
The best part: It may find the router for you. They say it's "essentially the free version of the multi-thousand-dollar Ekahau SiteSurvey." It's for Windows, How-To Geek has a little guide about it. It can make a map for you, that should give you a better idea of which corners to be concentrating your search in. But not the "walk around blindly with a strength meter" approach, use an app that will map it for you. I asked "really?" and he said "100%, I can see it in my system".īarring an obvious wire leading to it, then searching by WiFi signal strength should be good too. I can't really believe that something like this even exists, but the supporter from the ISP told me that it is like this.

In the Holiday house, signal A which my father uses for private stuff had only one line strength on the phone while signal B had 3 to 4.

So the Router actually had two different WIFI Signals, with two totally different strengths. The WIFI Signal was from the router inside my fathers home which is right next to the holiday house.

Distributed by the market leader ISP in my country. I tried just going around with my cellphone and searching in the area with the best connection to the network but didn’t find the router.Įdit: Due to some comments that wanted more information about the router: It's a normal ADSL/VDSL router which sends WiFi signals. My father is a digital neanderthal and doesn’t know where his router is, therefore I cannot configure my repeater to this router.Īre there any tools that could help me find that router in the house? I know that there are tools that tell you which Ethernet cable is in use and where it points to, so I figured maybe there are tools that help me find my router?īy “tools,” I don’t necessarely mean software, I’m also thinking about a hardware tool.
#Superhot secret locations install
I want to install a WLAN repeater in my father’s holiday house which he rents out to other people.
