Wi fi charges
Why do we have 1 set of prices for daily, weekly, yearly use but 3 different speed bands, from 100mbs down to 1, gold silver and bronze.
the bronze daily rate should be minimal
just back from rowntree park which is bronze, could not even log on the speed was so low
Comments
-
You raised this before.
Once you purchase wifi, you can log in at any site. The price would seem to be averaged. Otherwise, you would only be able to use a bronze login at a bronze site and need to buy more access for silver or gold sites and you'd not like that!
0 -
Unfortunately the first two sites we a booked onto
York rowntree park and new forest centenary are both bronze, and if I payed £30 only to find that you cannot get logged on for 4 weeks I certainly would be unhappy.
now that cafes are fully opened I can get free wifi
0 -
Much. of the problems are caused by some expecting the speeds that they may get at home in. places long distances from any open reach/bt connecting cabinets and not noting that until the upgrade is completed by BT?
And trying to stream programmes that if the clubs info is read that at this time it is not for such purposes, just looking at the websi te and emails
No WiFi is free you pay for it I n what you are expected to purchase
The 3 grades of WiFi are what if every one on site does as requested and are all part of the club wide package
0 -
Then you're better off to do as I do. Ignore site Wi-fi and make your own arrangements. I find 4G much more reliable.👍🏻
0 -
I have to be able to log in to my office system, [with a decent sized screen] as well as wanting good access to the web generally. Like TW, I gave up on the woeful WiFi years ago and now only use my smart phone's 4G connection linked to my laptop through the mobile hotspot. It is far superior to Wifi on any site I have been on (albeit not tried it for a long time).
Roll on widespread 5G!
0 -
... No WiFi is free you pay for it I n what you are expected to purchase
It's free at work. 🙄
It's naïve of the club to say ... here is the Interweb, but you can only use a bit of it. Oh! And you can only use it on one gadget. I'm surprised that anyone actually buys it when you can buy far better & more reliable bundles from O2/Vodafone/etc
1 -
We gave up on site wifi years ago it was so bad.
We bought a mifi and a card, fantastic works really well even overseas.
I know have a smart phone with a small data package for £5 a month and so far this year it has worked well, I'm not held in a contract I stop it whenever I like or change the package for more data if required.
Why would anyone pay for the site wifi these days
1 -
That may be a valid point for those, like yourself, that spend a lot of time away almost exclusively on Club sites. The annual fee is good value. However those that have Smart Phones will inevitably have a data allowance within their monthly package. It therefore makes sense to use that data and whilst I have not yet used a Club site with "Super Broadband" the speed I get with my phone has certainly been a lot faster and more reliable than any WiFi on a Club site I have experienced. There are at least a couple of Club sites where there is little or no 3G/4G signal, Clumber and Buxton spring to mind, and to use Club WiFi for the odd day or two, or even the odd week, is very expensive.
0 -
For anyone wishing to do the NC500 then I can tell you that EE is the best network to guarantee a signal around the north and parts of the west coast.
I'm with Lebara who I think use O2 and OH is with 3, both of us had issues at some point of the trip, mine worked better in west than OHs but neither worked around parts of the north.
0 -
it used to .... but now uses Vodaphone 😉
https://mobile.asda.com/help/network-coverage/network-provider
0 -
The reality is the club wi-fi is simply not fit for purpose and the ‘offer’ is years behind the market competition. We have stayed on private/commercial sites with far better wi-fi performance included in the price. People want/need to stream, especially families with children or those who need occasional access to their office/business. I accept in a very few locations the wifi infrastructure/capability is outside the clubs control however that is no excuse for telling members not to stream etc.
0 -
When you are staying in a tempory village of what could be 200 plus units at the end of a very long cable run, is it a wonder that it is asked of users not to make the system any slower by streaming
We have some friends in Norfolk who have four neigbours and to get fibre to their houses,,,Bt want £6000 per property
0 -
It’s not really the same thing at all but, even if it was, to use your figures £6000/200 = £30 per pitch so not bad really when each £30 could be recouped many times.
Nah, it’s just a rubbish system 😂😂😂
0 -
Then as I said £6000per property, in one lane , and not far from the main road so how much to run the supply to a site any distance from the nearest fibre supply, even at home we are nearer to a BT cabinet than the houses in Norfolk are and we have not got fibre broadband,its not the connection that is expensive it's the cable run.that most of the cost is
0 -
Well I never!
I could have sworn broadband already existed to site offices - I must be wrong.🤷🏻♂️
0 -
It’s not nit picking at all but making a valid point.
Indeed we do have high speed fibre broadband, and also mains electricity, water and drainage. I don’t see the relevance.🤷🏻♂️
0 -
It was a nice surprise this year to discover wi-fi is free at "The Friendly" club. Along with age concession I was well pleased. You can't expect high speeds when there are so many users in site.
0 -
How is it there are many examples of non-club sites that provide Wifi with streaming at a speed and cost the ‘club’ cannot? Similar size, similar locations etc etc. Fed up of excuses. Given the apparent limitations the service should be free.
0 -
I think what would be interesting to know is what percentage of people onsite actually use the Club WiFi? Members now have plenty of connection alternatives which many of us use instead of Club WiFi. If onsite usage was somewhere in the region of 80% there could be an argument for it being included in the site fees. However a much lower percentage would mean that people who don't use it would also be paying for it. I appreciate that it's a well worn phrase but there is no such thing as a free lunch. Somewhere things have to be paid for either directly or indirectly. I am not sure how sustainable Club WiFi will be going into the future and wonder if the Club actually get any payback for the investment made?
David
0