Fixing Wi-Fi Dead Zones in Brick Homes
If you live in a traditional UK terraced house or an older Australian brick build, you already know the struggle. The router is in the living room pushing out 500 Mbps, but the moment you walk into the kitchen or go upstairs, the signal drops to 1 bar and Netflix starts buffering.
Why Brick is the Enemy of Wi-Fi
Wi-Fi signals are just radio waves. High-speed bands (like 5GHz) have incredibly short wavelengths. While they can carry massive amounts of data, they are easily absorbed by dense materials like solid brick, concrete, foil-backed insulation, and metal plumbing.
If your ISP router has to push a signal through two brick walls to reach your bedroom, the signal is essentially dead on arrival.
Solution 1: The "2.4GHz Fallback" Trick
If you are trying to reach a smart TV or a security camera at the back of the house, make sure it is connected to your router's 2.4GHz network, not the 5GHz one. While 2.4GHz is slower, its longer wavelengths penetrate solid objects much more effectively.
Solution 2: Upgrade to a Mesh System (Best Option)
Wi-Fi Extenders (repeaters) used to be the go-to solution, but they often halve your speeds and require you to manually switch networks as you walk around the house. The modern, permanent fix is a Mesh Wi-Fi System.
Mesh systems use 2 or 3 separate "nodes." You plug one into your modem, place another in the hallway, and a third upstairs. Instead of trying to punch a signal through three brick walls at once, the nodes bounce the signal around the obstacles, enveloping your entire home in a single, high-speed network.
Wired Backhaul for Extreme Cases
If your internal walls are made of solid stone and even a wireless Mesh struggles, look for a Mesh system with Ethernet ports. You can run a single Ethernet cable between the nodes to create an unbreakable "wired backhaul," guaranteeing 100% of your NBN/Fibre speed in every room.