Most of these horns are for 6GHz. I have had friends that have "appropriated" some of them by adding a waveguide to N adapter and use them for the 5.8GHz ISM band with some minor aiming. Kick ass antenna gain.
Tim On 7/14/18 4:37 PM, Miles Fidelman wrote: > Looks like it! > > -------- Original message -------- > From: Tim Pozar <po...@lns.com> > Date: 7/14/18 11:46 AM (GMT-07:00) > To: Andy Ringsmuth <a...@newslink.com>, North American Network > Operators' Group <nanog@nanog.org> > Subject: Re: (perhaps off topic, but) Microwave Towers > > Did it follow this route? > > http://long-lines.net/places-routes/maps/MW6003.jpg > > Tim > > On 7/14/18 8:41 AM, Andy Ringsmuth wrote: >> >> >>> On Jul 14, 2018, at 10:19 AM, Brian Kantor <br...@ampr.org> wrote: >>> >>>>> I find myself driving down Route 66. On our way through Arizona, I > was surprised by what look like a lot of old-style microwave links. > They pretty much follow the East-West rail line - where I'd expect > there's a lot of fiber buried. >>> >>> Could they be a legacy of the Southern Pacific Railroad Internal > Network Telecommunications, >>> now known under the acronym SPRINT? >>> - Brian >>> >> >> Not along Route 66 in Arizona. That generally parallels BNSF Railway, > formerly the Santa Fe down there. Southern Pacific followed Interstate > 10 much further south. >> >> >> ---- >> Andy Ringsmuth >> a...@newslink.com >> News Link – Manager Technology, Travel & Facilities >> 2201 Winthrop Rd., Lincoln, NE 68502-4158 >> (402) 475-6397 (402) 304-0083 cellular >>