all depends on which router you brought, I use a dLink and the average range is 20 to 25 feet but it changes.
It also depends on your wireless card, Just take your router name and Google the specs which will tell you everything or just tell us the type of router you have and we will do it for you.
A wireless signal can go about sixty feet but usually its range will be forty of fifty feet in a home.
You need a new antenna - either a uni-directional , or perhaps a signal booster.
There are a number of wireless HDMI extenders available and these can be used to send a DVI signal from one point to another. There are fewer wireless VGA extenders but they can be found. Beware of cheap wireless systems. Seventy feet is a considerable distance to cover and the low cost wireless extenders may prove noisy or unreliable. If a computer can be attached to each display, then a wireless network can be used to replicate the image from a master computer. Wireless networks are often more reliable than low cost video senders but they will need more set up than video senders.
The range of a wireless microphone will depend on the product itself. The normal range of a wireless microphone may vary from 300 feet to a 1000 feet.
300 feet
It depends on the strength of signal created, the obstructions between the transmitting device and the receiving device i.e. thick stone walls in an old house will reduce signal capability even of 20 feet
30 feet
Modern wireless phones have a range of approx. 300 feet.
300 feet
They can reach lengths of 10 feet and weigh approximately 330 lb.They can reach lengths of 10 feet and weigh approximately 330 lb.They can reach lengths of 10 feet and weigh approximately 330 lb.They can reach lengths of 10 feet and weigh approximately 330 lb.They can reach lengths of 10 feet and weigh approximately 330 lb.They can reach lengths of 10 feet and weigh approximately 330 lb.
The new wireless N adapter for Xbox 360 can work effectively from 50-100 feet, however, there is some notable lag-time of about 20-30ms.
It will take 1/4 of a second to reach home plate