the laptop on a desk, 3 feet from the router.

Is this kind of signal variation normal?
Is there anything i can do to either test it or fix this?

Thanks alot for any help!
Brad

Author
7 Mar 2005 5:59 AM
DLink Guru
A number of thing can affect your signal streangth, such as microwaves
2.4GHz phones and such, but what can affect it the most is a neighbors
wireless network. Just about all routers set your network to channel 6 by
default. If others in your neighborhood have wirless networks and are close
to you then that could do what you are saying is happening to you. You can
confirm this by using a site survey utility that will show you other
networks in your area and what channels they broadcast on, or you can just
go into your router a try turning it to channel 1 or 11, since these overlap
the least, and see if that clears it up.

Robert...

"Brad Funk" <bfu***@cox.net> wrote in message
news:1_RWd.156051$Yu.64938@fed1read01...
Show quoteHide quote
>I am new to wireless routers, and networking in general.
> So i am wondering if this is normal.
>
> I have cable high speed internet, and it always works very well.
> Today i hooked up a linksys wireless router to my pc, and a card to my
> wifes laptop.
> It worked great for awhile, "very strong" signal.
> After a bit it went to low signal, then no signal.
> It is still going up and down.
> I have the laptop on a desk, 3 feet from the router.
>
> Is this kind of signal variation normal?
> Is there anything i can do to either test it or fix this?
>
> Thanks alot for any help!
> Brad
>
Author
8 Mar 2005 6:05 PM
Eric
"Brad Funk" <bfu***@cox.net> wrote in message
news:1_RWd.156051$Yu.64938@fed1read01...
Show quoteHide quote
> I am new to wireless routers, and networking in general.
> So i am wondering if this is normal.
>
> I have cable high speed internet, and it always works very well.
> Today i hooked up a linksys wireless router to my pc, and a card to my
wifes
> laptop.
> It worked great for awhile, "very strong" signal.
> After a bit it went to low signal, then no signal.
> It is still going up and down.
> I have the laptop on a desk, 3 feet from the router.
>
> Is this kind of signal variation normal?
> Is there anything i can do to either test it or fix this?
>
> Thanks alot for any help!
> Brad

Do a google for the free program "Netstumbler", which will give you a
graphical view of the signal to include the noise floor.

It sounds like you may be experiencing interference from something.
"Netstumber" may make it much easier to isolate the source of interference.

Interference (2.4 Ghz) can come from many different sources: cordless
phones, microwave, fish aquariums, security systems, garage door openers,
baby monitors, you name it.

Also, you many want to track the signal level with the laptop further away
than just 3 feet from the router.  Being too close can actually give
problems as well.  Try seperating the two by at least 10 to 15 feet.

As another poster replied with, you may need to change your channel.  If you
are seeing a neighbor's SSID, try changing your SSID to at least three
channels away from there.  The channel selected for your SSID is the center
frequency it will operate at, but the signal will actually take up bandwidth
across multiple channels.  I..e., with channel 1 through 11, you can only
have three 802.11g/b channels (1, 6, 11) without any overlap -- at least,
here in the US.   In Europe, they get a few more channels (up to 15, I
think), so are able to have four channels without overlap.

Some signal level fluctuation is normal, but shouldn't get a "low signal"
with an AP in the same room.  At the most, maybe a 20 percent dropoff, but
should still register as a "strong signal".   When I'm using my laptop, I'm
usually within 30 feet of the closet AP and see a signal level slightly over
80 percent.  I'm using 802.11a (5 Ghz) for WLAN traffic though -- which
drops off much more quickly than 802.11g/b with distance.  For 802.11g/b,
which is coming from upstairs, I usually get signal levels in the low 90
percentages.

Cheers,
-Eric