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Re: Custom Wireless Solution

  • From: Eric Whitehill
  • Date: Mon Apr 23 09:41:59 2001

A company I used to work for used Breezecom equipment
(http://www.breezecom.com) for their wireless solutions.  The overall
package for each radio was about $500 for the basic equipment, but you can
get the Antenna and radio (per site) for about $1500.  The equipment
itself is pretty reliable, but some of it also depends upon who you have
behind the console.  The transmission itself is pretty secure (2.4 Ghz if
memory serves me)  The equipment from what I have been told was originally
designed for use by the Israeli army, and then was turned public.  If you
have line of sight, it shouldn't be that bad, but at 6 miles, you
shouldn't even need an amp for the signal. (keyword:shouldn't)

Good luck.

-Eric

On Sun, 22 Apr 2001, Dominic J. Eidson wrote:

> Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2001 21:19:12 -0500 (CDT)
> From: Dominic J. Eidson <[email protected]>
> To: Wojtek Zlobicki <[email protected]>
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Custom Wireless Solution
>
>
> On Sun, 22 Apr 2001, Wojtek Zlobicki wrote:
>
> > I saw this question posed on on the forums at AnandTech.com and would
> > love to see if it is plausible.
>
> Oh, quite.
>
> > Here is my question: What equipment could I use to do this? I found
> > some stuff on cisco's site, but it costs about $8000. The speed does
> > not have to be supper fast, but I would like to have something at
> > least the speed of ISDN.
>
> Cisco BR340's - they're $900/each, and work well in bridge mode. As
> someone already stated, make sure you get some good high-gain (and
> narrow-beam directional - we use 10 degree yagi) antenna's.
>
> > Is this plausible.  Is there any technology out there that uses public
> > spectrum over a 6 mile distance ?
>
> With line of sight, they claim they can go 9+ miles. Of course, weather
> does affect it - one of our spans tends to go down when there's just the
> right kind of heavy rain.
>
> Theoretic speed is 11Mbit/sec - effective (real) speed is about
> 6Mbit/sec. (YMMV, that's on a 1/2 mile span)
>
>