Where SkyDibia works — and why coverage is not a fixed circle.
SkyDibia is node-based. Service quality depends on distance, obstacles, and how many users are active at that time. We design nodes for managed performance — not exaggerated radius claims.
What “coverage zone” means
Each node serves a local area around its installation point (example: PH-01). Your device must be within that zone to connect and stay stable.
What affects signal and stability
- Distance: farther from the node = weaker signal.
- Obstacles: walls, metal roofs, trees, and dense buildings reduce signal.
- Interference: crowded wireless environments reduce quality.
- User density: performance is protected by capacity controls, but heavy peak use can still affect experience.
How to know if you are within coverage
- Check the Locations page for active nodes.
- If you scanned a QR code on-site, the node is pre-selected for you.
- Stand outside / near windows when testing first connection (especially in dense areas).
- If you move away and signal drops, reconnect when you return into the zone.
Why we don’t promise “unlimited range”
Fixed-radius promises create false expectations and disputes. Infrastructure-grade delivery means we publish what we can operationally support, and we keep performance stable through disciplined capacity protection.
What happens when you move away
If you walk beyond the node’s effective zone, your device will disconnect. That is normal behavior for Wi‑Fi-based access. SkyDibia is designed for community zones, not city-wide roaming from one node.