
So what can you do instead, when the signals are looking too weak? What To Do Instead of Wi-Fi Signal Boosting

In this case, all you have achieved through signal boosting is sabotaging yourself by making your coverage less predictable than it was in the first place. Even though you may succeed in making your router transmit a stronger signal that reaches further, there is no guarantee that the signals returned by your wireless clients-computers, smartphones, and so on-will be able to reach the router. You May Sabotage Yourselfįor a wireless connection to work well, both sides of the connection need to be able to reach each other.

Extending your signal further will therefore contribute to even more interference for your neighbors. However, the frequency band with the longest reaching signals (2.4 GHz) is also the band with the most interference / wireless "noise". You Will Sabotage Your Neighborsīy boosting the Wi-Fi signal, you can extend its reach, which sounds like a good thing. The repeater/extender simply repeats the signal from the router to create a new network that extends wireless coverage. Note that while Wi-Fi extenders or repeaters are sometimes referred to as Wi-Fi "amplifiers", there is no actual amplification of signal strength involved.

Local laws in for example Norway clearly specify both what frequencies and which signal transmission strengths are allowed for indoor and outdoor wireless networks. Actually amplifying your router or extender's wireless signal to extend its reach runs the risk of being illegal in many countries.
