Coverage · blanket an area, not just a point
WiFi that covers the whole area, not just the room the modem is in.
A point-to-point link gets the internet to a place. Covering that place is the next job. We feed outdoor access points and mesh nodes from the link so people and devices stay connected as they move across the yard, the sheds, the site or the event, all on one network.
How we cover an area
Coverage is about placement and hand-over, not just raw signal. Done well, you never notice it.
Outdoor access points
Weatherproof access points placed for the way the space is actually used, so the signal reaches the yard, the shed and the far corner.
Mesh where cabling won't reach
Nodes relay to each other so coverage spreads without a cable to every point, the way to light up a sprawling or awkward site.
One network, seamless roaming
A single network name across the whole site. Devices hand over from one access point to the next as people move, with no dropouts.
Fed from the link
The coverage runs off your point-to-point or point-to-multipoint feed, so the area and the internet that reaches it are one job.
Built for the load
Signal is the easy part. Holding up when everyone connects at once is the real test.
Density for crowds
Events and parks need capacity, not just signal. We plan the access point count for the device numbers, so it holds when the crowd arrives.
The right placement
Height and aim beat raw power outdoors. We site each access point where it does the most good, not just where it is easy to mount.
Kept apart where it matters
Guest, staff and equipment on separate networks where you need the separation, so the public WiFi never touches the gear that runs the place.
Monitored and tuned
We watch coverage and load and adjust it, so a dead spot or an overloaded node gets sorted rather than lived with.
How we build it
Map the area and usage
We walk the site, work out where people and devices actually are, and plan the coverage and capacity around it.
Install and tune coverage
We mount the access points and nodes, set up the one network, and tune the hand-over so it is seamless on the move.
Monitor and adjust
We keep an eye on coverage and load and adjust as the use of the site changes through the seasons or the event.
Where wide-area coverage fits
Farms and large properties
WiFi at the workshop, the yards, the machinery shed and the house, all on one network fed from the main connection.
Events and showgrounds
Coverage across a festival, show or worksite for crowds and EFTPOS. Our sister service Event Networks does this at scale.
Caravan parks and campgrounds
Guest WiFi that reaches every site and cabin, with the capacity for a full park in peak season.
Worksites and yards
Connectivity across a depot, yard or site office where staff and devices move around all day.
Coverage rides on a link
To cover an area you first have to get the internet to it. We bring it in over a point-to-point or point-to-multipoint link, then spread it with mesh and access points. For events at scale see Event Networks, and for property-scale rural networking see Paddock Networks.
Questions people ask
What is the difference between a point-to-point link and mesh coverage?
A point-to-point link gets the internet to a place. Mesh and outdoor access points cover that place, so people and devices stay connected as they move across it. Most sites need both: a link to bring it in, and coverage to spread it out.
How many devices can it handle?
That depends on the design. A handful of devices on a farm is very different from a few thousand at an event. We plan the number of access points and the capacity for the real device count, so it does not buckle when everyone connects at once.
Is it really one network across the whole site?
Yes. We run a single network name across all the access points and nodes, so a device hands over from one to the next as you move, without dropping or asking you to reconnect.
Do you need to cable every access point?
Not always. Where running cable is easy we will, because a wired access point performs best. Where it is not, mesh nodes relay to each other wirelessly, so coverage reaches places a cable never would.
Can you set it up for a temporary event?
Yes. We do temporary coverage for events and worksites, sized for the crowd and the days you need it, then packed down after. Our sister service Event Networks focuses on exactly this.
Cover the whole place, not just one corner of it.
Tell us the area you need covered and roughly how many people use it. We will plan the coverage and a price.
Get a quote