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Wireless Home Networking

Channels, mesh vs AP, wired vs wireless, Starlink โ€” the choices that actually matter for fast home Wi-Fi.


3
Non-overlapping 2.4G Channels
Wi-Fi 7
Current Spec
5 GHz
Default for Speed
LEO
Starlink Orbit
Channels โ€” the part everyone gets wrong
2.4 GHz
Use ONLY 1, 6, or 11
Only three non-overlapping channels. Setting "Auto" usually picks 6. Most interference is on channel 6 โ€” pick 1 or 11 first.
5 GHz: many clean channels
Channels 36-48 and 149-165 are widely supported. DFS channels (52-144) work but pause briefly if radar detected.
Topology โ€” mesh, AP, or single router?
Single router
Small apartment, <1,500 sq ft. Simplest. Works fine for most users.
<1.5K sqft
RECOMMENDED
Wired access points
Multiple APs hardwired to a central switch. Best performance. Needs ethernet pulled to AP locations.
Mesh (wireless backhaul)
Easy install, no wiring. Trade ~50% throughput per hop. Good for renters or wire-less homes.
No wires
Pro Tip
Wire what you can. Every device on ethernet leaves more airtime for the ones that can't. Run cable during any renovation.
Common Mistake
One router for a 3,000 sqft home. The router can't physically reach the far corners. Adding range extenders compounds the problem.
Starlink essentials
Decision tree
  1. LEO satellites at ~550 km
    Low latency (~25-50ms) vs traditional GEO (~600ms)
  2. Phased-array dish
    No moving parts; tracks satellites electronically
  3. Real speeds: 100-300 Mbps
    Where service is good
  4. Best for: rural / mobile / backup
    Cable / fiber still wins in served urban areas
  1. Apartment / small home
    โ†’ Single Wi-Fi 6E/7 router
  2. Renting larger home
    โ†’ Mesh system
  3. Own larger home
    โ†’ Wired APs on ethernet
  4. Rural / no fiber
    โ†’ Starlink + Wi-Fi inside