F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks interference with wifi signals

interference with wifi signals

interference with wifi signals

P
195
02-20-2026, 01:33 PM
#1
Yes, ionized air can affect Wi-Fi signals.
P
PARAN0ID_M3DIC
02-20-2026, 01:33 PM #1

Yes, ionized air can affect Wi-Fi signals.

M
MythBusterRy
Junior Member
7
02-20-2026, 02:52 PM
#2
No, I'm not referring to an ionizing air purifier. Could you clarify what you mean?
M
MythBusterRy
02-20-2026, 02:52 PM #2

No, I'm not referring to an ionizing air purifier. Could you clarify what you mean?

I
iBarambe
Member
160
02-20-2026, 03:33 PM
#3
We placed routers in the corridors and provided Wi-Fi in nearby rooms. Once we added air ionizers to the spaces, the Wi-Fi signal weakened. I haven’t found another explanation because everything else remains unchanged.
I
iBarambe
02-20-2026, 03:33 PM #3

We placed routers in the corridors and provided Wi-Fi in nearby rooms. Once we added air ionizers to the spaces, the Wi-Fi signal weakened. I haven’t found another explanation because everything else remains unchanged.

R
RainbowLeader
Member
56
02-20-2026, 05:13 PM
#4
Shifted to Networking
R
RainbowLeader
02-20-2026, 05:13 PM #4

Shifted to Networking

E
epiKB
Junior Member
2
02-21-2026, 12:59 AM
#5
That’s intriguing. Does the WiFi connection improve when all air ionizers are disabled? How many routers are currently set up? Is this intended for a residential or commercial setting? I’m sure you understand these devices shouldn’t operate in their standard mode if they’re interconnected or linked via a dedicated switch. They should function as access points, each operating on separate channels for both 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands.
E
epiKB
02-21-2026, 12:59 AM #5

That’s intriguing. Does the WiFi connection improve when all air ionizers are disabled? How many routers are currently set up? Is this intended for a residential or commercial setting? I’m sure you understand these devices shouldn’t operate in their standard mode if they’re interconnected or linked via a dedicated switch. They should function as access points, each operating on separate channels for both 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands.