WIndows 10 Does a Wi-Fi repeater actually work?

T-Wrecks

New Member
There's a device that you can plug in that is supposed to improve the signal of devices you connect over Wi-Fi.

I don't have broadband. I pay for a monthly £35 goodybag with Giffgaff, and connect all of my devices with the mobile hotspot feature.

I swear, I get so annoyed laying in bed and the connection is reading as H+ all of the time, causing video sites to freeze. It won't go back to 4G unless I restart my smartphone, but I think I just don't get a good signal in my second floor flat anywhere, apart from in the sitting room. Even then, it rarely displays 4G anyway. About the only time it says 4G is if I restart my phone outside.

In my mate's house, I can get a full 4G signal, as he's in a main door with stairs inside.

I find about the only thing I can try is putting my phone at a window while it's still reading as 4G. Should I just get it to where it changes to H+, it doesn't seem to return to 4G. That's so nippy, especially if you're playing a game online on a games console where you require a strong signal.

So does anybody use a 4G booster at home? Does it do what it's meant to?
 
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Is that price for true Unlimited data? As in, full speed, non-throttled data all the time, regardless of MB/GB used? Sounds like they are possibly scaling back your connection speed. Also, how many devices are connected at once? Using mobile data for online gaming of any sort other than on a dedicated mobile device is fairly unreliable from what I've found. YMMV.
 
4G booster or Wifi repeater? You referenced two different things in your question.

Wifi boosters/extenders/repeaters 'work' and will improve far-reach areas of reception, but they also cause their own interference that degrades performance. Mesh type of setups use a dedicated backhaul radio on a different frequency and generally perform to a significantly higher degree, but we're still specific to wifi only.

It might be worth getting a better hotspot or one with external antennas if you're trying to leverage better cellular coverage. You also may see different coverage maps for different carriers.
 
Go to giffgaff.com, and they explain everything about their goodybags. But I cannot say I have ever been disappointed. :)

Although, yeah: I did notice the speed isn't great, after doing a test. On most sites, I don't really even notice that the pages load slowly, though.
 
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