Upgrade ethernet mesh home network with EasyMesh/Deco
Upgrade ethernet mesh home network with EasyMesh/Deco
Hello!
I’d like to ask for help for modifying/extending my home network. Please observe the first scheme. This is what I have right now. I have two cables coming out of the main router to the places that I need WIFI the most. The walls are very thick and I must be able to provide a wired connection to these places. I cannot introduce any more cables, nor need to. One of the cables is connected to the main Deco and the other is connected to the secondary router in House 2. Deco works in AP mode.
What needs to be done is to replace the secondary router in House 2 with something new (because the router is old and causes trouble and because I’d like to extend the mesh). Now, the obvious solution would be to replace it with another Deco and extend the mesh network. This is where I hit the first problem. TP-Link support said I will be able to pull this off but I will lose the mesh capability because Ethernet connection must be between the nodes. I.e. I won’t have a mesh between the two houses. Again, new cables is not an option.
So, I came up with two scenarios where I think I can have everything that I want.
First. Maybe the only way I can make use of the Deco mesh. Please observe the new proposal which extends my current setup with two more Deco M4 and a switch like TL-SG108.
Is this a valid scenario where I can keep a stable network, a mesh connection between all four Deco nodes and be able to extend with more wireless Decos in the future?
Second. I also researched an EasyMesh solution where I’d drop the Deco technology completely. Apparently, I have only one choice of a range extender that is capable of creating a mesh through Ethernet connection. Luckily, it seems to suit my needs anyway and be at a reasonable price. I adore the simplicity of this solution but I could barely find any information about such scenario. Would this work properly with two RE315 extenders connected to the main router? Would it really create a mesh network? Can I add more RE315 extenders connected to the router or the other extenders wirelessly?
Are both of those scenarios valid/good and which one am I supposed to choose? Or are there any better options than those I shared?
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Hi, Thanks for your time and patience. Maybe you could try to leave me a message for notification next time.
I'm sorry for the typo and it is "can't". I thought you used all the blank bold lines to represent the Ethernet connection.
There aren't many discrepancies and the technical support does have his highlights and focus.
I believe since you decided to seek confirmation in the community, you do want to compare different ideas. From my review, the key point is whether you refer to Easymesh or Deco Mesh.
Considering you already have an Easymesh router-Archer AX20(AX1800), it is natural to keep EasyMesh and add several EasyMesh extenders. Connecting the extenders wirelessly to the AX20 is the default Method to establish an EasyMesh network. While Ethernet/wired Backhaul is the newly added feature for EasyMesh, such as the introduction here-
EasyMesh Range Extenders Start Supporting Building a EasyMesh Network via Ethernet Backhaul.
RE315 happens to be one of the fewer supported models. You could add 2*RE315s into EasyMesh via Ethernet Cables and the 3rd is via WiFi. Of course, each RE315 will be connected directly to the EasyMesh router AX20, not like "AX20---RE315---RE315".
For the Deco Mesh recommendation, the technical support and I both agreed Deco in Access Point mode would be the best configuration.
However, I realized the support might think you plan to set up a different Deco Mesh network in each house, House 1 with AX20+2*Deco M4 and House 2 with a single Deco. It would be a misunderstanding. We could add all the 3*Deco M4s(or more, 2 sets as you mentioned) in two houses together under the same Deco Mesh network.
Best regards.
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David-TP wrote
I thought you used all the blank bold lines to represent the Ethernet connection.
Yes, that's what I did. And that's what you (TP-Link) do in all your articles. Why doubt it at all?
David-TP wrote
There aren't many discrepancies and the technical support does have his highlights and focus.
Really? Is this how you gatekeep your support agents? That's how you reply to all the quotes I showed? So, if I ask two guys what's the color of the sky and the first say it's blue and the second say it's brown, I should trust both. They are just sharing different highlights and focus. Correct?
David-TP wrote
I believe since you decided to seek confirmation in the community, you do want to compare different ideas.
Unfortunately, I'm not there yet. I'm still playing the game "find the liar". At this point, I'm looking for a single person in the universe who knows how the mentioned products actually work. And maybe then I can compare different ideas.
David-TP wrote
Considering you already have an Easymesh router-Archer AX20(AX1800), it is natural to keep EasyMesh and add several EasyMesh extenders.
Amazing insight. That said, this is a fresh quote (from today) from that same support:
"For the Archer AX20, we regret to tell you that the model doesn't support Easymesh.
You may refer to the compatible list for Easymesh Products.
https://www.tp-link.com/us/easymesh/product-list/#wi-fi-routers
Because AX20 does not support easymesh, even if RE315 supports it, they cannot form easymesh."
The funniest thing is that my router is actually contained in that same link. That must be a case of "different focus". Right?
David-TP wrote
For the Deco Mesh recommendation, the technical support and I both agreed Deco in Access Point mode would be the best configuration.
However, I realized the support might think you plan to set up a different Deco Mesh network in each house, House 1 with AX20+2*Deco M4 and House 2 with a single Deco. It would be a misunderstanding. We could add all the 3*Deco M4s(or more, 2 sets as you mentioned) in two houses together under the same Deco Mesh network.Best regards.
I will try to neglect the way you tried to gatekeep your support again with that misunderstanding nonsense.
Bottom line. If I have three Deco M4 units each connected directly to my main router through ethernet cable would all these three units form a proper mesh?
If yes: if I add another Deco unit, but this time wirelessly - would all these four units form a proper mesh?
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summoned wrote
Bottom line. If I have three Deco M4 units each connected directly to my main router through ethernet cable would all these three units form a proper mesh?
If yes: if I add another Deco unit, but this time wirelessly - would all these four units form a proper mesh?
Hi, Thanks for the message.
Yes for both questions.
Best regards.
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