Have high installation standards - good signal level, well-attached mounts and 
cabling, everything high is grounded, and don't use 
temporary/weird/hard-to-access wood poles or popups. No exceptions to those 
since almost every one will bite you in the butt later, some of our competitors 
and super-cheap wifi guys and many of the times we swap customers a complete 
reinstall is required.

-----Original Message-----
From: Trevor Bough <trevorbo...@gmail.com>
Sender: "Af" <af-boun...@afmug.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Jan 2015 00:21:09 
To: <af@afmug.com>
Reply-To: af@afmug.com
Subject: [AFMUG] New WISP

Hi guys, long time listener, first time caller. I'm looking at starting a
new rural WISP and was wondering if you guys could share some of the things
you wish you had known when you started out. Things to absolutely stay away
from, things that you didn't think of first, but made your life 10x easier,
etc. Any info would be greatly appreciated!

Reply via email to