My smart TV’s internet connection was awful. Every few minutes, videos paused to buffer. The apps crashed when I tried to open them. Loading screens went on forever. Movie night became an endurance test. My internet plan was fine: 1,200 Mbps down. But my three-season room sits far from the router, and all that wall insulation plus the double-pane windows basically murdered the Wi-Fi signal.
Running an Ethernet cable seemed impossible since the nearest connection point was across the house. Then I found powerline adapters, a $45 device that uses your electrical wiring as a network cable. This small gadget fixed everything, giving my smart TV the stable connection it needed through regular power outlets.
Why my smart TV’s Wi-Fi was terrible
The perfect storm of connectivity issues
Jonathon Jachura / MUO
The three-season room looked perfect for a smart TV until I actually tried using it. My main router is down in my basement (and my nearest Wi-Fi access point is a few rooms away). The TV is way up at the other end of the house. Netflix and Apple TV would sit there spinning for minutes before anything happened.
Then there’s how they built this room—insulation packed tightly in every wall, a double-pane sliding door, and matching windows. It might as well be a Faraday cage, as 4K streaming was a joke, and even 1080p buffering was a struggle. Even basic menu scrolling lagged. TV Wi-Fi chips are already weaker than phones, so my 7-year-old smart TV didn’t stand a chance. I’d watch loading screens more than the actual content. Browsing Netflix took ages. My “smart” TV felt pretty dumb.
So, to get a figure on it, I ran some speed tests (making sure to avoid the common speed test mistakes). In the three-season room, I was getting 10-50 Mbps. But walking back towards my Ubiquiti access point, I was suddenly getting 800 Mbps. And this meant I needed a different solution.
Why Ethernet wasn’t an option
The cable run challenge
Jonathon Jachura / MUO
An Ethernet cable seemed like the obvious solution. Wired always beats wireless—faster, steadier, no interference issues. Then I measured the distance. Yikes.
My router is located in my basement, on the opposite side of the house from the three-season room. I’d need a cable running along baseboards through four rooms, or drill through walls and floors. It’s just not happening in a house I just built three years back. The closest network jack was 30+ feet away. Even temporary cables would be a mess.
I could’ve wired for this during construction, but I didn’t think ahead. Now I needed a solution using existing materials, not a major renovation. Hiring an electrician to run new drops or fish cables through finished walls would turn a minor issue into a major project. I looked into Wi-Fi extenders and mesh devices, but I really only need internet for the smart TV, and that seemed like overkill.
Enter the powerline adapter
How this simple device works
Jonathon Jachura / MUO
Powerline adapters utilize your house wiring to carry internet data alongside electricity. It’s pretty straightforward: you plug one powerline adapter near your router or access point with an Ethernet port, and the other near your smart TV. Then you run another Ethernet cable from the powerline adapter to the smart TV, and voila, you have a wired smart TV.
Newer models advertise speeds of 2,000 Mbps, but real-world performance varies based on factors such as the age of your wiring, distance, and electrical interference. Even the worst-case scenarios outperformed the pathetic Wi-Fi speeds I was getting.
I grabbed a basic TP-Link AV1000 kit for $45 that promised 1000 Mbps—way more than needed for 4K streaming. The kit came with both adapters, cables, and basic instructions. The product listing online promised a plug-and-play setup. I’ve read enough Amazon reviews to know that this model works reliably for most people without much fuss.
Setting up was surprisingly simple
Five-minute installation
Jonathon Jachura / MUO
The installation process was ridiculously easy. The first adapter went into an outlet in a bedroom on the same circuit as the three-season room. Then, I connected the adapter to an Ethernet port with the included Ethernet cable. The second adapter plugged into the outlet behind the TV, with another cable running to the TV’s network port.
Powerline adapters must be connected to the same electrical circuit as the device that requires internet to function. Some adapters can work across ring circuits, but you may experience interference and degraded performance.
Both units lit up immediately, their LED lights indicating that they were searching for each other. One button press on each adapter created the connection in seconds. No apps to download, no settings to configure, no passwords to enter. Plug things in, press the pairing buttons, and you’re done.
It took maybe four minutes from unboxing to watching 4K Netflix. The improvement was immediately noticeable—apps opened right away, videos played without buffering, and menus responded instantly. Such a huge change, I wondered if something was wrong. After months of waiting for everything, instant responses felt weird. Finally, having a smart TV that worked properly was honestly pretty great.
The results speak for themselves
From frustration to flawless streaming
Jonathon Jachura / MUO
My speed tests in the three-season room now consistently show download speeds of 500+ Mbps—a huge jump from the previous 5 Mbps disaster. The connection stability improved even more than the speed.
Netflix, Disney+, and YouTube all stream 4K without hiccups now. No startup delays, no buffering. Apps that took half a minute to load now open instantly. Even bandwidth-heavy stuff like game downloads or multiple streams runs fine.
The TV’s interface feels completely different—quick, reliable, and responsive. What used to be a source of constant frustration now works as well as any device plugged directly into the router. Movie nights don’t start with the usual routine of waiting for apps to load and crossing fingers that the connection lasts. That little powerline adapter fixed way more than just internet speeds—it made our whole entertainment setup enjoyable again.