26 Feb 2023 03:42 PM
I have a second Sky router sitting at home, and I wanted to improve the connectivity in my room which is poor at times. I have configured the second sky router with a new static IP address with my main one being 192.168.0.1 and my second router being 192.168.0.253. I have disabled DHCP on my second router. The issue is if I connect them as is I begin to have some issues where my videos pause and my other family members have issues with the connection. I thought I could go around this issue by using a separate SSID for the second router so I can connect to it and only it, but when I log into my second router it seems to have adopted the name of the primary router and it does not let me change the SSID of the second router. I've logged into it using the new IP address I set but when I try to change the SSID it also does it for the primary router. My question is, is there a way I can keep the two routers but with 2 separate SSIDs so there are no issues with connections around my house?
26 Feb 2023 04:03 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreUsing a second router like that is never ideal. In theory it should be possible to set a different SSID, but I guess it's also possible that Sky are using similar firmware on the Hubs to their boosters which are inherently designed to duplicate the network name.
26 Feb 2023 04:06 PM
Hi @TimmyBGood,
Thank you for responding. So is it not possible to connect the two routers with separate SSIDs at all?
26 Feb 2023 04:11 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreI'm speculating it's potentially an undesigned side-effect, in which case it may not have a mechanism to overrule it.
26 Feb 2023 04:30 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreJust a thought: did you 'link' the two Hubs using their WPS buttons?
By default I'd guess that would effectively be an instruction to duplicate the network name.
26 Feb 2023 04:42 PM - last edited: 26 Feb 2023 04:44 PM
Ideally the second router should be setup as an access point but you can't do that with Sky hub's.
It would be less hassle just to purchase a reasonably priced extender or a better WiFi main router.
However why is the wifi poor in the same room?
26 Feb 2023 06:47 PM
Hi @TimmyBGood,
I did not connect them via their WPS buttons, I configured the second router as mentioned above and then directly connected them via and ethernet cable
26 Feb 2023 06:48 PM
Hi @cuke,
Thank you for your message. Apologies for any confusion the routers are not in the same room, the second router is in my room where the connection is less reliable
28 Feb 2023 11:15 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out morePeople have tried and failed before to use a second Sky hub for WiFi access, it simply doesnt work reliably and is always more of a headache than its worth. As @TimmyBGood has said, I believe its to do with Sky's router firmware and how they link to each other.
02 Jan 2024 02:59 PM
I had a similar query so I find the answers helpful.
May I safely assume that this applies to the most recent hub/router as supplied with the 500mbps fttp in December 2023?
Thanks
02 Jan 2024 03:01 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreYes you need a Sky booster or other 3rd party AP
02 Jan 2024 06:49 PM
Thank you James.
Its still early days so I'll wait until everything has stabilised.
The signal strength via ethernet is excellent and the wifi is acceptable 1 internal wall away from the hub.
2 walls really cut the signal and decent quality repeater/boosters make negligible, if any, improvement.
I'll go down the extended LAN and/or AP as suggested.
03 Jan 2024 07:55 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more@CJ49 the answer to your simple question isnt simple but can be summarised as it depends. Firstly what is the type of construction of your home if you have solid internal walls wifi is never going to be satisfactory unless you have multiple access points in different rooms connected back to the hub by ethernet or by powerline adapters. However personally in a 35 year old home I can get away with a system with 3 satellites positioned centrally on each level and linked together by wifi.
The next decision is what speeds you need where, a 500Mb/s connection is more about the number of users it can support than the outright speed each user needs. As a guide streaming the highest Netflix quality only needs 30Mb/s, online gaming requires around 10Mb/s but with both stability is as important as bandwidth. If you want 500Mb/s in every room be prepared to spend several hunderds but as an example my system cost £100 and gives speeds over 150Mb/s in the most distant room however each home. Is different.
08 Jan 2024 05:21 PM
Chrissee - sorry for the slow response. You got it in one. Its an older detached house with all internal walls being solid with heavy , hard brick including a few engineering bricks. Also I have up to 14 devices running, more occasionally, so demand is high. Thats why I opted for 500Mbps and updated most of my main devices to wifi 6 standard. You've confirmed my suspicion regarding the walls. My kneejerk was to buy a decent AP for the rearmost (furthest from router) part of the house and try to RJ45 to wherever possible. Is it worth waiting to See what Sky might offer?
08 Jan 2024 05:28 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more@CJ49 Sky sell two packages but neither are a good fit for your problem whichbis solid walls. If running ethernet is not practical then look at powerline networking kits which can come with built-in wifi access points. These use your mains cabelling to carry the data to a distant room. Both TP-Link and Devolo make decent units..
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