That cable is gonna cost you over a grand tho. Do you have direct line of sight, or close enough? You could maybe use something like this?
1 or 2 of these should work. I have 1 connecting my workshop to my house and it works flawlessly. It has pretty robust software options allowing for several different configurations.
https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-Transmission-Wireless-Injector-CPE710/dp/B08D71HC9L
Total distance? Are you capable of digging a trench?
Three options come to mind:
Get two of these. They are awesome. Almost 1 Gbps transfer rate at that distance and no burying cable.
TP-Link 5GHz AC867 Long Range Outdoor CPE for PtP and PtMP Transmission | Point to Point Wireless Bridge | 23dBi | Passive PoE Powered w/Free PoE Injector | Pharos Control (CPE710) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08D71HC9L/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_i_R46NAAC058T7DVT79ASP?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
I'd start dealing with the internet connection.
TP-Link Long-Range Outdoor Wireless Networking Solution - 5GHz AC 867Mbps, 23dBi
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B08D71HC9L/
Also since you have power out there, maybe internet over powerlines.
Once you have that, your electrician can probably do the rest.
Are the two EAP225’s hardwired and your using MESH to bridge the networks (I assume)?
Typically, the CPE product line is a better solution for this application:
CPE710 or 510:
TP-Link 5GHz AC867 Long Range Outdoor CPE for PtP and PtMP Transmission | Point to Point Wireless Bridge | 23dBi | Passive PoE Powered w/Free PoE Injector | Pharos Control (CPE710) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08D71HC9L/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_E02CXMSVRTCR013YNY73
But you could also just try custom, higher gain antennas on you 225 outdoors, and / or different channels.
Also check your PoE power levels. Are you using a PoE switch (some have issues) or the included midspan?
My outdoors (different application) used to drop and re-adopt frequently (MESH connected to main EAP225/245 network) when they were too close to the uplink AP. When they were mounted on the side of the house they didn’t stay connected reliably. Moving them farther away (fence) actually improved the connection significantly.
I assume this is most likely due to the shape of the antenna radiation patterns.
for your shed though, this is a much better option UNLESS you need to dig a ditch out there for something else anyways. https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-Transmission-Wireless-Injector-CPE710/dp/B08D71HC9L/ref=sr_1_6?keywords=tp+link+outdoor&qid=1637070664&qsid=139-9612539-7673909&sr=8-6&sres=B07953S2FD%2CB00P4JKQGK%2CB07CG3YRTR%2CB08D71HC9L%2CB00N2RO6...
just one will work, itll connect to your house wifi. if the speed isnt good enough you can add a second one to your house pointing at the one on your shed and youll be good. I have two links over 1000' with those and they still link at like 600 mbps
If you’re basing everything on cost just stop right there. Your customers won’t have a good experience, and neither will you.
I’m really not sure you’ve actually looked at ubiquitis products when you’re throwing out statements that the tp link stuff is cheaper. The CPE 710 AP ypu mentioned is around $69msrp https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-Transmission-Wireless-Injector-CPE710/dp/B08D71HC9L
A ubiquiti litebeam, the product tp-link ripped off, marked up and calls the CPE710 sells for $65msrp and is cheaper at distributors.
It sounds like you’re trying to base a business model off of someones backyard barn party wifi setup. I started an ISP, please trust me when I say, that reddit thread you linked is the WORST possible place to start taking advice from for a wisp. Never serve a customer on a residential wifi router’s radio/antennas, or a residential router whatsoever. If you want to start simple, get an RB2011 on ebay. That’ll be a decent and low cost router to start. Then use the poe injectors that come with the ubiquiti ptmp access points to provide poe to the AP.
I will reiterate. Watch the video I linked above. Look at ubiquitis product line. A proper PTMP Access Point starts at like $80, and the customer receivers start at $49. They make a $29 Aircube router and a $79 one. Mikrotik hap lineup is good too.
And do not expect to get the speeds published on the website. For any manufacturer.
Im also not a ubiquiti fanboy by any means, I’m just trying to give you the best set of gear to fit your bill. There are several other vendors like Cambium, Mimosa, etc but if cost is a problem those are nonstarters.
If you’re basing everything on cost just stop right there. Your customers won’t have a good experience, and neither will you.
I’m really not sure you’ve actually looked at ubiquitis products when you’re throwing out statements that the tp link stuff is cheaper. The CPE 710 AP ypu mentioned is around $69msrp https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-Transmission-Wireless-Injector-CPE710/dp/B08D71HC9L I see you mentioned
yeah, those are the ones i have. i bought 3 used ones for $30 each. they've been reliable, however, i've been wanting to upgrade to something a bit faster with 10/100/1000 interface and the ubiquiti only had 10/100. so i ordered a set of these.
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B08D71HC9L/ref=ppx\_yo\_dt\_b\_asin\_title\_o00\_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
i've seen a lot of people saying they like their TP-link hardware better than ubiquiti.
You can use a regular Ethernet switch every 100 meters if you really need to extend the signal.
