What Should You Know Before Buying or Setting Up a Netgear WiFi Extender at Home?

owenashford

New member
I’m thinking about improving my home network coverage and came across the netgear wifi extender. Before purchasing or installing one, what are the key things to consider in terms of compatibility, speed loss, placement, and real-world performance? I’ve seen mixed opinions online, so I’d like to hear from users who’ve actually used it in larger homes or multi-floor setups.
 
Before setting up a Netgear WiFi extender, ensure it is placed halfway between your router and the dead zone. Positioning it too far will result in a weak signal, while too close won't extend the range effectively. Use the "Nighthawk" app for an easy guided setup. Also, ensure your router’s firmware is updated and avoid placing the extender near thick walls or large metal objects.
 
Extenders are a situation where you get what you pay. The largest is that a typical extender is going to reduce your bandwidth by half instantly since it must communicate with the router and your device over the very same radio. With a 300Mbps connection, you should not expect to get over 150Mbps out of the extender. You can find models without FastLane technology that would preferably be the Nighthawk models; they have 1 band to use as a router and another band to use as a device to eliminate that 50% drop.
 
Exactly. The best scenario is half speed. When you set the extender too far out it is simply duplicating a garbage signal and making it a stronger garbage.
 
I experimented with the EX6120 in my two-story house, and it was a nightmare, in my opinion. The process of the switch between the main router and the extender is not smooth. When I was right next to the extender, my phone would remain connected to the low strength router signal. To jump my WiFi I had to manually switch it off and on. When you own a large house, then you only need to save your sanity and purchase a Mesh system such as Orbi.
 
During the setup simply use the same SSID and password as your main router. A majority of current Netgear products have One WiFi Name now. And it is not an ideal handoff such as a Mesh, but it is preferable to having HomeNetwork and HomeNetwork_EXT.
 
Placement is everything. They are all placed in the dead zone. Why? Without a signal there, there is nothing to be extended by the extender. Place it half way between the dead spot and router. Netgear has these small LEDs on the side- play with it until the light of the "Link" turns green.
 
Wait, then I need to purchase something to repair my poor WiFi, yet this can only do so when I place it somewhere where the WiFi already performs excellently? Optimizing engineering at that point.
 
I have a Nighthawk X6S, three-year-old is used by me in a 3,000 sq ft house. It is good TV wise, down in the basement, though I would not play games on it. The spikes in latency (ping) are actual. Good omen to Netflix, ill omen to Warzone.
 
Don't use WPS to set it up. It is a hole in security, and does not even work half the time. Use the Nighthawk application or the Web interface (mywifiext.net). It is 5 minutes longer but ends up staying connected.
 
Is it only me, or does any Netgear software update miss something? I am forced to reformat the entire thing with each update to feel the 5GHz band once again.
 
Attempt switching the channel of your router to 5GHz to a fixed channel such as 36 or 48. Occasionally the extenders will lose the signal when the router is connected to a router on an Auto channel which goes around.
 
Severe recommendation on multi-floor: in case there are any Ethernet ports in the walls, the extender uses Access Point (AP) mode. It does not suffer the entire wireless bottleneck of half speed since it is hardwired to the router. It is a difference between night and day.
 
Netgear is fine until it isn't. One of my dies died right after 13 months of purchase. When I contacted Support, I was told that I would have to pay them a technical service contract to have them talk to me. Never again.
 
Before buying or setting up a Netgear WiFi extender, check compatibility with your router, match the extender’s speed to your internet plan, place it correctly for best coverage, and follow the proper setup method for smooth performance.
 
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