Perhaps I am incredibly naive with my thinking.
I've attached a couple of screenshots reflecting a speed test I ran just a few minutes ago along with the screen shot of how I have my Peplink configured to utilize the RV park WIFI. The results speak for themselves. This is not an anomaly.
When I checked in, I was provided the SSID along with the password. At the site, I have the Peplink scan for wireless networks & once identified I key in the password. It just works.
There are multiple WIFI access points throughout the RV park (in excess of 250+ sites) mounted on elevated poles.
I completely agree with all the points being made with regards to RV park WIFI. Most of it just plain SUCKS! However, I submit that RV park WIFI can be very good as evidenced by my attachments.
I suspect that there are a combination of factors involved with most RV park WIFI networks.
- Insufficient bandwidth available from an ISP. If it's not there, not much you can do about it.
- Poorly designed RV park networks. Ethernet connectivity won't fix this. WIFI will only make it worse.
- Signal interference inside the RV park as well as inside the RV. Can be mitigated to some extent with additional hardware (both RV park & RV owner).
As one of the posters noted, running Ethernet cabling & conduit would be a major expense. Length of Ethernet cable is generally limited to about 100 meters & the little connectors are not the most robust. That would suggest one would most likely have to go with coax which is generally limited to about 500 meters. If the bandwidth isn't available from the ISP, what is the point of investing in the network infrastructure.... be it WIFI or hard wired?
The hardware involved to support a wired network in a RV park, IMHO becomes price prohibitive very quickly. I can't even imagine the hassle involved in trying to retrofit a RV park to a wired network.
I'm not saying it can't be or won't be done. I'm just thinking a properly provisioned WIFI network would be less expensive. There may be a different technology available that I'm not familiar with as my background is not in networking. I'll gladly stand corrected.