I’d rather not run the cable in through a window, so I put the router in a convenient bay. However, the floors on my coach are very thick and well insulated, so the signal deteriorates quickly as I move toward the back of the 45 foot coach and I get farther away from the bay. So, I sprung for the extra $130 and bought a Starlink mesh. I put the mesh inside the coach just above the bay in which the router is located. That gives me great coverage throughout the Coach.
Granted, I could’ve run the wire in through the window, or I could have installed some sort of a conduit for a permanent solution through the wall of the coach, but we spent nine months of the year in the coach, so I wanted something a little more finished. Also, I use the mesh with my Starlink for the three months of the year we’re at our house. So I have a double use for the mesh, making it less of a frivolous expense.
With regard to the double use – nine months on the road and three months at home - I went with the residential set up which costs $110 a month, and when I am on the road, I add Starlink Portability service, which raises the monthly cost to $135 a month, which is the same as the RV monthly cost. Portability can be turned off or paused when you are not using it, the same as you can do with the RV program. This gives me the prioritized signal for the time that I am at my homebase, and it gives me the RV signal when I’m on the road. Portability and RV give the same signal strength.