[MLB-WIRELESS] AP that you can connect two directionals to??

darrend at ndpgroup.com.au darrend at ndpgroup.com.au
Mon Sep 9 10:27:54 EST 2002


Paul, yes this is possible... you could use 2 high gain directionals with 
a power divider/phasing harness on one ap... or even a normal card running 
in ibss mode aswell....(hmm... maybe roger can confirm this)  Only 
drawback is that traffic is mirrored on both sides of the link... eg acts 
more like a ethernet hub. This may be fine if max performance is not 
required. If distance is also not an issue, then a single omni may also be 
sufficient.
So, put simply... there are many ways around this problem without using a 
2 card AP.

Kambrook have a new kettle due for release this christmas that will do all 
this aswell!

Darren Dreis
Vice President
Melbourne Wireless Inc.
vicepresident at wireless.org.au
http://www.wireless.org.au





Paul van den Bergen <paul at serc.rmit.edu.au>
Sent by: owner-melbwireless at wireless.org.au
09/09/2002 10:05 AM

 
        To:     melbwireless at wireless.org.au
        cc: 
        Subject:        Re: [MLB-WIRELESS] AP that you can connect two directionals to??

Hi all,

If you take an AP, rip out the omni and add one wire connected to two 
directionals (obviuosly pointing in different directions), will it still 
work as an AP?  I.e. will it then act as a relay?  OK. if the answer is 
yes, then if you have enough strength then leave the omni in place and 
point directionals at it...  let the AP do the work as it were...  why 
would you need dual antennaes???  I don't understand...

Steven Haigh wrote:

> The main reason that this should not be some with a dual antenna 
> access point, is that they default to using both antennas... I won't 
> go into the whole spiel about how dual antennas combat multi-path 
> reflections by receiving at differnt phase points, but only one 
> antenna is ever used at the one time...
>
> 
>
> It may *seem* to work correctly, but don't expect any performance 
> about it....
>
> 
>
> I can supply more details on dual antennas and multipaths if people 
> want it....
>
>
> Signed,
> Steven Haigh
> President - Melbourne Wireless Inc
> http://melbourne.wireless.org.au
> (Visit http://melbourne.wireless.org.au/security to install our Root
> Certificate.)
>
> 
>
> 
>
>     ----- Original Message -----
>
>     From: Jason Beveridge <mailto:jbeveridge at ozemail.com.au>
>
>     To: melbourne wireless <mailto:melbwireless at wireless.org.au>
>
>     Sent: Sunday, September 08, 2002 7:06 PM
>
>     Subject: [MLB-WIRELESS] AP that you can connect two directionals 
to??
>
>
>     Hi,
>
>     Can anyone tell me the make etc. of an AP that you can hook two
>     directionals to?
>
>     I have talked to some suppliers of AP's with dual antenna sockets
>     and they tell it can't be done with theirs. They indicate that you
>     would need two AP's back to back with a directional on each. I
>     want a least power use, least hardware option to set up a
>     "repeater". On omni on one AP may work but this link needs to be
>     super reliable - highest speed. (distance from each end to common
>     point ~ 1km)
>
> 
>
>     Cheers
>
>     Jason
>

-- 
Dr Paul van den Bergen
SERC, RMIT University
paul at serc.rmit.edu.au
+613 9925 1624 phone
+613 9925 5699 fax
goofey: bulwynkl




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