Hey All, As I'm starting to build up my equipment, I wanted to ask this question...
There's not much out there in Minnesota for existing networks, so I'm not worried about that. I forsee most of my setups being in rural areas, linking a search and rescue mission base with other parts of an airfield, or maybe if I get really lucky someday, a node in an aircraft which is already acting as a radio traffic repeater.
Why would I want to go with 5ghz over 2.4? I'm not too concerned with interferance, as most of our operations are well outside city limits.
I understand the networking aspects of this, need a little help with the RF. :-)
Thanks!
There's not much out there in Minnesota for existing networks, so I'm not worried about that. I forsee most of my setups being in rural areas, linking a search and rescue mission base with other parts of an airfield, or maybe if I get really lucky someday, a node in an aircraft which is already acting as a radio traffic repeater.
Why would I want to go with 5ghz over 2.4? I'm not too concerned with interferance, as most of our operations are well outside city limits.
I understand the networking aspects of this, need a little help with the RF. :-)
Thanks!
2. You can find a bunch of UBNT M5 equipment cheap on eBay because it's all being replaced by 802.11ac equipment.
If I'm not mistaken 5GHz will have a 6db weaker signal at longer distances vs 2.4GHz. The thing that makes 5GHz more appealing to me is that it has a smaller fresnel zone than 2.4GHz. Which means that it's easier to get a clear line of sight at longer distances with 5GHz. Any obstruction ie trees, hills, or buildings that are in the fresnel zone will degrade the signal. There is a great online tool from Ubiquiti that allows you to plot perspective node locations on Google Maps and try different frequency equipment to see what kind of obstructions and signal quality you will theoretically get. airlink.ubnt.com
Hope this helps
Chris N4TNA
Chris N4TNA
Chris N4TNA
Chris N4TNA
I'm running two M5 Nanobridge radios as a backbone link, one to our Mount OSo site at 34 miles and my second is to Mount Bullion at 36 miles. Good throughput and reliable connections even when the fog settles in. I am in a relatively flat farm valley surrounded by 3000 ft mountains ridges to the East and West. Both radios up around 20 feet, light vegetation nearby. I would go 5.8 Ghz. At each node end you will use low power 2.4 Ghz radios to allow your laptops, cells, and tablets to connect to the backbone anyway. You will end up using both.
While it is true 2.4 GHz has a 6dB advantage over 5.8 GHz, for a given dish size the opposite is true. If you compare the UBNT Rocket Dish models you'll see the 5 GHz version is spec'd at 30dBi while the 2.4 GHz version is only 24dBi. In practical use, this offsets the 2.4GHz propagation advantage.
Andre, K6AH
So, is there any reason in your opinon why I would want to consider 2.4 over 5.8?
If hams in the area haven't already bought a bunch of 2GHz nodes, then I can't think of a reason to not go 5GHz.
73,
Kent, KL5T