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Reviewed in Canada on February 4, 2025
Amazing to send over to near by house.
alyma farm
Reviewed in Canada on February 24, 2025
foctionne tres bien
Brian
Reviewed in Canada on August 2, 2024
Works as it says
Allen Offredi
Reviewed in Canada on July 13, 2024
I'm almost 1k from shed . Works will from window to window
Clark Luse
Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2024
This wireless bridge was easy to set up, they had one of the transceivers preset to A and the other transceiver set to b just had to mount them cable them up check to make sure they were on the same channel and that was it. Works perfectly.
Johnny
Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2024
The Wifi modules performed well and the signal strength was very strong even when line of sight was not available.
Michael
Reviewed in the United States on November 17, 2023
Worked right out of the box. Pay attention and follow the directions but this was fairly painless. We have a little cabin about 300 feet away from the main house. Set everything up in the main house, paired, then installed each bridge up on the second story but facing each other. There are quite a few trees in the way. Not thick forrest, but a lot of trees. Fairly good line of site in winter though, but we setup in the summer and it still worked great.Ran some tests before I got everything setup just right. Couple things to note.- Definitely need them to face each other as much as possible. Testing with them off direct line effected the connection a lot. At first I was only getting about 20 Mbps. Then when I placed the other bridge higher and directly facing the other I started getting 70 Mbps.- Distance and trees do matter, but I'm happy with the speed I'm getting. Testing closer with fewer trees and I was getting a lot higher speeds. But again, 70 Mbps is PLENTY for the cabin. No problem streaming Netflix, etc...- Glass windows don't seem to be your friend :) I tried setting up the A bridge in an upstairs window facing out to the cabin. Didn't want to connect and when it did had terrible speed. I was being lazy. So I did the whole ladder thing and mounted it properly to the side of the house next to the window upstairs... works great.This was a tremendous value. We now have great internet at our cabin in the woods :)
Clayton
Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2023
I got these to get internet/network out to my pole barn/building so I could monitor a DVR/NVR video system. The distance is only 200-300 ft but I got these for the speed more than the distance. Connected my own wifi router configured in AP mode in the barn and everything worked and I got a good signal even though I still have the transmitter/master inside. When I move it outside with direct line of sight I'm sure I'll get even better speed. The POE is great and I like the visible indicators on the side. I have done nothing with the configuration. The receiver/slave does not broadcast it's own WIFI by default which was perfect for me. I plan to try to turn off the WIFI on the transmitter/master side of things to see if that works. Side note, the sticker on the device says Master = B which is opposite the directions. I went with the directions and put master a "A" and it's working.
Connie
Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2022
Overall, this product is very good and is cheaper than competitors (i.e. overpriced Ubiquiti) but the configuration & doc can be better. Tech support via email is very good if you're okay with next day response. The casing does not seem fade by the Summer sun light.If your needs is inline with what the product is designed for, it's very easy to configure. You'll just need to plug in a few things and set one to A (Master or Bridge) and the other to B (Slave or Station) per their document. You'll be able to hook up a single device like security camera onto the Slave CPE. Other people did well showing how to do that in their comment. However, if you have a more complex needs, like having a whole network on Slave side, you'll need to do more. Read on. Perhaps I can help here.First, you should review the images attached to my comment, especially the networking diagram that I wanted to achieve. In short, on the Slave side, I have a whole network that MUST have the same subnet (i.e. 192.168.5.XXX) of the Master side. If you don't need both sides having the same subnet, you can choose to follow my steps (for bonus feature below) or perhaps connect a ROUTER on the Slave side to control IPs. In my case, to keep the same subnet, I cannot use a router.The way you set this up is 1,2,3:1) Set up both Master's & Slave's IPs to the existing network's subnet (ie. 192.168.5.xxx) instead of their default (192.168.255.xxx)2) Sync the 2 CPEs on the Admin page.3) Test before deployment.Details:After you did basic steps to set up CPEs to A or B, and sync them (let's say, to C channel w/ IP 192.168.255.112 and 212), then...a) Config Master: Connect its power plug-in's POE side to 1 Cat inlet on the CPE. Connect your laptop to the 2nd Cat inlet on the CPE. Change your laptop's IP to static IP at 192.168.255.7 (or any available 8, 9, 10... on the last digit). Open a browser and type in URL: http://192.168.255.112 to connect to the Master CPE's Admin page. UserID/pwd: Admin/admin. Now, do 2 tasks: (a) Click on Wireless & write down the SSID & password. You'll need them soon. (b) Click on Network & change its network IP to 192.168.5.12 (my subnet is 192.168.5). Save the changes. This will disconnect you from Admin page b/c CPE now has a new IP. Trust it's saved.b) Config Slave: do the same physical connection between your laptop and Slave CPE. Connect to its Admin page at http://192.168.255.212. Click on Network linke & change its network IP to 192.168.5.22. Save it.At this time, the CPEs should be out of sync, and you can only sync them via Admin page. If you check the CPEs now, you should see they have different channels and if so, the Strength signal lights are 0. In such case, keep going... you're almost there... just 1 more step.c) Change your laptop IP to 192.168.5.7 (or any available digit). On browser, type 192.168.5.22 (Slave's new IP) to access the Slave CPE's Admin page. Click on Wireless link and scan for SSIDs. Select the Master's SSID and enter password (did you write them down in step a?). See image. You should notice both CPEs now have the same channel (A, B, or C...) and the Strength lights are at max.IF, for any reasons, you want to check or recover the Master's SSID/pwd, you can do so by physically connect your laptop to Master CPE. Make sure your laptop now has IP as 192.168.5.xzy. On a browser, type in 192.168.5.12 (Master CPE's IP). Click on Wireless link, and you should see them.Muy bien! Now you're done w/ configuration! Congrats.Testing. You can unplug your laptop and test your network before deployment:i) Change your laptop's IP to Dynamic IP (DHCP). This is to confirm the router on Master side can push new IPs to the Slave side.ii) Connecting all components as a real, yet simple, network. Review the networking diagram as needed. On Master side, you should have Internet->Router->Master CPE .On Slave side, you should have a Switch->laptop and other devices.Your laptop should have IP as 192.168.5.xyz and be able to browse the Internet. If so, you're all set for deployment.A huge bonus for this configuration is this... Since your computer and CPEs are on the same subnet, you can access their Admin pages any time without having to physically connect to each CPE. All you need to do is, on a browser, type in 192.168.5.12 or 22 to access them. Total control of the whole network at your fingertips.Hope this helps someone.
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