I've been yaking with Sebastian about mounting PDs from my apartment
(NW Reno, on a hill) and backhauling to his house near UNR for a bit
now. I've got a Cisco 1240AG dual-radio WAP with quad RP-TNCs (two per
radio) that would work wonderfully as a bridge point for multiple
backhauls while maintaining client access locally. The great thing
about this model is the connectorized antennas and the flexibility of
IOS (I can operate on multiple SSIDs, in dynamically assigned VLANs,
on a per-client and per-radio basis). It's also designed for
"challenging RF environments" where LoS isn't a guarantee.

Re: the dish, this one looks good:
http://tinyurl.com/kuqoy



On 7/18/06, Josh Scilacci <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
That is a pretty huge difference between the two. I know that the Pringles
cans are very directional so that might have had something to do with their
results, but still the dish just produces awesome results.

My Linksys WRT54GS produces some great signal strength as far as just off
the shelf APs go. It is running OpenWRT right now and I have the power
output just set to normal as I am afraid of it being melted to my floor when
I come home one day.

We should try out the dish though. We could take it to the roof of SEM and
see what kind of distance we could get out onto the quad with it. I will
make sure to make it to the meeting on Saturday and we can figure out some
more ideas. In the mean time I guess we should be on the lookout for some
Primestar dishes laying around.  :-)

Josh


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