[MLB-WIRELESS] [TIB] A new offer has been added to TIB - 11/1 2/2002
paul van den bergen
pvandenbergen at swin.edu.au
Fri Dec 13 11:14:58 EST 2002
Hi all,
Nice summary of the ins and outs of optimal antenna design, evilbunny.
(On the other hand, me thinks you tread a little heavily on peoples toes...)
I have mentioned befor that I have a pair of old WaveLAN cards (650mW - 2Mb/s)
that even with 15 m of loss will still exceed 4mW with about an 8 - 10 dBi
omni. The cards have a nominal range of 35 km, which has got to break some
rules, surely....
WHat I would really like to do is sent the Rx to the Omni and have the Tx come
in on a 24dBi conifer... and the same setup at the other end. this way I
will have a true duplex (4Mb/s) low noise, high sensitivity long distance
short-cut link (likely at this stage to a friends place in the Dandenongs...
we shall see. I am sure I will get some offers...)
Does anyone have any idea how to do this? The only way I can see easily is to
use 4 cards and I only have 2 (fine for my end, but these are not your common
wireless card and run the older proprietry standard 802.11)
I will also have to dig into the electronics, etc and see if I can reduce the
power output...
On Thu, 12 Dec 2002 06:32 pm, evilbunny wrote:
> Hello Barry,
>
> BP> Doesn't answer the question tho: is amping an omni bordering on
> BP> counterproductive given what community wireless meshing is about?
> BP> - Barry
>
> Completely, since most most people in community groups long term would
> have no need for long links to achieve this goal once critical mass is
> hit and there are antenna every 1 to 2km, why is there a need for the
> extra brute force?
--
Dr Paul van den Bergen
Centre for Advanced Internet Architectures
caia.swin.edu.au
pvandenbergen at swin.edu.au
would somebody get this big walking carpet out of my way?
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