HCHTech
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,212
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
Same old question, I'm afraid.
I've got a church whose existing WAPs are getting old. I'm going to put in a small Ubiquiti switch and some APs. I'm trying to work out how many of the things I need.
I have 4 areas to cover. There are existing ethernet runs to the approximate center of each area in the ceiling.
The interior partitions are metal stud & drywall, wooden doors.
The first area is the rectangular office wing, single story, about 3500 sq. feet. Hallway down the middle, offices on both sides. 45' x 78'
The main builiding is 3 floors, 10' height, with a drop ceiling about 18" down from the top. I don't know the construction of the floors, but they must not be concrete since we can see the wifi signals of the lower floors from the upper floors (although dimished, of course). Each floor is rectangular and just over 10,000 sq. ft. Hallway down the middle, rooms on both sides. 74' x 136'
Note this does not include the sanctuary - they specifically do NOT provide wireless for parishioners - haha. They have their sound and video computers wired, but no wireless on purpose. I guess they don't want them distracted with facebook. Tee hee.
I'm thinking I could start with 4 AP-Pros, then put an in-wall unit (most rooms have wired ethernet) in any rooms that don't end up with full coverage. This wouldn't require running any new lines, but might not really be the best answer.
Their internet is Comcast business - I measured150/30 the last time I was there outside of business hours (no usage).
Good plan? Arguments for doing 2 APs per floor of lower power placed at 1/3 and 2/3 instead of a single AP per floor placed in the middle?
I've got a church whose existing WAPs are getting old. I'm going to put in a small Ubiquiti switch and some APs. I'm trying to work out how many of the things I need.
I have 4 areas to cover. There are existing ethernet runs to the approximate center of each area in the ceiling.
The interior partitions are metal stud & drywall, wooden doors.
The first area is the rectangular office wing, single story, about 3500 sq. feet. Hallway down the middle, offices on both sides. 45' x 78'
The main builiding is 3 floors, 10' height, with a drop ceiling about 18" down from the top. I don't know the construction of the floors, but they must not be concrete since we can see the wifi signals of the lower floors from the upper floors (although dimished, of course). Each floor is rectangular and just over 10,000 sq. ft. Hallway down the middle, rooms on both sides. 74' x 136'
Note this does not include the sanctuary - they specifically do NOT provide wireless for parishioners - haha. They have their sound and video computers wired, but no wireless on purpose. I guess they don't want them distracted with facebook. Tee hee.
I'm thinking I could start with 4 AP-Pros, then put an in-wall unit (most rooms have wired ethernet) in any rooms that don't end up with full coverage. This wouldn't require running any new lines, but might not really be the best answer.
Their internet is Comcast business - I measured150/30 the last time I was there outside of business hours (no usage).
Good plan? Arguments for doing 2 APs per floor of lower power placed at 1/3 and 2/3 instead of a single AP per floor placed in the middle?