Today, Business Communication Solutions visited a customer in Austin, Texas who was frustrated with slow internet speeds inside their home. The internet service itself was fine—but the experience changed depending on where he stood.
In some areas, Wi-Fi was fast.
In others, the signal looked strong—but performance was slow.
This is a very common Wi-Fi issue, and the fix helped explain why reconnecting to Wi-Fi or rebooting often makes things better.
What We Observed On Site
While troubleshooting, we asked the customer to:
Stand still in the problem area
Disconnect from Wi-Fi
Reconnect to the same network
As soon as the device reconnected, speeds jumped back to normal.
Nothing about the internet connection changed.
The device simply connected to a closer wireless access point.
Why Wi-Fi Devices Don’t Always Choose the Best Access Point
Wi-Fi roaming decisions are made by the device, not the access points.
That means:
Your phone or laptop decides when to switch
Devices tend to “hang on” to weaker signals
A strong-looking signal doesn’t always mean fast speeds
Devices often stay connected to a farther access point even when a closer one is available—until something forces them to reconnect.
Why Disconnecting and Reconnecting Helps
When you disconnect and reconnect to Wi-Fi:
The device scans all available access points
It chooses the strongest and fastest option
The connection is refreshed
This is why:
Turning Wi-Fi off and on helps
Rebooting a device improves performance
Restarting routers temporarily fixes slow speeds
It forces a new access point selection.
Using the Same SSID on Every Access Point
Most modern Wi-Fi systems use the same network name (SSID) across all access points.
Pros of Same SSID
Seamless roaming
One network name for the entire home or business
No manual switching required
Cleaner user experience
Cons of Same SSID
Devices may stay connected to a farther AP
Slower speeds in some areas
Roaming behavior depends on device quality
Can feel inconsistent without proper tuning
This setup works best when:
Access points are properly placed
Power levels are tuned correctly
The network is professionally configured
Using Different SSIDs for Each Access Point
Some people use different Wi-Fi names for each access point.
Pros of Different SSIDs
Manual control over which AP you connect to
Helpful for troubleshooting
Predictable performance per AP
Cons of Different SSIDs
Not user-friendly
Manual switching required
Devices don’t roam automatically
Not ideal for larger homes or businesses
This approach is sometimes useful in:
Problematic environments
Special-use areas
Temporary troubleshooting scenarios
Why Rebooting Routers and Access Points Helps
Rebooting works because it:
Clears stuck connections
Forces devices to reconnect
Refreshes network tables
Resets roaming decisions
It’s not a “fix”—it’s a reset of conditions.
If rebooting helps often, it usually means:
AP placement needs improvement
Roaming behavior isn’t optimized
The network design needs adjustment
The Real Fix: Proper Wi-Fi Design
The best long-term solution isn’t constant reconnecting—it’s:
Proper access point placement
Correct transmit power levels
Roaming optimization
Professional configuration
At Business Communication Solutions, we design Wi-Fi so devices naturally connect to the best access point—without user intervention.
Wi-Fi Slow in Certain Rooms in Austin?
If your internet is fast but Wi-Fi performance changes depending on where you stand, the issue is almost always Wi-Fi design, not your internet provider.
📞 Call Business Communication Solutions at 512-257-1433
We provide professional Wi-Fi troubleshooting and optimization for homes and businesses in Austin and surrounding areas.