PC Pro

BT Mini Whole Home

£75 mesh Wi-Fi that kills notspots

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PRICE Three nodes, £63 (£75 inc VAT) from amazon.co.uk

Thanks to its solid performanc­e and very reasonable price, BT’s Whole Home Wi-Fi system ( see issue 309, p79) has been on our list of recommende­d mesh extenders since its debut back in 2017. Now, the telecoms giant has come out with an even cheaper option, shrinking down its distinctiv­e discs and scaling back the internals. Although this means performanc­e is slower, it still makes a great way to extend the reach of your home network on the cheap.

The Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi kit is an 802.11ac mesh system, just like the regular Whole Home kit. As with the original model – but unlike most other mesh platforms – it works as an extender for your existing router, rathe rather than seeking to replace it.

As the name suggests, however, the Mini uses smaller discs that are easier to locate discreetly about your home and the hardware inside them has been pared back a little too. The full-sized units are rated for connection speeds of up to 800Mbits/sec on the legacy 2.4GHz band and 1,733Mbits/sec over 5GHz connection­s, while the Mini claims only 300Mbits/sec and 866Mbits/sec.

Those are still fair speeds, and the Mini boasts 4x4 MIMO too. But, since this is only a dual-band platform, your devices can’t make full use of the available wireless band width, as the 5GHz channel also has to carry all the backhaul traffic between nodes.

Mini by name…

The Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi units are of a simple circular design, measuring 12cm across (almost exactly the same size as a CD). They stand upright on an integrated plastic foot that sticks out of the back and, when the unit’s powered on, a single LED glows through the faceplate in various colours to indicate activity or connection problems.

At the rear, there’s a power socket, a Gigabit Ethernet connector, a WPS button for connecting devices without having to enter a password and a pinhole for resetting the firmware.

It’s a nicely functional design and, while the single Ethernet socket may seem restrictiv­e, remember that this is a wireless extender system: you can connect additional wired clients directly to your existing router.

BT’s quick-start guide encourages you to set up the system via the free app for Android and iOS and this is made easy thanks to a QR code on the back of each node. Alternativ­ely, natively, you can open n a web browser and log og into the

Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi system directly, using the preconfigu­red credential­s inscribed on the back of each unit.

Either way, there’s little le to configure. Once the three ree units are plugged in, they automatica­lly connect to each other and start broadcasti­ng a wireless mesh that connects back to your main network. From the

Wireless Settings page, you can then change the SSID and WPA2 passphrase to whatever you desire (a set of blank stickers is thoughtful­ly provided for you to write these on and affix directly over the pre-printed informatio­n). You can also tweak the radio channels and disable WPS if you’re concerned about unauthoris­ed visitors connecting to your home network, although sadly there’s no passwordpr­otected soft-button option.

Other features include an optional guest network, which grants internet access while keeping users isolated from your own clients. While you can’ t split up the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands into separate networks, you can enable or disable band-steering on a per-device basis. You can manually pause the internet for all connected clients too, although there are no proper parental controls: that sort of thing is left for your router or broadband provider to handle.

Kills notspots dead

“Its throughput was still good enough to allow me to sit in the bedroom and stream 4K videos without a glitch or stutter”

The original Whole Home Wi-Fi outperform­s most dual-band competitor­s, largely because its ultrafast 1,733Mbits/sec 5GHz radio provides enough bandwidth to handle both client and backhaul traffic at decent speeds. As we’ve mentioned, however, the Mini’s transceive­r is only half as fast and, while BT doesn’t publish the full internal specificat­ion, it’s a good bet that the antennae are smaller too.

To see how these changes affect performanc­e, I tested the BT Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi in my usual way, by setting up the primary node in my living room, situating the other two nodes in adjacent rooms, and walking around with a Microsoft Surface Laptop measuring the average upload and download speed to a NAS appliance connected to the main router by Ethernet.

The results ( see graphs opposite) were hardly a big surprise: for the most part, the Mini performed at just under half the speed of the regular BT Whole Home system. That puts it decidedly towards the low end of the mesh market as a whole; I’ve included scores from Netgear’s dual-band Orbi ( see issue 308, p80) and the tri-band Asus ZenWiFi ( see issue 309, p78) to illustrate what a prem ium 802.11ac mesh is capable of.

Even so, the Mini delivered a stable connection everywhere in my home, and proved convincing­ly faster than the Tenda Nova MW3 ( see issue 309,

p86). Indeed, its throughput was still good enough to allow me to sit in the bedroom and stream 4K videos from YouTube and Netflix without a glitch or stutter. If you’re focused on everyday internet duties you probably won’t ever notice the difference between this and a much more expensive mesh setup.

Sound investment

The BT Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi system currently costs only £75 for a three-node pack. That’s absurdly cheap for a bona fide mesh setup: hitherto, the only such system we’ve seen for under £100 has been the Tenda Nova MW3. If you’re willing to pay a bit more, a twin-pack of BT’s regular Whole Home Wi-Fi discs can be had for £125, while the Orbi and ZenWiFi push prices to around £200.

Unlike its non-BT rivals, the Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi isn’t a replacemen­t for an outdated router, nor is it a turbocharg­er for your home network. That means, if you’re looking to fling huge data files around at maximum speed, this isn’t the extender for you.

If you’re merely seeking a localised signal boost, however, then the Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi could be just the ticket. The three-node configurat­ion makes it more flexible than a regular wireless repeater, not to mention more manageable and expandable. And while it won’t win any awards for performanc­e, it’s more than fast enough to extend email, web browsing, casual gaming and video streaming into the farthest reaches of your home.

If that’s all you’re looking for then there’s really no need to spend more – the BT Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi kit will do the job at a fantastic price. DARIEN GRAHAM-SMITH

SPECIFICAT­IONS

3 x 802.11ac Wi-Fi discs 2.4GHz/5GHz dual-band 2 x antennae per disc WPA/ WPA2 encryption WPS Gigabit RJ-45 port (one per disc) up to 300Mbits/sec over 2.4GHz up to 866Mbits/sec over 5GHz iOS and Android apps 120 x 50 x 120mm (WDH) 3yr warranty

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 ??  ?? LEFT The CD-sized Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi is a neater choice than its sibling
LEFT The CD-sized Mini Whole Home Wi-Fi is a neater choice than its sibling
 ??  ?? BELOW Simply aim your phone at the QR code on the back of each node to get set up
BELOW Simply aim your phone at the QR code on the back of each node to get set up
 ??  ?? ABOVE A single LED glows a calming blue when everything’s working smoothly
ABOVE A single LED glows a calming blue when everything’s working smoothly
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