Good Sam Camping Blog
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FREE HIGH SPEED WIRELESS INTERNET

November 4, 2012 by · 6 Comments 

Free High Speed Wireless Internet.

As Nancy and I have recently gathered around community campfires at a number of RV parks, this is often brought up as a highly desired feature sought after by RV’ers visiting destination RV parks and campgrounds.

In our continually expanding connectivity market Internet service is, in many cases, relatively easy for campground owners to install and offer as yet another amenity.

But the question remaining is; just how much are all of us willing to pay for this free high speed internet?

“What”, you might ask, “is this guy talking about – he just said free high speed Internet?

Yea – it is free, just like a campground swimming pool, clean and modern bath houses, playgrounds, concrete patios, cable TV and on and on…….

Sorry guys – it isn’t really free.  ALL of us pay for those swimming pools and ceramic tile bath houses whether we use them or not.  We have stayed at more RV parks than I can remember – and NONE has ever offered us a reduced rate for our stay when we told the desk clerk at registration we were not going to use the pool or bath house.

True high speed Internet via Wi-Fi is, unfortunately, an expensive amenity to add to any facility.  It isn’t as easy as what we do in most brick and mortar homes where we can purchase a market priced bundle from a high speed fiber or cable provider and hook up a low priced high speed wireless router.

Campgrounds may install a shared system like the one described above, but the number of users and the distance the Wi-Fi radio signal travels is going to be limited.  Only campers that are close to the Wi-Fi antenna will be able to get a signal and when the bandwidth demand of the connection rises speed and accessibility drop drastically – often to the point that no one is able to use the service.

Most campgrounds offering wide-area high speed Internet to all campsites will need additional antennas, repeaters, routers, powered “dog houses” to shelter them,  multiple data lines and even dedicated servers – all are items that have an appreciable installation cost not to mention the reoccurring data line charges, maintenance and periodic upgrades.  For large parks this can (and does) amount to thousands of dollars a month.  Smaller parks with less elaborate systems can still be looking at monthly data line bills running several hundred dollars – even more if they are located in remote areas (which many campgrounds are) where high speed fiber and cable has yet to be installed.

Many of the parks we have visited offer only a subscription Internet service managed and billed by a third party.  With these systems, you must find the wireless signal which brings you to a web site that requires payment by credit card or Pay-Pal to receive a log-in and password.  These subscription services are often offered by the hour, day, or week.  Sadly, even these systems are often slow and problematic as more and more campers are using wireless devices and even attempting to download full length movies and TV shows.  With a pay-as-you go wireless connection, the park may benefit from a royalty fee for allowing a particular Internet provider to wire their park.  This can not only reduce the possibility of a camping rate increase but may offset other rising costs passed along to campers.  Unfortunately, If traffic is not high enough to return a significant profit to the installer or provider, it is doubtful that the service will go beyond poor to mediocre connectivity or speed.

While many campers clamor for yet another “free” service, there are others out there that simply do not want something else added that would increase the camping rate.  The truth is most campers simply want a clean park with level sites that are easily accessible, have convenient water, sewer and electrical hook-ups and offer safety and security from park intruders.  They would prefer that amenities such as swimming pools have a separate admission fee for those that want to use them rather than making every camper pay for something that they don’t use.  In light of these feelings, is it right to have free high speed wireless Internet that is paid for by all campers, even if they do not use the service?

FWIW – Many traveling RV’ers now stay connected via their wireless smart phones and even use them as “personal hotspots” for connecting a laptop or tablet computer to the Internet.  Unless you are located on the downhill side of Tim-Buck-Two from a cell tower, the connection is usually faster and more secure than anything a RV park offers.  Those who want this smart phone feature pay for it individually by selecting a specific data plan from their wireless provider – those that do not want it pay nothing.

 What is your feeling on this “free” amenity?

Are you willing to pay higher camping rates to have on-site high speed Internet for everyone – if so, how much?

HAPPY CAMPING TRAILS TO ALL!

 

 

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Comments

6 Responses to “FREE HIGH SPEED WIRELESS INTERNET”
  1. James Okvist says:

    Good WIFI access is very important to me. I would be more than willing to use a pay as you go service as long as it is reasonably priced and reliable. Unfortunately my experience with pay as you go services is often delivered by Tango internet. Their performance is poor or worse. I have only seen one park that used Tango where the wifi worked well. User support from them is really bad. I have never had a problem that their user support helped in any way. I have twice paid for wifi access and never received any access. When I called and complained they said they would refund my payment. I have never received the promised refund.
    As for parks that include wifi in their standard package, I don't notice a correlation between wifi and price. It seems to me that providing free wifi is necessary. If I have a choice to go to a park with wifi or one with out free wifi I will pick the one with wifi. If a park identifies Tango internet in their ad I will avoid that park.
    In terms of price, internet should not cost more than $1 to $2 a day. At $2 a day that's $60 a month. It should not cost more than that.
    BTW I have seen parks that separate out charges for different services like 50 versus 30 amp electrical service or cable TV. It's easy to charge separately for internet. Don't give out the password unless the service is paid for.

    Jim

  2. I have Cellular Internet at home that travels with me anywhere there is a cell signal. Why wouldn't folks just handle it on their own like myself? It is a Verizon 4G LTE MiFi personal wireless hotspot.

  3. Jay James says:

    We've traveled all across this country. We've stayed in parks with and without Wifi. I've found that most of the pay wifi isn't very reliable. I suppose the parks with "free" wifi have increased their rates but it's not that noticable. We have an AT&T wifi hotspot that we use when we aren't able to get wifi in a park. As long as we have an AT&T phone signal, we have wifi. We also have been in parks that advertize Free wifi but it's only available in the lobby of their office, etc. If Good Sam or some group could come up with a set of standards and publish the names and locations of those parks that adhere to those standards, I wouldn't mind paying a little extra for good wifi service.

  4. Mona Jensen says:

    WiFi, that you can actually get on, is the number 1 thing I want in an RV park. We have traveled across Canada and many United States and there are not that many that you can actually access anytime you want. I would be willing to pay up to $10 or $15 per 24 hours IF it is a strong, stable signal, which it usually isn't. I hate it when the park's ad states "WiFi throughout the park" or something similar, only to find out the 2 or 3 RV's near the office are all that can access it! This is the 21st century – RV parks and resorts need to realize this and provide WiFi for their entire park.

  5. Steve Dawson says:

    I also have this. This is the way to go. Good reliable service. Just don't down load big files.

  6. we hafe our own widi costing 50 dollars a month. It worked great in Montana, Idaho, Wyoming. We usually use it as the free ones are problem in loosing the connection. Some citys are fully wired…such as Sedona, AZ. Had a terrible time getting a connection even though the tower was just a few yards away.

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