The manufacturer's website has information that the Tenda 4G03 is capable of providing LTE data speeds of 150 Mbps.
How to access the Internet where there is no way to pull a wire. Review of the Tenda 4G03 quality Wi-Fi router
From time to time many users are faced with the need to access the Internet in places where there is no possibility to make a wired connection, or to pay for high-speed Internet access using GPON technology, etc. is simply not practical. In this situation, you have to look for alternative ways to access the Internet. Wireless Wi-Fi router Tenda 4G03 can help to solve this problem.
Packaging and delivery kit
Tenda 4G03 Wi-Fi router comes in a relatively small, informative, colorful cardboard box on which we can find information about the main characteristics of the router, its image, as well as a QR-code to download the branded mobile application.
Inside the box there is a sealing cardboard frame, thanks to which the set is firmly fixed inside and doesn't hang around. The package includes:
- Tenda 4G03 Wi-Fi router;
- Network power adapter;
- Patch cord;
- Quick start guide.
How to correctly position the router antennas to achieve maximum range of the Wi-Fi signal
Quite often, visiting friends and relatives, I see that on their wi-fi routers antennas are placed as desired, but not as it is necessary. And the reason for this is that people simply don't know how the signal from wi-fi antennas spreads. But in fact it's very simple. And even the manufacturers themselves show exactly how the antennas should be located. Look at the box from your router (if you haven't already thrown it away), there will be a hint. Below I will tell you exactly how to position the antennas for better signal reception and transmission.
In order to understand how to place the antennas on the wi-fi router, it is necessary to understand how the signal from these very antennas is dispersed. And here, of course, not everything is so simple. And there are many different types of antennas. But we are interested specifically in the antennas in household routers, which are usually a spring, with the right number of coils, hidden in a plastic pin. The classic antenna on a router looks like this:
This is the type of antenna installed in most home routers. Although there are models with built-in antennas and omni-directional antennas. But we will not consider them, because in this case the manufacturer himself took care that the antennas were installed in the right direction.
Now let's see how the Wi-Fi signal diverges from this type of antennas. Googling will help us for this, where you can find a bunch of different studies and measurements. If we take a simplified diagram, it looks like this:
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Then you have to wrap your head in tinfoil. Because apart from the router, the apartment is full of other radiations: microwave, cellular, neighbor's routers, 5G towers, reptiloid transmitters, radio waves from radios and repeaters, radio and TV signals.
Oh, my gosh, I'm so scared myself.
If you ever stood next to a spectroanalyzer, your confidence would shake to some extent.
What's the point? You need a grounded screen with a grounding resistance of less than 0.01 Ohmm, which is a minimum of 2,000 15-meter metal pins driven into the ground at a distance of 20 meters from each other. Then your screen will help, otherwise hide in a bunker with walls of one meter of armor:)
Knock on the door and introduce yourself as an employee of an Internet company, say preventive maintenance, and then do with the antennas what you need!
Here for example in my apartment catches 3 router from the sasedej all with a password of course. And what is free? Without knowing the password, I can not use the Internet, then.
It also happens that the router is lying somewhere on the floor behind the desk in a pile of wires and of course there are complaints about the poor connection. So it was with friends in St. Petersburg's old stock, where thanks to the wooden slabs WiFi worked more for communal neighbors from downstairs and was not the full coverage is not such a big three-bedroom-settlement. As soon as you put the router up on the cabinet, there is a stable connection in the far room.
And my router doesn't have any antennas outside.
What am I supposed to do, put it on its side or upright?
What are you smoking out there that's got you so worked up?
What difference does it make which side you put the oil on, it'll fall down anyway!
Well, lamers don't get it.
And who at least the user – they get.
//Ps
How strange, my router is 15 years old.
The incoming channel is 250 Mbps, by youfly 220-230 Mbps load holds steady…
And what are the numbers claimed?
For example claimed gigabit per second.
And you have to understand that firstly this gigabit is possible only in ideal conditions – the air is clear, the signal is good, and the subscriber's device supports it.
Secondly, gigabit is the speed of the link – the radio channel through which the data will be transmitted. Data can be service and user data. In wi-fi, the share of service data is about 55%.
Accordingly, the transfer rate of user data will be about 450 megabits.