Fritzbox Repeater 6000 in the children's room?

  • Erstellt am 2023-07-11 10:48:34

sysrun80

2023-07-18 23:44:38
  • #1


Well, that’s how it is. That way you can just brush everything off. Quite simple. :rolleyes: Do you also have authorization for the 50Hz power grid? You have a bunch of antennas installed in the walls. No idea, it’s just a feeling, I have no expertise in that.
 

Gerddieter

2023-07-18 23:52:23
  • #2
We have that in common Then Did you really have antennas built into the walls?
 

hanse987

2023-07-19 00:28:41
  • #3


You don't need it, but I would never do anything else! I would even additionally install network ports for access points on the ceiling. We are all so different.
 

HeimatBauer

2023-07-19 09:59:51
  • #4


I actually installed that once in my place. Result: Mom immediately plugged in the radio alarm clock, so the clearance was initially pretty pointless. That's why the radio alarm clock got its own socket, which was branched off from the neighboring room, making the area within 1m around the bed free of the network again. However, I didn't do that anymore when building the new house.

I wouldn't want to miss a single one of my LAN sockets. If I want a repeater somewhere, I just plug it in – of course with PoE. And unfortunately, I only have two ports behind the TV, so there's another small desktop switch there as well.
 

mayglow

2023-07-19 12:50:10
  • #5
Instead of "do I have to worry about the radiation," I often care more about whether it blinks or makes noises. I believe repeaters usually blink less, I think. But I wouldn’t want to have the main router in the bedroom. And with noises, I have found that what people perceive varies a lot. I once had a power supply where presumably some coil was whining or something, but my husband didn’t hear a thing, while it drove me crazy until I found and unplugged the culprit. Children usually hear such things even more (they simply perceive a larger frequency range), I would at least keep that in mind and for that reason alone want to have as little electricity near the head as possible. In that case, it just has nothing to do with "radiation."
 

rick2018

2023-07-19 12:54:59
  • #6
Power via POE and simply turn off the lights. I do not hear my APs and they do not light up either.
 

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