Dead zones are usually caused by placement, building materials, distance, interference, or weak backhaul—not a lack of internet speed. A professional design fixes the underlying coverage problem instead of adding another temporary extender.
Why dead zones happen
Most internet providers place their router where the service enters the home. That location may be convenient for the installer but poor for coverage. Signals weaken through walls, floors, cabinets, appliances, masonry, metal ductwork, radiant barriers, and long hallways.
A dead zone can also appear when a device remains connected to an access point that is too far away. Proper roaming, channel planning, power levels, and access-point placement matter just as much as raw signal strength.
Why extenders often disappoint
Consumer extenders repeat an existing wireless signal. If the signal reaching the extender is already weak, the extender repeats a weak connection. Additional wireless hops can reduce usable capacity and create confusing network names or poor roaming.
A professional system uses access points connected to the network through Ethernet, fiber, or a dedicated wireless bridge. That gives each coverage area a stronger path back to the gateway.
How Berthoud WiFi fixes coverage
We review the floor plan, construction, device locations, current router, internet handoff, and available cabling. Signal testing helps identify whether the problem is coverage, interference, congestion, or an upstream internet issue.
The final solution may include relocating equipment, adding one or more UniFi access points, installing wired backhaul, replacing consumer mesh hardware, or extending connectivity to an outdoor or detached area.
U6 versus U7 access points
WiFi 7 is not automatically the correct answer. Several UniFi U6 models remain excellent choices because of their radio capability, coverage, compatibility, and value. U7 models may be useful when newer client devices, 6 GHz, multi-gig switching, or future planning justify them.
We recommend the model that fits the property and client mix instead of designing around a marketing generation.
What to expect during installation
The process includes consultation, site review, equipment planning, cable-route approval, installation, configuration, testing, and handoff. We explain the design before work begins and test representative areas after installation.
The goal is consistent performance where people actually use the network—not simply a strong speed test beside the router.
Serving Northern Colorado
Berthoud WiFi is based in Berthoud and provides this service throughout Loveland, Fort Collins, Longmont, Erie, Boulder, Windsor, Johnstown, Timnath, Mead, Frederick, Firestone, Wellington, Greeley, and nearby communities.
Frequently asked questions
How many access points does a home need?
The answer depends on square footage, floors, construction, layout, mounting options, and device use. Many homes need more than one properly placed access point, but adding too many can also create interference.
Will faster internet fix a dead zone?
Usually not. A faster plan cannot correct weak signal or poor access-point placement inside the property.
Can you cover a garage or patio?
Yes. Coverage may use an indoor or outdoor access point, Ethernet, fiber, or a wireless bridge depending on the distance and construction.
Do you install U6 and U7 models?
Yes. We choose between UniFi U6 and U7 access points based on coverage, radio capability, client devices, cabling, and budget.
Related services and guides
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