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I'd like it to help my my desktop PC, & Roku.
I can't move any devices.
... just my 2¢♪ moderate Mart ♫ ☺ Planar Asylum
where speakers are thin & music isn't
Follow Ups:
Bought a Big Roku 110$ ...First time. Took me most of a day to get it find acknowledge my Router (cable company supplied, Near new and a Fairly good quality gizmo as reference aside)
Then the signal strength was weak. Moved the router within 20 feet of the darned Roku then it got usable signal.. But still wouldn't work reliably. Really Pissed with the thing .. I took it back .. got an instant refund.. in full.
6 months later I tried again... this time with a Roku stick unit.. ~50$
This Garbage thing would not find/read my Router From 20 feet away.
Again.. back to the store for a refund.
Notably the store clerk then revealed that almost ..ALL.. of their Rokus on their sales display had 'returned' stickers on them.
Clearly I wasn't the only unhappy customer.
NOT a router issue.. I can find / use my wifi from down the street with my Phone.. fer Gawds' sake.
Gave up on Rokus as CRAP.. period.
Then ran an HDMI wire from my 'puter to the TV.
Cost ~15$ and works perfectly.
Yess the wire is a nuisance.. but it's also 100% reliable
Edits: 05/21/17
It's the most effective way to extend the range of wifi.It receive on one channel and transmits on another channel (1watt output). Its for serious long range. You can use two of them with yagi antennas for nearly unlimited line of sight range. It's popular with boaters and RVers and for stealing a wifi signal from restaurants etc. Ccrane sells one rebadged under it's own brand name.
You might try TP-Link power line extenders. I am using the AV1200 power line model. They seem to work well extending the signal to my garage.
I'm in a nursing home.
So, in your scenario, I'd need the device in your metaphorical garage.
... just my 2¢♪ moderate Mart ♫ ☺ Planar Asylum
where speakers are thin & music isn't
The normal answer would simply be to replace the wi-fi router with a more powerful one. But I guess that your circumstances may not allow for this. Otherwise do that.
In regard to the recommendation for TPLink this uses the home power wiring to send the data signal matrixed with the power sine wave. Just what an audio enthusiast doesn't need as we all know distortion on the sine wave ( which is what it amounts to) has negative audible results on equipment connected to it. Perhaps you could buy a conditioner to clean it up for the outlets to your audio equipment but my experience has been that these add their own signature and I have returned to direct connection to the wall socket after a period of familiarisation.
Your suggestion of buying a conditioner won't solve this person's wifi problem. I know the TP Link product works for a fact.
I hope that I may be able to clarify the point I was making.
I never said that buying a conditioner would solve the OP's wi-fi problem. Nor did I say that the TP link did not work for data transmission.
What I said was that TP Link adds what is essentially distortion to the mains sine wave. I said that this distortion has a negative effect on the performance of audio components that are connected to that mains circuit. I said that he could try a mains conditioner for his audio if he used the TP Link. The idea being that the conditioner could restore the sine wave - he would probably need a regenerator type for this.
I was under the impression that the TPlink sent a digital signal. How could that distort the audio signal?
I am new to learning about digital and was under the impression that a digital signal was a on/off type information and not a continuous wave
Any signal that is added to a sinewave ( e.g. matrixed or superimposed) is a form of distortion of the sinewave.
People often imagine that digital transmission works like a kind of morse code. In practice it is usually a continuous waveform having specific attributes which as they occur are interpreted by a detection circuit as representing a change in value ( + or -, 0 or 1, on or off). Digital engineering works by analogue means :-)
Do you have any links to some good information to learn more about this. I am trying to read up on it.
I'm using a TPLink to my Marantz NA7004 network streamer. Should I use something else???
IF you can't hear a difference.. then Is it relevant?
Ideal is exactly that.
Real life is somewhat different.
The link attached leads to quite a good and simple Wikipedia article.
In respect of your other query I don't know exactly what you are doing and what it is that you link digitally to your streamer, what connections you use etc. Looking at the specifications I would guess that the usual connectivity would be via USB or ethernet but I see that SP/Dif co-ax and optical inputs also feature. Do you connect to a NAS or something similar?
If you are using TPlink for other types of digital distribution via the home mains wiring then the damage is done and plugging the network streamer into any wall socket will still mean using distorted power. However if the TPLink connection is only for this device then I would switch to a hard wired connection suitable to your needs and the device's connections. So ethernet cable is one way to go but I do know of people who say that using computer network optical cabling is better. However this adds a level of complexity and expense. Sticking with basic but decent quality Cat5 cabling if suitable you could then just try a connection with it against the TPLink and see what difference it makes - that would be a cheap comparison.
In any case I am sure that there will be better qualified inmates than myself able to deal with this.
In my last house I did "hard wire" it with cat5. This house that I recently moved into, there is NO way I can get a cable from the router to the streaming device. So it has to be wireless.
The TPlink is used only for the streamer.
One odd thing about the NA7004. I tried patching the digital out from my NAD (Ok stop laughing) to the digtital coax in. Every connection with exception of my ipod I get "unable to unlock signal" error messages.
OK, no wires.I am way outside of my comfort zone with this recommendation but if I understand the device it will connect to your router by wifi and to your network streamer's ethernet connector. At least that is how I see it.
Not sure about the other connectivity problems. At face value the Marantz can cope with a number of different types of digital input.
Edits: 03/23/17
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