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I’ve been trying to get my home network setup to handle consistent 4K streaming across three TVs and a handful of mobile devices, but I keep hitting frustrating bottlenecks, especially in the evenings when everyone is online. My current setup is the standard ISP-provided router placed centrally, but the signal degrades badly in the far bedroom and the backyard office. I’ve looked into mesh systems and even a more powerful single router, but I’m hesitant because my house has a mix of old plaster walls and newer drywall, which I hear can really interfere with signal propagation. The trade-off I’m wrestling with is whether to invest in a high-end tri-band mesh system for complete coverage, which feels like overkill, or try to strategically place a couple of wired access points, which would mean dealing with the hassle of running Ethernet through finished spaces. My main goal is achieving reliable whole-home coverage without sacrificing speed for my work video calls, which feels impossible with my current spotty connection. I’m hoping someone here has navigated a similar home network setup challenge in a older, mixed-construction home and can offer some practical advice on what actually worked without breaking the bank.
From my experience in an older plaster-drywall home, I found running wired backhaul to a couple of ceiling-mounted APs made a bigger difference than a fancy mesh. If you can’t pull Ethernet everywhere, try MoCA adapters on the coax runs and pair them with a dedicated AP or two; it creates stable backhaul without trenching walls. QoS for work calls and 4K can then coexist.