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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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Do these work with extension cords?
And could you plug one into your router, then attach a second wireless router to the other end of the other one upstairs?

Would you then have a house with two networks? And would that then confuse your devices if it was in a room where one signal was weak, but still present, and the other was much stronger?

Thanks in advance.
(, Mon 16 Jul 2012, 14:59, 2 replies, latest was 13 years ago)
At this rate I'll be able to still get signal when I'm in the pub 500yrds away

(, Mon 16 Jul 2012, 15:00, Reply)
#Yes but they're quicker if they're directly plugged in.
#Yes
#You're computer will connect to the strongest one remembered, so it'll just ignore the weaker one. If you were moving around it might take it a minute to change between the two but not a major problem.
(, Mon 16 Jul 2012, 15:02, Reply)
This all sounds very promising. I may force my parents to get some for their house
And then I can sell them the new router I bought and haven't used yet.
(, Mon 16 Jul 2012, 15:03, Reply)
You can link some routers together to provide for one SSID

(, Mon 16 Jul 2012, 15:05, Reply)
CAN YOU!!!!????
I'm not sure what this means, but I'm guessing you're talking about having two routers on one network?
(, Mon 16 Jul 2012, 15:08, Reply)
Yeah
Possibly not with freebie Sky ones and such like but we have 6 access points for our network here, all on one SSID
(, Mon 16 Jul 2012, 15:22, Reply)

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