Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Wi-Fi Boosting: Hardware Trick

Increase your Wi-Fi router's range towards your computer and filter out unwanted Wi-Fi signal from neighbouring devices with some hardware trick. You already have the materials in your house and it takes less than 5 minutes.

A little theory 


Just the bare minimum to understand how and why it works.

Wi-Fi is an unlicensed radio band in the 2.4 GHz range and it behaves just like any other electromagnetic wave. It is known that electromagnetic waves are piercing through metal object very weakly, or in other words they are reflected or stopped. This is the exact same reason why you shouldn't put any metallic object in your microwave oven either.

Electromagnetic waves propagate in the direction without any obstruction freely, but waves that hit metallic surfaces (say a steel plate) get reflected (a portion pierces through and the remainder gets reflected. The ratio of reflected to continuing waves depends on the type and thickness of metallic layer). The reflected component then is heading the same way as the part which was going unobstructed, thereby creating an amplification effect. This amplification can be used in the case if Wi-Fi signal as well, just like described above.

Consider the following example.

Imagine a 2 dimensional system with point signal source (say a router, broadcasting Wi-Fi signal) and a metallic object (radiator) on its right. Considering only the horizontally propagating waves in the 2-dimensional plane, the following happens.

 The signal is emitted and propagates freely to the left as there is no obstruction.

The other part of the signal propagates to the right and hits the surface of the metal plate. At this point (ignoring any signal getting through, so assume 100% reflection) the signal is reflected from the surface and starts heading backwards, the way it started from (dashed lines) .


The reflected waves are now heading in the same direction as the first part (to the left), but now there are twice as much, going in the one direction, hence the stronger or more signal.

How to make use of this 

 

The reflection of signals is usually an unwanted thing in an apartment where Wi-Fi is used as it generally weakens the signal. This occurs when a router is placed close to a radiator or mirror and the computer is on the other side respectively. However when placing the signal source cleverly,  reflection can be taken advantage of and it can actually boost the radio signal. 2 main tricks that can be done are
  1. Amplifying the signal coming from the router to a specific direction
  2. Blocking signal arriving to a device
The first one is the process described above in the theory whereas a signal is forced in a chosen direction. The latter option might not seem useful for the fist time, but it is actually very handy in situations where there are a lot of different signals. In these cases (say 20 different Wi-Fi routers) each of the 13 channels are used, some even by more than 2-3 devices. If this happens, the receiver device has to differentiate between the incoming signals and decide which one is the one required and filter out the rest. Referring to the used example, if an antenna is receiving a signal from the left, then by placing a metallic object on its right, the unwanted signals coming from the right can be blocked out, hence the receiving device will have to "think" less about which signal is useful and which one should be disregarded.

Make your own amplifier

 

Making something that amplifies or rather said direct your Wi-Fi signal into the necessary direction is way easier than it sounds. All you need is:
  • Cardboard
  • Aluminium foil
  • Scissors, duct tape etc.
Ultimately what you need to do is to cut a piece of cardboard and cover it with aluminium foil. This will act as the metallic layer as described in the previous example and reflect your signal the way you need it to.




Then, based on how you want to direct the signal place it behind your signal source. You can either have it
  • Straight - the signal will be stronger on the one side of the wall while weaker on the other side
  • Bent in a slight "U" shape or parabola - the signal will be directed more or less in a cone shape. This is a more focused option and can extend the range further out in a narrower region.

Results


This does sound cheap and it is, but it certainly does the job. I have applied this behind my receiver antenna and it has blocked out about 9 out of 12 Wi-Fi signals from neighbours and therefore made my own signal reception much more stable and reliable. I am just making another one to place behind the router and direct more signal towards my antenna, which is going to even further improve the quality of my local network.

Please note that even though this is a nice trick you can do fast within the next 5 minutes and get significant results immediately after placing it, it will not be as good as buying directional antennas or anything similar.

My plans are to test a parabola antenna by placing a small router in the middle of it and check how far the range has extended. I have seen Wi-Fi working over vast distances and I am hoping for reproducing similar results.

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