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stephenpatrick
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Recommended antennas for 70km ?

Mon Feb 13, 2006 11:00 pm

Hi all,

For P2P links, can people recommend antennas that would work well at up to 70km ? Anyone who has tried it, that is? (theory is easy: reality differs)
Customer prefers 5.8GHz, and the towers proposed are not very high, so 5.8 might be better than 2.4 considering fresnel zone, antenna beamwidth - hough 2.4 is still an option.

What realistic bandwidth can you get through such links?

Would really appreciate comments from people who have tried such things ...

Regards

CableFree Solutions
 
cmit
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Mon Feb 13, 2006 11:25 pm

Hi Stephen,

I seem to remember someone posting about a 90 km link he had done here in the forum. I think it was somewhere in South America, from one mountain top to the other.

Apart from that, no personal experience from me with such distances (although I'd love to try one ;-) ).

Best regards,
Christian Meis
 
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djape
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Mon Feb 13, 2006 11:56 pm

Well, 3m dishes from both sides, SR5 and if you get 6 mbit/s you should be very happy...
 
eflanery
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Tue Feb 14, 2006 2:24 am

We haven't done one quite that long, but the best "antenna of last resort" we have found is the Gabriel high-performance (drum style) quick fire series. Runs about $3000-$4000 per 6ft dish, gets you about 37dBi of very clean gain, weighs about 300lbs, and they are almost invurnerable to noise.

At 70km, with SR5s right on the back of the antenna, and VERY careful aiming; I would expect these to link at at least 12Mbps, perhaps 18 or 24. Higher rates may be possable, but I wouldn't count on more than 12 (~8Mbps real throughput).

--Eric
 
matt
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Tue Feb 14, 2006 4:08 am

I would not think you should have a problem with a 70km link.

We have tested 60km with some equipment in the workshop.

WRAP with SR5 Cards each end

Solid 1.2M Dish, 26dBi antenna with 1/2M run LMR-400 coax

19dB 2.4GHz Parabolic reflector, 26dbI antenna with 1/2M run LMR400 coax

Signal strengh, around -78 to -85 dB rx each end.

Managed 8MB/s half duplex.

Not to bad for assembling a few bits a peices laying around.
 
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stephenpatrick
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Tue Feb 14, 2006 12:04 pm

Thank you very much everybody, very helpful and much appreciated.
Will pitch these suggestions in and see what happens ....

Regards

Stephen
 
msolis
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Wed Feb 15, 2006 12:48 am

This is our experience in long MT links

90 Km, Atheros, 2.4 Ghz 24 dBi Grid:

rx-current: 4.4Mbps
rx-10-second-average: 3.7Mbps
rx-total-average: 3.7Mbps
lost-packets: 0
random-data: no
direction: receive
rx-size: 1500
status: running
duration: 4s
rx-current: 3.8Mbps
rx-10-second-average: 3.8Mbps
rx-total-average: 3.8Mbps
lost-packets: 0
random-data: no
direction: receive
rx-size: 1500


53 Km, Atheros, 5.8 Ghz 29 dBi Parabolic:

[admin@REICO-POAS] > /too bandwidth-test 172.23.0.134
status: running
duration: 11s
rx-current: 15.2Mbps
rx-10-second-average: 9.4Mbps
rx-total-average: 9.4Mbps
lost-packets: 0
random-data: no
direction: receive
rx-size: 1500

62 Km, Atheros, 2.4 Ghz 24 dBi grid with nstreme dual:

tx-current: 2.3Mbps
tx-10-second-average: 2.4Mbps
tx-total-average: 2.4Mbps
rx-current: 2.6Mbps
rx-10-second-average: 2.2Mbps
rx-total-average: 2.2Mbps
lost-packets: 0
random-data: no
direction: both
tx-size: 1500
rx-size: 1500
 
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normis
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Wed Feb 15, 2006 9:44 am

wow, nice
 
telephone29
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Wed Feb 15, 2006 6:25 pm

90km single faster than 63km dual? hmmm.... sounds like interference or something else, but this is not "normal" :)

were these 2.4GHz links with g, g-turbo or just normal plain b mode?
 
msolis
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Wed Feb 15, 2006 9:02 pm

Both in 2.4-b

Yes, 90 Km is more efficient that 63 Km. The 90 Km link have better fresnel zone.
 
tully
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Wed Feb 15, 2006 10:49 pm

I saw that the test were only running for 4s and 11s. It may take longer for the bandwidth test to get to the full speed of the link. Also, you should add any 'normal' traffic that is already going over the link.

