nanog mailing list archives

Re: OT: Wireless Network Strength Dependent On Wired Network?


From: Brielle Bruns <bruns () 2mbit com>
Date: Sat, 20 Jun 2009 02:21:39 -0600

On 6/20/09 12:47 AM, Neil wrote:


Now, a former electrical engineer is claiming that if we improve the wired
network so that the signal comes across better, then computer2 won't drop
the wireless connection so frequently. (He says that the signal emitted by
the wireless router will be improved by feeding it a better source signal.)


He doesn't know what he's talking about. The two signals have nothing to do with one another - there is no direct connection between wired ethernet and wifi. You can not just plug an antenna into the end of a cat5e cable and expect it to work.

In an easier to visualize path... if you have an ethernet card, and a 802.11g card in your desktop, yes, they may be attached to the same PCI bus, but the packets still have to come in one interface, be handled by the hardware on the card, passed down the PCI bus to the CPU where the software handles processing of the data, then passed back down the PCI bus to the other card, processed by that card, then transmitted by that card over whatever transport it uses. There's a few conversions going on during the path, throwing out garbage data, retransmitting, etc.

If you shut off the antenna of the wifi card, it doesn't affect the ethernet card, and it will continue passing data for the computer to the LAN. If you unplug the cat5e, the wifi can still pass data between devices that communicate over wifi.

I can go into alot more detail here, but moral of story, is don't let a electrical engineer that has no clue about how ethernet and wifi work tell you how packets get from one place to another, and how ethernet relates to wifi.

--
Brielle Bruns
The Summit Open Source Development Group
http://www.sosdg.org    /     http://www.ahbl.org


Current thread: