@Playstheblues
ah yes, the wonderful world of RV Park Wi-fi. No matter how good the internet is and how good the wifi coverage is, devices inside your camper suffer from being inside your camper. You are on the right track by piping the strongest signal possible inside to either an AP or Router and letting your devices connect inside the camper.
I currently live in an RV Park and during my two year stay here have built the parks WI-FI network. I am doing something very similar to what you are trying and with excellent results. With the exception of upgrading my router a couple of days ago, this has been my setup for over two years and has worked flawlessly.
I would go with a 5ghz CPE if possibe since RV Parks are notoriously flooded with 2.4Ghz devices. Downside is park may not have 5Ghz, and if they do, you could run into issues connecting to it if the channel is set to AUTO. My CPE710 could not even see the Parks EAP610 so I had to set the Parks EAP610 to a set channel. You seldom have the luxury of modifying the RV Parks Wi-Fi settings, so I have a CPE210 in case I have 5Ghz connection issues or if park only has 2.4Ghz.

Standing in the middle of my RV with phone connected to RVParks EAP610, which is about 80 feet away with line of site to my camper, but obviously not the the phone.

Standing in the same spot, connected the my AX3000. This is the full rated speed of the parks ISP.
