I’ve personally had very good results with Ubiquiti Unifi kit. It’s business grade, so not cheap, but highly effective.
The access points prefer to be wired, but have a fall back mesh mode. It doesn’t add much latency, or lose much bandwidth. Furthermore, the access points seem to have FAR better range performance than most home kit. I had a situation where a “long range gaming” access point became unreliable after about 10m. The Unifi LR gets over 50m in the same environment.
Network over Power line adapters can also be useful, and can reduce the number of access points you need.
The other pro of this, you can map bad wifi signals with their app so know where to add another access point if needed. I’ve got solid concrete walls and have 3. One for downstairs, one for upstairs and one for the garden. I definitely don’t need 3, I just didn’t want any wifi black spots.
I’ve personally had very good results with Ubiquiti Unifi kit. It’s business grade, so not cheap, but highly effective.
The access points prefer to be wired, but have a fall back mesh mode. It doesn’t add much latency, or lose much bandwidth. Furthermore, the access points seem to have FAR better range performance than most home kit. I had a situation where a “long range gaming” access point became unreliable after about 10m. The Unifi LR gets over 50m in the same environment.
Network over Power line adapters can also be useful, and can reduce the number of access points you need.
The other pro of this, you can map bad wifi signals with their app so know where to add another access point if needed. I’ve got solid concrete walls and have 3. One for downstairs, one for upstairs and one for the garden. I definitely don’t need 3, I just didn’t want any wifi black spots.