What he said.

We have paid between $15 and $60 depending. Since we have Senior passes, we get free entrance to national parks and get a 50% discount on camping in national parks. We also have a less generous deal with CA state parks.

Private campgrounds can be hit or miss depending on facilities, privacy, etc.


bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

On 5/31/2018 8:45 AM, Steve Jones wrote:
do you like liability and property damage? cause thats how you get liability and property damage

fees range from 5-25 for rustic no power/water/etc to 150/night depending on the park. but 30-50 is average with power and water

On Thu, May 31, 2018 at 10:40 AM, <ch...@wbmfg.com <mailto:ch...@wbmfg.com>> wrote:

    What does a traveler expect to pay to park in one of these
    places?  I have about 10 acres next to I-80 with water, power and
    sewer already installed.  I could lay down some gravel and put up
    a sign.
    *From:* Steve Jones
    *Sent:* Thursday, May 31, 2018 9:39 AM
    *To:* af@afmug.com
    *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] RV park network design
    industrial vending machine selling routers.
    Im trying to get the one we are doing to finger conduit to each
    site post for future use, whether fiber or copper
    On Thu, May 31, 2018 at 10:22 AM, Cameron Crum <cc...@wispmon.com>
    wrote:

        You'd be surprised. A lot of them travel with their own cable
        modems and wifi routers. But you could always rent them one,
        or set up each ONT with a small wifi router already and give
        them a choice.
        On Thu, May 31, 2018 at 10:05 AM, Jason McKemie
        <j.mcke...@veloxinetbroadband.com> wrote:

            Probably zero.


            On Thursday, May 31, 2018, <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote:

                How many RV travelers are set up for ethernet vs WiFi?
                *From:* Jason McKemie
                *Sent:* Thursday, May 31, 2018 6:42 AM
                *To:* af@afmug.com
                *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] RV park network design
                I'd do fiber as well, seems like that many long-run
                cat5/6 connections could be problematic.

                On Wednesday, May 30, 2018, Cameron Crum
                <cc...@murcevilo.com> wrote:

                    Why run ethernet? This seems ideal for fiber. Put
                    a small box for the ONT on the same pole as the
                    electrical hookup with about 20 ft of ethernet
                    cable so they can drag it through a window and
                    call it a day. Rent them a cheap router if they
                    want wifi or mount a small loco ac or something
                    running as a low powered AP and alternate
                    frequencies every 3 or 4 spaces.
                    On Wed, May 30, 2018 at 2:57 PM, Colin Stanners
                    <cstann...@gmail.com> wrote:

                        Be careful of selling service over Wi-FI...
                        customers buy "signal boosters" that run their
                        own DHCP server, or they see a very strong
                        signal to their booster and complain that
                        their service sucks (don't understand that the
                        signal from the booster to your network is
                        low). And there's interference from mobile
                        hotspots etc....

                        I would do like Adam says, run ethernet lines
                        everywhere with outdoor-grade ethernet
                        connection boxes (make sure to have a surge
                        protector on each line as it returns to your
                        switch). You can try offering some service
                        over wifi but tell customers that if they want
                        reliable speeds they need to hardwire.
                        On Wed, May 30, 2018 at 1:07 PM, castarritt
                        <castarr...@gmail.com> wrote:

                            We were approached by a current subscriber
                            who is building an RV park with around
                            ~100 pads, and he wants us to offer
                            service to his tenants.  This isn't the
                            typical situation where we would sell
                            service to the RV park, and they handle
                            distributing it to their customers.  He
                            wants to avoid providing wi-fi himself,
                            and will instead let us charge every
                            client that wants service separately.
                            Also, this isn't a campground; his
                            shortest lease term will be monthly.

                            While the park is under construction, he
                            is willing to let us lay conduit, so we
                            could provide wired service to each pad if
                            we wanted to. Alternatively, we could just
                            setup a bunch of wi-fi APs. One potential
                            complication is that we have a fairly busy
                            cluster of 5g PMP450s a couple hundred
                            yards from this RV park, so while wired
                            service could be more reliable for the
                            park tenants, the potential for 100
                            customer wi-fi routers we can't control
                            operating within sight of our PMP450 POP
                            sounds like the stuff of nightmares.

                            We are leaning more towards a wi-fi option
                            due to better control over spectrum, as
                            well as avoiding maintenance of 100
                            outdoor ethernet ports that the customers
                            would be plugging into, but we are open to
                            suggestions.
                            Also, assuming wi-fi is the correct
                            answer, does anyone have any equipment
                            recommendations?  The park is about 400'
                            by 900'.  I was looking at either doing a
                            whole bunch of low end APs, or maybe ~8
                            sectors.  We haven't used any of the
                            Cambium wi-fi gear yet, but the cnPilot
                            E501S looks interesting.

                            Thank you,
                            Chris Starritt
                            Western Broadband
                            supp...@ecpi.com
                            512-257-1077



Reply via email to