  verolom
join:2002-03-23 Eagleville, PA
·Comcast
1 edit | reply to MrBentor Re: Why not for the US?
Yes, if I brush my teeth once a month 
I'll believe this when I see it. There is no way a 100 mW transmission can traverse 60 miles (line of sight I presume -- useless), especially with all the interference in the 2.4 GHz band. Software is good but not that good. |
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 MZR
join:2006-08-12 TX | It is possible, LOS is the keyword. Ever thought how the 1W transmitters in the directway satellite systems can reach a satellite that is 22,000 miles away? LOS... |
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  fireflier Coffee. . .Need Coffee Premium join:2001-05-25 Limbo | Well, that and HIGHLY directional antennas. . . |
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  NOCMan Verizon Fios User Premium join:2004-09-30 Flower Mound, TX
| Only 1W? How high up are those satellites? I've ran setups to 23,000miles and we'd have to push a few dozen watts just to get through heavy clouds and a lot more if it was raining really bad. -- Mac Chatter »www.macchatter.net |
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  verolom
join:2002-03-23 Eagleville, PA
·Comcast
| reply to fireflier Yes, but antennas are hardware. Wi-Fi gear uses a half-dipole with a tiny 2.16 dBi gain and this article claims using existing Wi-Fi gear. Also consider the carrier frequency, noise figure and lack of line-of-sight (multiple reflections).
Allow me to remain a skeptic... |
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 MZR
join:2006-08-12 TX
| reply to NOCMan I agree with you, but remember,in a sat terminal you are amplifying a wide spectrum(multiple channels). A direcway, any other residential sat setup only needs to amp a small carrier. It is just like many Wireless ISPs that use 5 and 10MHz channel widths to increase range instead of the standard 20MHz Wi-Fi channels.
I was a direcway customer about 5 years ago and used to lose sync every time a dark cloud got in the way.
BTW, I still have the equipment, If anyone wants it. |
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  maartena Stacked. Premium join:2002-05-10 Orange, CA
·RoadRunner Cable
| reply to NOCMan said by NOCMan :Only 1W? QUESTION: What's the power for Cassini's transmitter?
ANSWER from FAQ on June 3, 1999: It's 20 watts. Received at the DSN antennas, the signal power is 10 to the -16th (0.0000000000000001) watts. From Saturn, the signal takes about 1 hour and 20 minutes to reach Earth.
Conclusion: You don't need a whole lot of power to send a signal.... and to receive a signal, you need even less.  -- "Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both" - Benjamin Franklin, Founding Father. |
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