I am still trying to understand how you have customers pointed between
18-45 miles on 5GHz to a 120 degree sector?!?  Are these reliable
connections?

On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 7:25 AM, Lewis Bergman <lewis.berg...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> 3 degrees at 30 miles
> 360 degrees in a circle so 3 degrees is 120th of that.
> Circumference = Pi x Diameter
> 188 miles = 3.14....X 60
> 188 miles / 120 = 1.57 Miles. You should divide that in half since you are
> probably pointed to the middle of the signal so maybe 3/4 of a mile wih no
> safety margin at thirty miles. Just divide that by the % of distance to get
> other distances.
>
> On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 2:37 AM TJ Trout <t...@voltbb.com> wrote:
>
>> Can someone tell me the width of a 5ghz signal at 30 miles coming from a
>> 3* or 5* antenna?
>>
>> On Thu, Dec 1, 2016 at 10:48 PM, That One Guy /sarcasm <
>> thatoneguyst...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> radiomobile or link planner (just get systems in play with "close enough"
>> characteristics on the links) and move the sites then recalculate til you
>> hit your unacceptable margins
>>
>> On Thu, Dec 1, 2016 at 11:17 PM, TJ Trout <t...@voltbb.com> wrote:
>>
>> I have a tower site which customers are connected from a distance of
>> 18-45 miles away ( remote mountain) I'm using 5ghz with 120* sectors.
>> Customers are using rcl-2 and 2ft parabolic antennas.
>>
>> Any ideas how to calculate how far I can relocate the sectors without
>> having to realign the customers antennas ?
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>> --
>> If you only see yourself as part of the team but you don't see your team
>> as part of yourself you have already failed as part of the team.
>>
>>

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