Neal
Administrator
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2019
- Messages
- 13,869
- Location
- Midlothian, VA
- RV Year
- 2017
- RV Make
- Newmar
- RV Model
- Ventana 4037
- RV Length
- 40' 10"
- Chassis
- Freightliner XCR
- Engine
- Cummins 400 HP
- TOW/TOAD
- 2017 Chevy Colorado
- Fulltimer
- No
In my setup Pepwave scans every morning (once per day) and figures out channels. When I tried out Ubiquity not long ago at home it had nice control over all of that as well. Fortunately Wi-Fi is not that strong so campgrounds shouldn't be too bad but closely parked rallies may be a concern. I've been to some rallies where they raised this concern. Apartments can't be great for this but this is why Wi-Fi expansion continues (6, 6E, etc.).Jim....As long as the routers are assigned different IP address ranges there should be no issues with them running side by side. It is possible that you could get channel interference issues from the WiFi side on both units, but Ubiquity allows you to either let the router self manage channel usage, or you can manually manage the channels used for both 2.4 and 5ghz to avoid any interference issues. I don't believe at this time there is a way of a way to change channel settings on the Starlink router, mostly due to Starlinks desire to keep it simple for the folks that aren't technology savvy in those areas. A quick scan with a smart phone app of the channels in use by Starlink will tell you which channels to stay away from for peak results.
Interesting @redbaron as I figured the dishy needed their router for account control, dish alignment, etc. Anything that does not work by removing the white router from the setup? Any feature loss? stow, unstow, etc.? From what I've read the router is a power hog. Not sure how a PoE injector compares, I have one, I may try it, but that could solve power concerns for boondockers.