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Flirc pi 4
Flirc pi 4










flirc pi 4

In Barn for Review: Fern & Roby Raven III Road Tour: Rockport Technologies Speakers at Goodwins High EndĪlbum of the Week: Akira Rabelais | À la recherche du temps perdu Links to other suppliers are included for your convenience.In Barn for Review: Parasound JC 3+ Phono PreamplifierĪlbum of the Week: Michael Hurley | The Time of the Foxgloves

  • John Sinclair 3D Printed (Design: Thingiverse) ( eBay)Īmazon links are affiliate links which help support the site, where possible I’ve used links which should take you to the product in the Amazon store in your region.
  • Generic aluminium case with heatsinks and fan ( Amazon-UK).
  • Generic aluminium case with heatsinks ( Amazon-UK).
  • FLIRC Raspberry Pi 4 Case ( Amazon-UK) ( Amazon) ( The Pi Hut).
  • Armour twin fan aluminium radiator ( Amazon) ( ebay) ( The Pi Hut).
  • Armour aluminium radiator ( Amazon) ( Pimoroni) ( ebay) ( The Pi Hut).
  • Raspberry Pi 4 Official case ( Amazon) ( Pimoroni) ( The Pi Hut).
  • Raspberry Pi 4 ( Amazon) ( Pimoroni) ( ThePiHut).
  • (Though as you’ll know if you read my other posts, I have a preference for passively cooled cases). In the 5GHz tests, the Armour Twin Fan Radiator case did surprisingly well, outperforming the FLIRC.
  • Of the metal enclosures, the FLIRC cases performed the best in the 2.4Ghz tests, perhaps helped by having a plastic base.
  • possibly due to the plastic standoffs raising the Pi a little higher off the desk.
  • The plastic cases don’t have a significant impact on WiFi performance, but the Pimoroni Pibow Coupé 4 case performs the best of these.
  • 5GHz signal strength on the Pi4, on the whole, is worse than 2.4GHz.
  • flirc pi 4

  • The generic aluminium case performed the worst, with poorer readings across all APs.
  • Metal enclosures of any kind have a measurable impact on WiFi signal strength.
  • Click to enlarge Click to enlarge Summary The second graph shows all the measurements, to highlight where some configurations had patchy signals, not getting reading from an AP for all 5 test runs. The first graph shows the averages from the tests for each configuration. Click to enlarge Click to enlarge 5GHz WiFi I will be moving either AP1 or AP4 to a different 5GHz channel, they are both currently on “Auto” setting for 5GHz channel selection.

    flirc pi 4

    Note: AP1 is approximately 1m away from the Pi under test, under the desk the Pi was sitting on.

    flirc pi 4

    Access PointĪpple Airport Express (802.11n 2nd Generation)Īpple Airport Extreme (802.11n 5th Generation) A simple description of WiFi signal strength can be found here. Measurements of WiFi signal strength use dBm (0 to -100), closer to zero is better. There are other APs visible to the Pi from neighbouring houses, but we’re not going to worry about those here. The command is repeated 5 times for each test configuration. I run an ssh session into the Pi and use the command: sudo iwlist wlan0 scan to list all the APs the Pi can currently see and record the WIFi signal strength of each of my APs the Raspberry Pi 4 can see from where it resides on my office desk. With the Pi 4 housed in each enclosure, connected via both WiFi and Ethernet. I’d like to replace this with some Ubiquiti PoE access points at some point in the future, but that’s for another day.Įach Pi test configuration was positioned in the same place, tests were then conducted as close together as practically possible to avoid influence from atmospherics and other external sources Testing method This setup came to be after eventually deciding to standardise on one manufacture to aid with device roaming between AP. 2 x Apple AirPort Express (802.11n 2nd generation), 1 x Apple AirPort Extreme (802.11n 5th generation) and 1 x Apple AirPort Extreme (802.11ac). My home is probably an atypical setup, with the home WiFi coverage provided by 4 dual (2.4Ghz & 5Ghz) access points. I’d wanted to follow on from my post looking at the impact on cooling from different cases by examining their impact on WiFi signal strength.īluetooth testing is out of scope. Whilst I only have a small number of different cases to test with. Note: You may want to check out a more recent article I wrote on WiFi performance: Raspberry Pi WiFi Performance Revisited (Feb 2021)įollowing a comment from Geir on a previous blog post, where he asked if the metal enclosures which may help assist cooling of the hot Pi 4, could impact WiFi signal strength.












    Flirc pi 4