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WillaMesh Equipment

Introduction

To connect to WillaMesh, you will need a few pieces of equipment installed at your location. Check out the photos to see what the devices look like, when they are needed, and their cost.

Model When To Use Cost
Routers
Linksys EA6350 Needed to connect to WillaMesh. Good for most homes and businesses. $50.00
Linksys WRT32X Larger homes needing more powerful Wi-Fi or sites acting as major WillaMesh relays. $200.00
Outdoor Radios
Ubiquiti Loco5AC Clear line-of-sight to nearby relay. $50.00
Ubiquiti NanoBeam Great all-around radio to connect to relay. $90.00
MikroTik OmniTik Sites in low-density, clustered neighborhoods needing Internet connectivity & disaster communications. $130.00

Routers

Inside your building, you need a router. This provides Wi-Fi to the computers and devices in your home or office and securely connects your internal network to the larger WillaMesh network and the Internet. Although these are standard hardware units, they are using special software and configurations to allow them to work properly with the community mesh network technology, so be sure to acquire them from us. If you have one of these models already, we'll be happy to see if we can reconfigure it so you won't need to purchase another router.

Linksys EA6350

This is our "go-to" option for a router. It provides good performance and is our least expensive option. It costs $50.00.

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Linksys WRT32X

This is a powerful device that is only recommended for larger homes or businesses that need more extensive Wi-Fi coverage or for sites providing WillaMesh relay service to dozens of other sites. It is significantly more expensive than the Linksys EA6350 at $200.00.

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Outdoor Radios

A typical installation will require your site to be connected to a WillaMesh relay using special outdoor Wi-Fi radio mounted on your roof or side of your building.

Ubiquiti Loco5AC

This is what we would use if your site is very close to an existing relay. It is the least expensive option, but will not be a good fit if the relay is not within clear line-of-sight of your location. It costs $50.00.

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Ubiquiti NanoBeam

The NanoBeam is the radio that would be used in most scenarios. It provides great performance and is pretty reasonably-sized. It costs $90.

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Mikrotik OmniTik

The OmniTik is a good solution for neighborhoods with low-density housing. This radio is a multi-tasker. It serves up standard Internet connectivity and is the foundation for a local disaster communications network to empower information exchange and outreach during power outages, severe weather events, or other adverse scenarios. It costs $130.

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