Hi all,
I've got a long-term visitor coming in, and I plan to buy a Wireless Joey from Amazon or eBay. I also want the wireless one so I can move it around and use it outside from time to time during BBQs, etc. I called Dish, but they want an installation tech to come out and it costs quite a bit more, I presume because they provide a WAP, etc.
I actually work in product management for a large (famous brand) manufacturer of residential and small business wireless routers. As such, I have a pristine wireless network that utilizes a Broadcom based 802.11ac 3x3 solution (marketing zealously called AC1900), which is the same chipset technology in the Wireless Joey. I also live in Texas on a large lot without interference from neighbors' Wi-Fi systems.
All that said, I'm sure the signal quality and interference of my system is in the top 99 percentile of all other Dish network customers. I also have a 200 Mbps Internet connection to which I have no problem achieving over wireless connections with modern 11ac clients (Macbook Pros, 3x3 Bridges, 11ac Android devices, etc. etc.).
I've read so much contradictory information about using a Wireless Joey on your own network. Both my Hopper and MOCA Joey are Internet connected and have IP addresses from my IPv4 network (not using the self-assigned 169 MOCA addresses).
So am I correct in thinking that I can purchase a Wireless Joey from the Internet, activate it with Dish (paying the $7 / month fee) and connect it to my Wireless Router and be able to view TV and access DVR content through the Hopper (using Hopper's tuners)? I'm assuming I do not need to use the second Ethernet port and a separate WAP for the Wireless Joey and that I can instead use my existing Infrastructure Router?
Finally, I have an earlier Hopper, maybe 2-3 years old. It is a Hopper 2000. I also have the USB Sling add-on (not that it should matter).
Please advise before I pull the trigger here.
I've got a long-term visitor coming in, and I plan to buy a Wireless Joey from Amazon or eBay. I also want the wireless one so I can move it around and use it outside from time to time during BBQs, etc. I called Dish, but they want an installation tech to come out and it costs quite a bit more, I presume because they provide a WAP, etc.
I actually work in product management for a large (famous brand) manufacturer of residential and small business wireless routers. As such, I have a pristine wireless network that utilizes a Broadcom based 802.11ac 3x3 solution (marketing zealously called AC1900), which is the same chipset technology in the Wireless Joey. I also live in Texas on a large lot without interference from neighbors' Wi-Fi systems.
All that said, I'm sure the signal quality and interference of my system is in the top 99 percentile of all other Dish network customers. I also have a 200 Mbps Internet connection to which I have no problem achieving over wireless connections with modern 11ac clients (Macbook Pros, 3x3 Bridges, 11ac Android devices, etc. etc.).
I've read so much contradictory information about using a Wireless Joey on your own network. Both my Hopper and MOCA Joey are Internet connected and have IP addresses from my IPv4 network (not using the self-assigned 169 MOCA addresses).
So am I correct in thinking that I can purchase a Wireless Joey from the Internet, activate it with Dish (paying the $7 / month fee) and connect it to my Wireless Router and be able to view TV and access DVR content through the Hopper (using Hopper's tuners)? I'm assuming I do not need to use the second Ethernet port and a separate WAP for the Wireless Joey and that I can instead use my existing Infrastructure Router?
Finally, I have an earlier Hopper, maybe 2-3 years old. It is a Hopper 2000. I also have the USB Sling add-on (not that it should matter).
Please advise before I pull the trigger here.