Solving Wi-Fi interference in CBS (Concrete Block) homes
Why Florida coastal construction blocks Wi-Fi signals and how to fix dead zones with wired backhaul and high-performance mesh.
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Concrete block structure (CBS) with steel rebar is the Florida standard for hurricane safety, but it acts as a literal shield against Wi-Fi signals.
A single concrete wall can drop signal strength by over 50%, creating "Faraday-lite" environments where standard routers fail to reach the next room.
The technical wall: CBS and Signal Attenuation
8-inch concrete blocks and rebar lattice aggressively absorb RF signals. This is why a "fast" router in the living room often cannot reach a smart lock at the front door or a thermostat in the hallway.
How to bypass concrete interference
- check_circle Use wired Ethernet (Cat6) backhaul to move data through walls via wire, not air.
- check_circle Utilize MoCA 2.5 adapters to turn existing TV coax into high-speed network ports.
- check_circle Place mesh nodes in direct line-of-sight through doorways and hallways.
- check_circle Avoid "range extenders" that only amplify a already-weakened signal.
- check_circle Install coastal-hardened outdoor access points for pool decks and docks.
Approved hardware for CBS homes
We recommend tri-band mesh systems like eero Pro 6E or Max 7. These systems use a dedicated frequency for node-to-node communication, which is critical for maintaining speed in reinforced concrete environments.
Quick checklist.
Interior CBS walls identified.
Ethernet or Coax availability checked.
Node placement optimized for line-of-sight.
Outdoor signal gaps measured.
Tri-band hardware verified.