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Cybertron Blog

Cybertron has been serving the Wichita area since 1997, providing IT Support such as technical helpdesk support, computer support, and consulting to small and medium-sized businesses.

Bad Office Wi-Fi? Three Free Fixes Before You Buy

Bad Office Wi-Fi? Three Free Fixes Before You Buy

You are mid-meeting, or uploading a big proposal, and the loading wheel shows up. One sad bar of Wi-Fi. The usual reaction is to buy a faster plan or a router with eight antennas that looks like a robot spider. Hold off. Most of the time the internet and the hardware are fine. The problem is where the box sits. Here are three fixes that cost nothing.

Put the router in the middle

Think of your router like a lightbulb. Stick it in a far corner and the rest of the building stays dim. Wi-Fi radiates in every direction, so when the router is shoved against an outside wall, half of its signal is heading out into the parking lot. Move it toward the center of the space and every laptop, tablet, and printer has less distance to cover.

Get it off the floor

This is the mistake in about nine out of ten offices we walk into. The router is on the carpet, buried behind a filing cabinet and a knot of power strips. Radio waves spread sideways and down, so a floor-level router is firing a big chunk of its signal straight into the foundation. Concrete and metal floor supports act like a shield and kill it before it reaches your desk. Get it to eye level or higher. Mount it on a wall or set it on top of a bookshelf. Fewer obstacles, better connection.

Keep it away from interference

Your router does not play well with certain neighbors. Park it next to a microwave, a cordless phone base, or a big aquarium and you have a problem. Microwaves run on the same 2.4 GHz band as a lot of older Wi-Fi, and water absorbs signal, so a fish tank or heavy plumbing in the wall will choke it. Take a walk through your office. If the router is sitting beside the breakroom microwave or tucked behind a metal fire door, that is your dead zone explained. Metal, water, and competing electronics are the three things that wreck a wireless signal.

When placement is not enough

Your team should not have to do the Wi-Fi dance by the hallway just to send an email. If you have moved the router and still hit dead zones, the fix is usually a mesh system or proper wireless access points. Those blanket the whole office in one managed signal that does not drop the second someone walks into the conference room. We can map your coverage and tell you exactly what you need.

Book a call and we will run a quick network assessment.

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