I have one of my four BT Whole Home Wifi discs placed close to the front door, so that my video doorbell and security camera have a good connection. However whenever I need to reboot the system (or individual discs) the doorbell and security camera will often reconnect to a disc much further away (e.g. at the back of the house). As a result, their wifi connection is poor and they frequently drop their connection (albeit briefly).
Is there any way of "forcing" a device to connect to a specific disc without having to power cycle it? The doorbell camera in particular is a pain in the neck to power cycle as it is hardwired to a shared power supply.
There is no way to do this, this is one of the reasons I moved to Unifi is ultimately the Wholehome system just didnt have enough configuratable (not a word) settings.
Every time there was a power cut the blooming discs wouldnt MESH with each other in the optimum order even though I selected 'Prefer Daisy Chain' on the admin page, they would still sometimes connect to a disc further away.
Each time there was a reboot I would find myself turning off all my devices, turning off all the discs, powering on each disc in the right order whilst also powering on the devices nearest the disc I wanted them to connect to.
Eventually enough was a enough, I installed ethernet everywhere and got Unifi setup, it had helped me so much but I outgrew it and being able to lock a device to a certain disc would be a huge benefit but it is not there.
If you want this sort of configuration the original AC2600 discs wont do it.
Yeah I'm thinking of upgrading as I constantly seem to be running around the house fixing devices that have randomly dropped off the wifi network.
As a matter of interest, what Unifi hardware did you go for?
I went for a Cloud Key Gen 2 for the controller and then u6+’s for inside the house and their Swiss Army Knife ultras for outside.
I have a 30’s house which is forever concrete so have a lot of AP’s to cover it. They will MESH if Ethernet is not there but recommended that you get a POE switch and network them all via Ethernet.