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Dead Zones & Dropouts: Solving Wi-Fi Coverage Issues

By Network Cabling Elite Team  |  February 19, 2026

Dead Zones & Dropouts: Solving Wi-Fi Coverage Issues

The Mystery of the Dead Zone

We have all been there: you walk from your living room into the kitchen, and suddenly, your Zoom call freezes. These "dead zones" are the bane of modern connectivity. While many homeowners try to fix this with cheap "plug-in" extenders, they often make the problem worse by creating interference.

Why DIY Extenders Fail

Most consumer-grade extenders simply repeat a weak signal, cutting your bandwidth in half. To truly solve coverage issues, you need Professional Access Point (AP) Placement. This involves hardwiring high-powered APs directly to your router via Cat6 cabling.

The Professional Advantage

At Network Cabling Elite, we use professional heat-mapping software to visualize your Wi-Fi signal. We identify interference from neighboring networks and structural obstacles to ensure 100% coverage with seamless roaming. Don't settle for "good enough" signal—get the coverage your home or office deserves.


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Frequently Asked Questions

What is structured cabling?
Structured cabling is a standardized architecture for your business's telecommunications infrastructure. Instead of a messy, tangled web of point-to-point wires, structured cabling uses patch panels, organized trunks, and standardized Cat6/Fiber drops to provide a clean, highly reliable, and easily scalable network for data, voice, and video.
Should I install Cat6 or Cat6a cable for my office?
For most standard commercial offices, Cat6 is sufficient, supporting Gigabit speeds up to 328 feet. However, if you are future-proofing a medical facility, enterprise server room, or require 10-Gigabit speeds across longer distances, Cat6a is the recommended standard due to its higher bandwidth and thicker shielding against crosstalk.
Do you provide fiber optic installation?
Yes. We specialize in fiber optic backbone installations. Fiber is essential for linking network closets (MDF to IDFs) across large campus environments or multi-story buildings, as it bypasses the 328-foot distance limitation of traditional copper ethernet while providing virtually unlimited bandwidth.
How much does a network drop typically cost?
The cost of a network drop typically ranges from $150 to $300+ per run. The final price depends on the cable category (Cat5e, Cat6, Cat6a), the environment (drop ceilings vs. hard drywall), and whether commercial fire codes require the use of specialized Plenum-rated (CMP) cabling.
Do you mount and install Wi-Fi access points and security cameras?
Absolutely. Alongside running the low-voltage cabling, our technicians are highly experienced in mounting and terminating hardware, including PoE (Power over Ethernet) security cameras, wireless access points (WAPs), and building out complete server racks and patch panels.

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