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My Grandpa was (supposedly) misinformed that the stone walls inside his house would make him unable to use WiFi. Is this true? Is so, why?

Thanks...

2006-08-20 09:49:34 · 7 answers · asked by Paul 2 in Computers & Internet Internet

7 answers

yes it affects but depends on the thickness of the wall and how strong the signal of the wifi...coz wifi gadgets are use to be broadly use and it was made to have a strong signal on an open area but got little limitation in closed one...

2006-08-27 21:42:04 · answer #1 · answered by bloodyvamp 3 · 0 0

WiFi Sigals are not like Radio signals as it Travels in a Specific direction , not like radio signals which are floating. If you are in a corridor , u might see that at one corner u get best signals where coverage is good but as you turn right or left the corridor u might have zero or poor Signals , cause mostly Wi-Fi uses 2.4ghz Signals and their Antenna's are directional. This 2.4ghz is a congested frequency very old and was prior used by Millitary for long range walkie Talkies.

2006-08-28 05:12:03 · answer #2 · answered by jhsumrani1 1 · 0 0

Your latency (ping) is often effected through the nature of WiFi being 0.5-duplex basically. this signifies that basically one gadget (inclusive of the router) can transmit. in case you want to transmit, yet radio frequency is already through yet another gadget, you would possibly want to ought to attend. this would upload a 10-20 msec of latency, searching on signal ability and high quality. I often propose utilising a stressed out connection, as a results of the undeniable fact that is comprehensive duplex (2 way communication concurrently) and the bandwidth between you and the community is dedicated with gaming applications (noticeably with more moderen video games). you will get through on a instantaneous connection. I used to play CS:S over WiFi, yet connecting to the router with a cord dropped through pings down through 25 msec.

2016-11-26 20:14:01 · answer #3 · answered by speelman 4 · 0 0

All building matterials affect WIFI signals. Stone and concrete are really bad since they are so dense and thick.

2006-08-20 09:58:11 · answer #4 · answered by Jake C 2 · 0 0

The stone probabbly weakens the signal or makes it harder to go through walls.

2006-08-20 09:56:30 · answer #5 · answered by I run with scissors 4 · 0 0

yes i sit in a classroom everyday with stone and brick walls around NO SIGNALS at all either for phones or internet

2006-08-20 09:55:06 · answer #6 · answered by Vince 2 · 0 0

I dont know if they COMPLETELY block WiFi signals or not but they to diminish it a lot...to the point of being useless almost.

2006-08-20 09:58:54 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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