Before we had a bathroom

We’ve got plumbers in today replacing a few items that have broken in the 15 years since we fitted them. Before we moved into this house we had about 11 months of renovation to turn a flimsy house with no insulation, minimal plumbing and wired with appallingly dangerous wiring (rubber coated cables where the insulation had disintegrated), into something that could be lived in.

I could rant about how the plumbers back then made absolutely no thought as to future maintenance, but I will not. However, in looking for how the shower was fitted (so it can be replaced) I came across this photo before the bathroom even existed.

02062009449

In this photo the flat roof of the utility room below has been removed and replaced by joists to provide a floor. The door opening was previously a window at the top of the stairs. The shower was fitted between the two studs you see to the left and in front of the white door.

Here’s how it looks now from the exterior (the window you see is about where I was stood when I took the above photo 14 years ago.

IMG 7848

A years old Wifi issue finally sorted! Yeah!

I’ve always wondered why I had wifi issues in my garden office on my phone and more generally everywhere else in my garden. It’s only 10m away from an access point with good quality external aerials. Which should give decent coverage over the entire garden and offices.

I have a central Draytek 2820n router connected to a Netgear GS724t switch (then another in my garden office). There are two Draytek Access points connected to the switch. AP-800 and AP-900. Both legacy products now, but OK.

Wifi reception in the house is generally decent. But in the garden and our garden offices it is rubbish. There are multiple Smart switches that are always disconnecting (in fact I threw one away a few years ago and replaced it with a new one). A pair of Sonos speakers that are always disconnecting (though they should be using SonosNet and not general wifi) and a Raspberry Pi on the boat that I can rarely reliably SSH to.

Our garden has some overhead power cables above it. These are 11kv with three phases and power the entire village.

Yesterday morning I just noticed that I was getting a very decent wifi signal on my phone (20Mbps down). Then it dawned on me that the cables are turned off today for tree work and the village is being powered by a diesel generator for the day. The naive “jumping at straws because this dammed wifi problem is never going away” person in me immediately assumed that interference from the cables was the issue

Then more knowledgeable people than me told me that a 50hz electricity cable will not interfere with a 2.4/5Ghz wifi signal. The frequencies are too different. Still something is awry. I also noticed that the three smart plugs in my garden that are generally problematic are connected without issue. Same goes for two Sonos speakers. I could even connect to the RPi with a decent connection. Enough to update Raspbian without having to use Tmux.

However, then the connection fails again and the power has yet to be restored to the cables. So what is the problem?

The Draytek router has AP central management and I configure the two Draytek access points using that tool. I’ve rarely looked at the config pages of the actual APs.

Draytek CentraAPmanagement

But now I looked at one. Turns out that it was using two wifi networks with the same SSID.

The AP in the house had both SSIDs connected to LAN-A, but the AP in the garden had one of these “pseudo” networks connected to LAN-B. The LAN-B is not connected to anything!

DraytekAPdualSSIDs

So when the power went off the APs rebooted. Then the devices get a decent connection. But as the phone roamed it switched to the SSID with no network connection and so the iPhone goes crazy with no internet connection and switches to 4G. I have no idea why the Smart switches disconnected though.

I just turned this off on both APs and everything now connects flawlessly with a strong signal. I have had this problem for years…! Sheesh…!

UPDATE March 18, 2023

So the wifi failed again. I went back to check and the multi SSID option had been re-enabled. Turns out the AP Management tool on the router has a profile that enables it, and it kept cloning it to the access points. Now that’s fixed. Fingers crossed.

UPDATE April 18, 2023

So the problem was not fully solved. The issues above were real, but the heart of the problem was hardware. In these days of reliable hardware how odd to have an issue that is not PSU related. I swapped out the AP, but the only spare AP I had did not have a built in Ethernet switch, and there’s an IP camera attached to the existing AP. So I disabled wifi on the faulty AP point (Draytel AP-900), used that as a switch and plugged in the Ethernet portless AP (Draytek AP-710). For a week before our holiday and the few days we returned it has proved to be faultless. I do need to remove that faulty unit completely. The AP in the house is plugged into an adjacent switch and so only needs a single Ethernet port. I’ll swap the two over soon.

migrated blog to new hosting provider

So after moving my old hosting provider to a monthly renewal 12 months ago in preparation for moving it. I finally found a day to migrate it all over to a new provider on Saturday. I chose Mythic Beasts. A Cambridge based company that I have a few other domains hosted on and have been impressed by their plain talking sales, sensible pricing and proper technical support.

Their support pages suggests a “no downtime” workflow that involves copying their DNS entries for your new site to your existing hosting provider’s DNS record. So even though you do not know when the changes propagate through DNS servers both your existing provider and the new one’s all point to the same new server on your new provider’s site. Very straightforward.

I also discovered a cool WordPress plugin (Updraft Plus), that I’ve been using for backups for some time, has a very restore function that you can easily and quickly restore a backup to a new site. If I’d have known how easy and reliable this perhaps I would not have bothered exporting my site, and importing to a backup server. Just In Case.

Spring is coming – flowers in the garden

Our garden was well planned by the previous owners. They bought the house in 1933 and spent their lives planning the garden. No lawn, but vegetable patches in the middle and flowers around the borders. We have left the garden much wilder. The vegetables patches were replaced by grass (although we reverted part of that to vegetables patches during the first lockdown). The borders are still full of flowers. All planned so that the last weeks of Winter and Spring are full of flowers, snowdrops, aconites, crocuses, daffodils, then tulips, crown imperials, irises and plenty more. Here’s the first batch:

(The first daffodils photo is from elsewhere in the village, but it’s a lovely photo!).

IMG 7576

IMG 7567

IMG 7569

IMG 9245

IMG 2493

IMG 7795