Nstreme might speed this up if you are not already using it. If the signal is good, you should get 20Mb/s plus.

You might also try the new 2.9.12/13 with the 5 or 10MHz channels. It concentrates the power on less channels and should help get a better signal over the distance.

John
 
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samsoft08
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Sun Feb 19, 2006 7:05 am

well , if its thats easy to make a link of 90Km , so why i cant make it with a 7KM ???!!!! i'm totaly lost with this distance , it's ok for an hour or two then it's gone , after that i need to restart my d-link 2100 AP to get back the connection , and what about the fresnal zone ? is it so important ? what if the height of one of the 2 points are not equal to the 2nd point height ? or its lower than the fresnal zone ? what about amplifires ? i'm using a 1W with the d-link2100AP , is it wrong ???? please i need HELP !!
 
matt
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Sun Feb 19, 2006 7:38 am

Hello samsoft08

First of all, most in the wireless industry will say that WiFi amplifiers will do more harm than not. The worst thing about them is they amplify not only the output signal, but all so the noise being received by your WIFI radio device. I have not needed to use them to date so can not comment to much.

What type of antenna are you using?

The type of coax and the lenght?

Did you make them yourself?

Have you done a scan in both areas for other WiFi repeaters etc? You may have some interferance.

What are you current signal strenghts?

Matt
 
pdf
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Sun Feb 19, 2006 4:55 pm

We have a 70km link with SR5 + 1m dishes - it is rock solid and gives 10Mbps+. What nearly caught us out was 'curvature of the earth' - this adds about 100m to your height requirement over 70km. Fresnel zone is just 30m at 5.8Ghz - so you need height of about 130m+. However, if you have the height we were amazed how easy it was.

Paul
Please can you tell us the TX output power in db that you are using? :)

Thank you!
 
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[ASM]
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Sun Feb 19, 2006 5:22 pm

Some of our links at 65 km have throughput of 50 Mbit/s tcp.. The main thing is "The bigger the better", but we don't use antenas greater than 2 meters. You have to have very low loss cables, a good feed. This link has the same throughput with CM9, put we've upgrated put SR5 just to be sure that the link will be stable in the winter
 
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Sun Feb 19, 2006 5:37 pm

Some of our links at 65 km have throughput of 50 Mbit/s tcp.. The main thing is "The bigger the better", but we don't use antenas greater than 2 meters. You have to have very low loss cables, a good feed. This link has the same throughput with CM9, put we've upgrated put SR5 just to be sure that the link will be stable in the winter
Yup but the bigger (antenna) the higher db. I am asking you this because in some countries there are output power limitations. So I was wondering how much dbs you are using (antennas + wireless card). For example 28db antennas (at 5ghz) are common but if the output tx is over 3 or 4 dbs (considering some cables and connectors attenuations) we are over the 30dbm which is the legal maximum limit. So that's why I am asking ;)
 
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samsoft08
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Mon Feb 20, 2006 1:57 am

Hello samsoft08

First of all, most in the wireless industry will say that WiFi amplifiers will do more harm than not. The worst thing about them is they amplify not only the output signal, but all so the noise being received by your WIFI radio device. I have not needed to use them to date so can not comment to much.

What type of antenna are you using?

The type of coax and the lenght?

Did you make them yourself?

Have you done a scan in both areas for other WiFi repeaters etc? You may have some interferance.

What are you current signal strenghts?