I think folks said the dish requires, PoE? I don’t have one myself. But if that’s the case a PoE mid-span injector would be best <50 meters from the device.
Or you could use a wireless point to point bridge. Like this one:
TP-Link 5GHz AC867 Long Range Outdoor CPE for PtP and PtMP Transmission | Point to Point Wireless Bridge | 23dBi | Passive PoE Powered w/Free PoE Injector | Pharos Control (CPE710) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08D71HC9L/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_TF01KDK244HDDD2AB1AP
As many have suggested, if you are able to get a clear line of sight then this is perhaps the best option for you. Very easy to set up and 100% reliable. 2 main requirements: 1. Power Supply and 2. Near Clear line of sight.
this is a job for a Point to Point link.
A pair of these: https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-CPE210-300Mbps-dual-polarized-directional/dp/B08D71HC9L/
You'll need to run cat5e'6 to the place you mount it on the house, and point it at the shed. put the other on the shed, pointed at the one on the house.
You have direct line of sight?
use a pair of thise to make a wireless bridge https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-CPE210-300Mbps-dual-polarized-directional/dp/B08D71HC9L/
Reposting this, i deleted to double check with a friend who does outdoor deployments like this more than me that this would work fine.
https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-CPE210-300Mbps-dual-polarized-directional/dp/B08D71HC9L/
Fiber would be the elite best here, I think. Copper ethernet might work, though as often stated, anything over 100 meters is outside of spec and, while it doesn't instantly stop working at 101 meters, it becomes less and less reliable. 540 feet (plus any connection distances on either end) is significantly more than the 100 meter spec and you can expect significant difficulties or degraded performance. On the other hand, maybe you can set it 10 Mbps instead of 1G and it will be rock solid forever? You will only know once you have dug the trench and tried it and then it is pretty likely to fail.
So, wireless is tailor made for this application. There are several point-to-point wireless solutions. This TP-Link is physically identical to the Ubiquiti version I happened to get and about the same price per unit as well, about $70. I presume there will be some feature differences, as Ubiquiti does some stuff nicely. It is the only Ubiquiti product I happen to have, but for no particular reason. They will max out at about 655 Mbps and at least a mile range, which should be more than plenty.
For the barn end, you will need at least a WiFi access point for devices there to connect to and most have a few hardwire switch ports included. For the Starlink end, it depends. If you are all WiFi currently, you can use a WiFi bridge to connect wirelessly to Starlink and ethernet to your point to point bridge. Note that most such WiFi bridges, including the one I linked to here, only have a 100Mb wired connection, so that is the fastest it will send data to your remote point. There may be devices with 1Gb wired connections, but I have not shopped for one. I used this specific WiFi bridge while I was waiting for my Starlink ethernet adapter to ship because I didn't want to do any of the cable hacks.
My current network depends on a point to point between my house and workshop/barn, but it is a bit more complex because my Starlink dish is on the roof of the barn, where there are no trees to interfere, but router and an alternate internet provider and pretty much everything else is in the house, so I backhaul Starlink to the house using a VLAN to isolate it, then LAN traffic goes back over the same link to provider internet to devices in barn.
Here are some example;
https://www.amazon.ca/UBIQUITI-LBE-5AC-GEN2-Litebeam-Wireless-Bridge/dp/B072KQNGB1
https://www.amazon.ca/TP-Link-Business-AX3000-Ceiling-EAP650/dp/B0B12R9CYH
https://www.amazon.ca/UBIQUITI-UAP-AC-PRO-Unifi-Wireless-Access/dp/B01GBVMIWE
Coincidence or copycat, you can judge 👨⚖️
I am using these for a similar scenario: garage is 150ft away and these are installed inside the roofs since I am in a condo association. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08D71HC9L/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_i_TTSY32RVRXQN83SXHBFW?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
These are probably enough for your case since you are closer and probably line-of-sight: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00N2RO63U/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_i_0SBP9NBT4MJM85Z2H738?psc=1
I have the receiving one in the garage hooked to another router configured as an access point to broadcast the WiFi there. Think of the two units as a wireless Ethernet.
You can't "repeat" an antenna signal, but as someone else has suggested, you can install a HDHomeRun device in the barn and then extend the house's network to the barn via a point-to-point wireless networking device.
ie, A pair of these plus a HDHomeRun
Sounds like you want some sort of directional antenna.
or
Something like this
TP-Link 5GHz AC867 Long Range Outdoor CPE for PtP and PtMP Transmission | Point to Point Wireless Bridge | 23dBi | Passive PoE Powered w/Free PoE Injector | Pharos Control (CPE710) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08D71HC9L/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_VGXY6GF068QC7E8DQPJF
Or this
LiteBeam Antenna 802.11ac LBE-5AC-Gen2-US 2X2MIMO airMAX Gen2 5GHz 23dBi 450+ Mbps CPE https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07FW44NDB/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_V52ACPR30K6QQCWMSMEF
I would try this 23dBi antenna first, before all that digging.
https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-Transmission-Wireless-Passive-CPE710/dp/B08D71HC9L
or get a couple of these for cheaper and double the throughput