 John GaltForward, MarchPremium join:2004-09-30 Happy Camp kudos:5 | reply to margioa
Re: using uhf for wifi transmition Do you know what the pricing is (more or less)? |
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 margioaPremium join:2007-04-06 Nicaragua Reviews:
·deltathree
| said by John Galt:Do you know what the pricing is (more or less)? Yes buddy, I was told by W.I. that the current sales price is @ $695.00 |
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 John GaltForward, MarchPremium join:2004-09-30 Happy Camp kudos:5 | So, ~10x the price of a UBNT Loco M5.
I like it when 'teh maths' is easy, lol.
The problem here in the US is that the same frequency range (460-500 MHz) is jammed packed with users, third world...not so much, if any at all.
I have a design in Panama and one in Costa Rica that might be able to benefit from this vendors radios. Lots of vegetation to deal with, of course. The objective is to move bandwidth into the hill regions. If I can do 5GHZ up into a distribution hub, then use the Orion radio on a 20 MHz channel to do PtMP to the villages, and using 2.4 GHz wifi to connect to the user, I'm thinking that might work pretty good.
A timely discussion, lads!  -- Nothing makes an American want to do something more than telling them they can't.
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 InssomniakThe GlitchPremium join:2005-04-06 Cayuga, ON kudos:1 | reply to prop
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 lutful... of ideasPremium join:2005-06-16 Ottawa, ON Reviews:
·TekSavvy DSL
| I was going to post link to the actual lab URL when I mentioned IEEE 802.22 in the other UHF thread going on here: »Threat to WISP's and ISP's? Free Super WiFi FCC White Space
»www2.nict.go.jp/wireless/smartlab/index.html
BTW although they claim to be first "prototype" for 802.22, there are a few others in development. Sort of like 802.16 prototypes in early 2005. |
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