Matt
this is the answer :

a- point 1 :

1- Outdoor AP 1W transmision power ,2.4Ghz .( wireless interactive ).
2- 15 dbi omni antenna.
3- LMR400 less than 1 m cable.
4- 45m height .

b- point 2 :

1- D-link 2100 AP. 2.4Ghz
2- 1 W outdoor amplifire.
3- 24dbi grid antenna
4- cables are LMR400 less than 1 m .

the distance is 7Km near line of site .. its two points inside a city crowded with 2.4Ghz signals , which i'm using .. i'm using MT as a gateway , DHCP , and a web proxy
 
joeri91942
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Mon Feb 20, 2006 9:07 am

Hi there

With that setup you shouldn't have much problem, while i haven't done that many long distance setups though, the last I did was a 4km this weekend and that worked real sweet.. could even reduce output power to fit inside regulatory demands :-) anyway, back to your issue....

Since you are using the 2.4GHz band... and since you are in a city (which I presume is full of things like microwave owens, wireless phones, hearing aid circuits and such, all on the same band) have you looked at the radio spectrum to see if there is any interference?

On my MT boxes I would just start the windows interface and hit a button to see the "load" on each channel... not sure if any of your boxes has that kind of capability.

/Jörgen
 
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samsoft08
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Mon Feb 20, 2006 9:01 pm

well , be sure that in my city ( Baghdad ) there is 100's of wirless clinets and wisp , some of the wisp's using power up to 4W !!!!!! i'm sure there is an interference , the question is how to overcome this problem ?? i cannot say its a bad link , coz its good for hours before hang up !!!! restarting the d-link solves the problem ..
 
joeri91942
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Mon Feb 20, 2006 10:20 pm

Hmmm..... any special time of day you loose connection?

When you loose the link, is there any kind of debug/log/message/status information on the DLink unit stating why it lost the link? Normally it would just reestablish the link in case of disturbances so it sounds strange that you have to restart it....

What kind of signal do you get at each end? With that kind of output and antennas you should be somewhere around... -50 dBm, is that the number you get? If not you have a problem somewhere in your setup, here's a very good linkbudget calculator http://www.antennspecialisten.se/se/sup ... udget.html (requires Java)

Since a reboot cures the problem it sort of sound like there might be a problem with that unit.... do you have another unit available that you can test with? Have you tried running without the external amp?

Is there any dispaly in your units that can show the load on various channels? Sometimes ou can solve a problem by moving to another channel.

Best regards

/Jörgen
 
cibernet
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Mon Feb 20, 2006 11:05 pm

well , be sure that in my city ( Baghdad ) there is 100's of wirless clinets and wisp , some of the wisp's using power up to 4W !!!!!! i'm sure there is an interference , the question is how to overcome this problem ?? i cannot say its a bad link , coz its good for hours before hang up !!!! restarting the d-link solves the problem ..
You can use 5.8Ghz
 
titius
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Tue Feb 21, 2006 2:35 am

maybe ACK timing???
 
matt
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Tue Feb 21, 2006 11:46 am

I would go for a MikroTik (RIC/522) 5.1-5.8Ghz Integrated Router Antenna at each end.

This will get you away from the 2.4GHz noise and give you a little bit more flexable working area with the frequencys and a lot more control over your network.

Not only with config, but also in status information about your wireless link, noise levels and a lot more.

My 5c worth

Matt

PS: Preconfigure both units, one ethernet cable to the roof and run POE (power-over-ethernet), bolt onto pole, alian. Job Job. All done.
 
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samsoft08
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Tue Feb 21, 2006 9:12 pm

thanks guys for these good advices

what i'v done now is changing the 2nd point from d-link+1w amp to an outdoor ALCON with 250mW built in and the same 24dbi grid antenna .. now the link seems more stable although there is a time out ping from while to while , the ping is about two digits most of the time , but no hanging up no more , now i have to tell you an important thing i didnt before , 1st point at 45m the 2nd at 12m only , as i told you i'min a middle of a city , may be thats why i have the time out some times and the high ping ??

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