miked@jamagination.com wrote:
> a local company had a wifi offering using the Orinoco USB gold towers
> connected via the fattest cable I've ever seen to a 5.4GHZ 26 dBi
> Reflector Grid WLAN Directional Antenna mounted on my roof - looks
> like a big bbq grill
That sounds like they are using a stand alone table top mounted client
radio that connects to your computer with USB. Not much good if you
want to set up a home network (of course you could network off a
computer that you leave running all the time).
It has to have a large BBQ dish antenna and very low loss cable to
connect to the radio. That's why most WISPs use a roof mounted
radio/antenna assembly that uses CAT5 cable down to the network.
>> You could use a small low cost client radio to test the path also
>> at several elevations every two foot or so.
>
> not sure what a client radio is - have a link to some info you could
> post back here?
Orthogon/Motorola. Redline, and Trango come to mind. But first, make
sure its a 5.4 GHz radio as that frequency is almost always limited to
backhauls and pricing around $8,000 for one radio. Most likely its a
5.8 GHz radio. Clients (the subscriber's radio) can be had for under
$250.
> do 5.4G repeaters need to be registered w/FCC? i.e. where could I
> find an online list of towers in my area that this provider might have
> repeaters on? is this public information?
I don't think that route will be productive.
There really isn't such a thing as repeaters in the sense that you
find with two-way radios.
Radio station licenses and tower locations are public data, but radios
operating in the unlicensed bands don't need to be listed.
Start with
http://www.cellreception.com/towers While it says cellphone
towers, it shows all towers that are registered with the FAA. Towers
under 200 feet are not required to be registered (unless they pose an
aviation hazard).
You might see if there are other WISPs in your area, but if you're up
in the mountains...good luck.