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Old 04-07-2007, 06:22 PM
kimiraikkonen
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Default Re: Broadcom Wireless adapter freezes randomly

On Apr 7, 7:10 pm, John Navas <spamfilt...@navasgroup.com> wrote:
> On 7 Apr 2007 05:43:39 -0700, "kimiraikkonen"
> <kimiraikkone...@gmail.com> wrote in
> <1175949818.993437.131...@e65g2000hsc.googlegroups .com>:
>
> >I think i might determined the problem. It's all about signalling
> >quality or direction. Although signal strengths is reported ''good''
> >or ''very good'' ,

>
> Those labels aren't terribly meaningful -- I've seen devices that report
> "very" or even "excellent" with so much interference that the connection
> cannot be maintained. You need to look at real signal strength and
> noise numbers.
>
> >i tested any blockages or brackets or spreading
> >radio signals which are not linear can drop my wireless connection?

>
> >Does it make sense?

>
> As you wrote it, no.
>
> >I asked some people and said it's possible.

>
> Signal and interference problems are indeed possible, AS I SUGGESTED WAY
> BACK AT THE BEGINNING. (Sorry for shouting, but you're making this way
> harder than it needs to be.)
>
> --
> Best regards, FAQ for Wireless Internet: <http://Wireless.wikia.com>
> John Navas FAQ for Wi-Fi: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi>
> Wi-Fi How To: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_How_To>
> Fixes to Wi-Fi Problems: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_Fixes>


Why doesn't make it sense? I asked some people and this could be
possible. Signal quality and strength are not the same. Although
signal strength ''very good'' or ''good'', wireless may drop. But when
it is ''excellent'' wireless is stable. So it makes sense.

Additionaly, i closed 2 doors covering wall between adapter and
router, wi-fi drop solved. Signal interference is not the reason, i
tried with many channels as suggested.

Buying a 5dbi antenna improves signalling quality/noise reduction?

I have a standard 2dbi antenna.

Thank you.


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