Monday, February 25, 2013

What does the signal strength REALLY mean?

So I take a lot of calls on network issues, specifically about laptops connecting to wireless networks.

The common misconception is that signal strength equals speed. While signal strength is, indeed, a factor, it’s not the only factor nor even a major one. Signal strength is an indicator of one items – strength from your laptop/mobile device/PC/macbook to your wireless router. That’s it. Not to the internet, not to your work website, not to Google, not to ticketmaster.com, nothing.

You see, when you connect to the Internet, you’re not connecting directly to the website. You connect to your router, which connect to your modem, which connects to a backbone line, which connects to another (very high powered) router, which connects to another one, and another one, and then maybe your intended site/server. Each “hop” of this transmission takes time to jump from each step to the next, and then any information coming back takes a similar path to come back

Huh?

That means your computer sends a request to a website or other server, then that server sends back the information you requested (web page, file download, video feed, etc.). So each connection is a two-way street, encompassing at least five different sub-connections, all taking their sweet time.

So what does this have to do with signal strength, JR?

Not much, and that’s the point.

As I said above, signal strength is what people use as an argument for “my internet connection should be blazing fast”. They think that since they have four or five bars, they should have instant connection to anywhere in the world, and that’s simply not true.

It only means you have a strong (not necessarily fast) connection to your router. After that, the signal strength means nothing.

So what does it means if I have very LOW signal strength?

As I mentioned, signal strength CAN impact your speed, but not in the way you want. If you have a poor connection, indicated by a low signal strength, you can get a very low speed, as the network and your laptop have to compensate for data packets missing, etc.

Okay, so signal strength is important, to a degree. How do I improve strength if I have a low signal?

Well, understand that wi-fi, or wireless networking, is still a radio signal. Have you ever driven your car into a long roadway tunnel, and your radio started getting fuzzy, or just outright not playing at all? That’s called EMI, or “Electromagnetic Interference”. In layman’s terms: stuff that gets in the way of your radio signal.

The same thing happens to wi-fi signals. But because the broadcast strength is MUCH lower than a radio station’s, it’s easier to disrupt wi-fi. That means the metal in your walls, the wires running through them, the concrete foundation, nearby electrical appliances (TV, anyone?) can all have an impact on your router’s wireless transmissions.

So keep your wireless router away from appliances, and out of the basement. If you need wireless on more than one floor, there are ways to use TWO wireless routers or access points (APs) to cover more area.

So, what can I do if I have great signal strength, but have very slow internet?

First off, determine if it’s ALL sites that are slow, or just one or two. If the latter, it’s probably something to do with an internet backbone router, or the website’s server. In all of these cases, there’s precious little you can do about it. The items you need to troubleshoot are not in your control, and may not be in the control of the website’s owner. You can call them to see if they have issues, but if they find nothing problematic on their end, chances are you’ll have to wait until the Internet fixes itself (which it does have this ability to do).

If it’s ALL websites that are problematic, then call your ISP (Internet Service Provider). They can check for signal to your building, see if an outage is going on, etc. They can guide you through some troubleshooting, or send a tech out if it’s necessary.

Conclusion

There’s a lot that is affected by wireless signal strength, but it’s not the end-all-be-all of network speed. I’ll cover troubleshooting connection speeds in another post, so stay tuned!

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