Mesh is not magic. It still needs a real plan.
The problem is rarely that the box says mesh. The problem is usually bad placement, too many devices fighting for the same signal, interference, or expecting a setup app to understand the house.
Treating mesh like magic
Adding more pucks does not fix bad placement, bad wiring, interference, or a router that is doing too much.
Mesh units talking to each other only over Wi-Fi
If every puck has to reach the next puck over Wi-Fi, your devices and the system are all sharing the same airspace. In busy homes, that can mean lower speed, lag, and dropouts.
ISP mesh pucks are built for convenience
Leased pucks are easy to ship and support. They are not a custom design for your walls, devices, cameras, office, or outdoor spaces.
Coverage numbers ignore real houses
Square-foot promises do not account for brick, tile, mirrors, HVAC, floor plans, neighboring networks, or where people actually use Wi-Fi.
Devices stay on the wrong access point
A phone or laptop can stay connected to a weak signal even while a better one is nearby. The system has to be placed, tuned, and tested.
Smart devices get treated as an afterthought
Doorbells, cameras, thermostats, speakers, and older 2.4 GHz devices need a plan too, not just the same main network as everything else.
What we actually do
Survey the actual home
We look at layout, materials, device count, outdoor areas, office locations, and where Wi-Fi actually needs to work.
Plan where each access point goes
We place each access point so devices can move through the house without hanging onto a weak signal.
Use cable between key access points
When it makes sense, we connect important access points with cable so they are not all fighting over the same wireless signal.
Choose the right hardware
Sometimes mesh pucks are fine. Sometimes ceiling or wall-mounted access points are better. We recommend what fits the house.
Separate guests, work, and smart devices
Guest, work, smart home, and camera traffic can be separated instead of everything living on one shared network.
Validate after install
We test speed, weak areas, how devices move between access points, and real use before calling the job finished.
Mesh works best when placement is intentional.
We decide where the access points should go, whether they need a wired connection, and how phones and laptops should move between them.
Start with the rooms that matter
Offices, TVs, bedrooms, outdoor areas, cameras, and high-use rooms drive the design.
Put access points where they can actually help
Placement is based on walls, distance, device load, and where people actually use the connection.
Tune roaming between access points
Phones and laptops should move through the house and shift to the strongest practical access point instead of clinging to a weak one.
Use Ethernet where it improves reliability
When an access point is wired, it does not have to use the same wireless signal it is trying to deliver to your devices.
Sometimes the fix is running cable.
- Cable runs to the most important access points
- Ceiling or wall-mounted access points when tabletop pucks are the wrong tool
- Cleaner installs with fewer visible power adapters where supported
- Outdoor or edge coverage planning for patios, garages, and cameras
- Guest, smart device, camera, and work network separation where appropriate
- Post-install speed, coverage, and device roaming testing
Simple, straightforward process. No surprises.
How this works
Look at the house
We review the layout, problem rooms, device load, ISP equipment, and where coverage actually matters.
Pick the right approach
Mesh pucks, ceiling-mounted access points, cable runs, router changes, or a mix. The design comes before the hardware.
Configure and test
We install, tune, validate, and show you what was changed before handing it off.
Transparent pricing
Primary technician on-site.
Per additional tech on-site.
Larger installs and custom setups.
Final pricing confirmed before work begins.