Wireless bridging involves connecting two routers wirelessly, creating a wireless link between them. This method is convenient for areas where running cables is not feasible. This is particularly useful in scenarios where you need to extend your network to areas that are out of range of your primary router, such as different floors in a building or. Connecting two routers together is one of the most effective ways to extend your WiFi coverage, create separate network segments, or repurpose an old router instead of throwing it away. Whether you want to blanket a large house with WiFi or set up an isolated network for a home office, knowing how. Are all the strands in the optic fiber cable gonna work at the same time and are they compatible with the transceivers? Thank you yes, for single-mode modules, you'll need single mode fiber/cable. Check the specs, that the advertised wavelengths and desired distance/length match. Assuming you don't. Then you can install a very good small and very fast switch at the "entrance" of the fiber connection. That would be the ISP Modem or device they use to give you the signal. Application scenario: now some broadband providers send fiber-optic cats without wireless function, but we want to use wireless. We currently have an old Nighthawk AC1900 (R7000) router/access point (AP), which we plan to move to the second house.