Thanks ! Have a question , just purchased two sets of D-link DHP AV600 power line extenders, one extender connected by ethernet cable to my internet modem in the basement ( Telus 1 gig) two connected to two internet TV boxs and one to internet phone land line, I did this for better reception for phone and TV , however all three extensions show Ethernet light red and reception cuts off or is poor , if I disconnect two extenders , the one extender is on all three lights green , any tips to get all three extenders operating on green light? Thanks again.
Nice video, very useful. I am thinking of buying a pack of 3. Reason is I have the main access to the network close to the main entrance to the flat. Right now the wireless router is plugged in there and there is no much coverage on the other end of the house. Plus, I do think a cable is better than wireless, so I was planning to plug one where the current router is, replacing it, one in the living room where I will plug in the router, one in the main studio where I have playstation, desktop PC, printer and a bunch of raspberry pi. Obviously I will need a router there as well... but hey... if I want to use cables, I need ports :)
Thanks for the great vid! I'd appreciate some advice here. Adapter A is a floor above adapter C which is in the basement. If the internet speed drops to around 5-10% on this distance, and even pairing gets lost from time to time, could an adapter B placed in between the two existing ones solve the problem? Does an extra adapter amplify the signal? Thanks for your help.
I thought they worked in pairs, like remote power switches etc. - that a pair needs to be set for the same frequency/code. Do they work as a 'distributed switch' then, i.e. can I plug one to a router and then have 3 or 4 in other rooms, so that the tv in each room can use the 'wired' connection (between its RJ45 socket and the adapter)? Will they not talk over each other?
Can powerline networking work for multiple addresses within a building , having different power supplies. Or would they need to be on the same power distribution?
Alright pal I have had my two av2000 for about a week now they do connect then after about 30sec the second one starts to slowly blink again tried the cables supplied and two other even ordered grade 8 too
..if you get to make a prototype home ..how will you change the current powerline cables.. coax twisted AC ?..just imagine in the future all devices are connected this way to your home monitor ing sys..fridges,lights..etc via a newer networked Neutral live AC cabling ..where appliances comes with a built in network identity ...or mybe adding 4 extra twisted wires unto AC cabling to fit this purpose..so I would be 5 pin socket.. :-)
Client has 2 switch breaker panels but only one incoming service line i kinda think powerline would have problems making connection. Thanks for read and reply.
If the adapters are connected to different breaker panels I think they will run into some problems. If the shed isn't too far away you could maybe use a wireless access point instead. Just a thought.
@@homenetworkgeek192 the issue is that the house is built like a Faraday cage: stucco chicked wire and lath and plaster inside. The shed is only 8 feet from house and brand new Frontier router is beauty a blip. Like -70db. Trying new Asus router. Thanks...
Hey H Geek, got a question: I have a client that want to get Ethernet to the shed behind house. She is electrified BUT, has it's own breaker panel. Only one meter so it only has one line from power company. Do you think a powerline will work under this condition.
I bought a pair and roommate bought a pair now we take turn use the internet because one person loose all connections as soon as the other pair to the master. Both power line adapters are the same.
I’ve been looking for a channel that explains everything you are covering, amazing!!
Glad your finding the videos helpful Benji.
Thanks ! Have a question , just purchased two sets of D-link DHP AV600 power line extenders, one extender connected by ethernet cable to my internet modem in the basement ( Telus 1 gig) two connected to two internet TV boxs and one to internet phone land line, I did this for better reception for phone and TV , however all three extensions show Ethernet light red and reception cuts off or is poor , if I disconnect two extenders , the one extender is on all three lights green , any tips to get all three extenders operating on green light? Thanks again.
thanks for the video and answering my questions
Nice video, very useful. I am thinking of buying a pack of 3. Reason is I have the main access to the network close to the main entrance to the flat. Right now the wireless router is plugged in there and there is no much coverage on the other end of the house. Plus, I do think a cable is better than wireless, so I was planning to plug one where the current router is, replacing it, one in the living room where I will plug in the router, one in the main studio where I have playstation, desktop PC, printer and a bunch of raspberry pi. Obviously I will need a router there as well... but hey... if I want to use cables, I need ports :)
Exactly what I was looking for!
Excellent info explained very clearly. Thank you, your video helped me very much.
Thanks for the great vid! I'd appreciate some advice here. Adapter A is a floor above adapter C which is in the basement. If the internet speed drops to around 5-10% on this distance, and even pairing gets lost from time to time, could an adapter B placed in between the two existing ones solve the problem? Does an extra adapter amplify the signal? Thanks for your help.
I'd also appreciate an answer to this.
@@peabrainsbraineater4904 it won't. Extra adapters don't amplify the signal, only eat more bandwidth :P
@@svrjaxstudio They do amplify the signal
spot on lad, cheers :)
I thought they worked in pairs, like remote power switches etc. - that a pair needs to be set for the same frequency/code. Do they work as a 'distributed switch' then, i.e. can I plug one to a router and then have 3 or 4 in other rooms, so that the tv in each room can use the 'wired' connection (between its RJ45 socket and the adapter)? Will they not talk over each other?
Really good clear information which answered my question. Thank you for sharing 👍.
Really helpful, thank you
Very helpful, thanks
can i use two on one circuit and use a short ethernet to the next circuit where i could place one more pair?
Can powerline networking work for multiple addresses within a building , having different power supplies. Or would they need to be on the same power distribution?
Alright pal I have had my two av2000 for about a week now they do connect then after about 30sec the second one starts to slowly blink again tried the cables supplied and two other even ordered grade 8 too
..if you get to make a prototype home ..how will you change the current powerline cables.. coax twisted AC ?..just imagine in the future all devices are connected this way to your home monitor ing sys..fridges,lights..etc via a newer networked Neutral live AC cabling ..where appliances comes with a built in network identity ...or mybe adding 4 extra twisted wires unto AC cabling to fit this purpose..so I would be 5 pin socket.. :-)
Client has 2 switch breaker panels but only one incoming service line i kinda think powerline would have problems making connection. Thanks for read and reply.
If the adapters are connected to different breaker panels I think they will run into some problems. If the shed isn't too far away you could maybe use a wireless access point instead. Just a thought.
@@homenetworkgeek192 the issue is that the house is built like a Faraday cage: stucco chicked wire and lath and plaster inside. The shed is only 8 feet from house and brand new Frontier router is beauty a blip. Like -70db. Trying new Asus router. Thanks...
Hey H Geek, got a question: I have a client that want to get Ethernet to the shed behind house. She is electrified BUT, has it's own breaker panel. Only one meter so it only has one line from power company. Do you think a powerline will work under this condition.
Sorry I don't quite understand what you mean when you say only one meter. Can you clarify please?
I understand. I think having a different breaker box shouldn't matter.
@@paulraymond1804 it WILL matter. The different breaker panel means the signal will have to travel more than most powerline adapters are capable of.
do the adapters have to be the same brand and model, or can they be different ?
Should be the same brand at least.
@@svrjaxstudiobullshit, I connected devolo with Fritz and it works perfectly fine
Radio Amateur enthusiasts hate EoP, it affects there equipment
Cheers
is 4 ok ?
4 will work fine with 50Mbps :)
Whatsa roota? 😀
I bought a pair and roommate bought a pair now we take turn use the internet because one person loose all connections as soon as the other pair to the master. Both power line adapters are the same.