Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz H-PolSectorChoices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.........

2010-05-03 Thread Kurt Fankhauser
What gain of YAGI are you using? You didn't say how well it was working or
not either.

Kurt Fankhauser
WAVELINC
P.O. Box 126
Bucyrus, OH 44820
419-562-6405
www.wavelinc.com
 
 

-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Josh Luthman
Sent: Sunday, May 02, 2010 8:33 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz
H-PolSectorChoices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.

I know for a fact at least one person on the other list you and I share is
doing it.  It was suggested to me a few months ago.

Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373

Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue
that counts.
--- Winston Churchill


On Sun, May 2, 2010 at 6:52 PM, Kurt Fankhauser k...@wavelinc.com wrote:

 Is anyone here currently using 3 YAGI's to achieve 360 degree coverage
with
 3 Canopy 900 radio's? How is this working for you?

 Reason I am asking is because the 3 sectors are so huge that the windload
 on
 the tower is too much and looking for alternatives.

 Kurt Fankhauser
 WAVELINC
 P.O. Box 126
 Bucyrus, OH 44820
 419-562-6405
 www.wavelinc.com


 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Tom DeReggi
 Sent: Saturday, May 01, 2010 12:53 PM
 To: sarn...@info-ed.com; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz H-Pol
 SectorChoices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.

 SuperPass is an excellent antenna brand. The founder has several unique
 patents in antenna technologies, that other antenna manufacturers would
 love

 to get their hands on. There are several uique end results they offer...
1)
 They tend to make it possible to make shorter antennas for similar gain.
 For example with 5.x sectors, the make some of the most compact sector
 antennas on the market. 2) They can make them very cost effectively, and
 still have them perform well.  These are great for repeaters, where there
 is

 a low budget, and cosmetics and size is a concern, and closer to the
ground
 where less durable mounts are perfectly acceptable.

 Now everybody cant be everthing to everybody. Just like anything else
 in

 this industry, and Provider needs to define what they need and pick an
 antenna that matches their specific need.  SuperPass is NOT a MTI antenna,
 they really serve two different market segments.

 MTIs are EXPENSIVE and LARGE and HEAVY, the exact opposite of a Superpass
 antenna.  Of course the MTI is going to outperform the Superpass in most
 cases. The MTI was purpose built to get optimal RF characteristics out of
 the technology, and the trade off is expense, size, and weight. But the
MTI
 makes a VERY high quality antenna, if not one of the very best, from the
 perspective of RF pattern, isolation, and sturdiness.

 In 900Mhz, our personal favorite are the Tiltek sector antennas. We like
 them because they have excellent front to back isolation and quick drop on
 beamwidth edge comparatively, have rock solid mounting hardware thats easy
 to adjust, and priced a bot lower than other high end antennas. We find
 Winncom to be a good source for these, although I'm sure there are other
 good sources.   The Tilteks have both a Dual Pol and Single pol options. I
 dont think its possible to buy a better antenna. Again, with quality, also
 comes size.  This is a 4ft by 1.5ft antenna at about 10db for 120deg.
 (Thats

 not exact db spec)

 There also becomes a convenience factor to consider. We Almost always use
 the Trango built in antennas when we can, and I've heard that people using
 Canopy  are happy with the Canopy brand integrated 900Sector.

 When the sectors quality reallty starts to matter is when trying to
 colocatemultiple antennas near each other to get full 360 degrees.
 With the Tilteks, we can get 3 120degree sectors of the same polarity
 colocated without self interference (meaning all on adjacent channels),
 fasten directly to a Guyed tower structure (meaning very little horizontal
 seperation, maybe 3ft)  if we put about 15ft of verticle seperation
between
 each antenna.

 Originally, we put them back to back, which worked way better than the
 other

 native antennas could. The excellent F/B ratio and tight beamwidth made
 that

 possible.  But as our buildout grew, and we had more links and varying
 signal strengths, and more close to beamwidth edges than others, we
 recognized a clear improvement when we added the verticle seperation also.

 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


 - Original Message -
 From: Scottie Arnett sarn...@info-ed.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Friday, April 30, 2010 1:16 AM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz H-Pol Sector
 Choices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.


  To start out with, I have 

Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz H-PolSectorChoices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.........

2010-05-03 Thread Tom DeReggi

I'd advise against Yagi's as APs if you live anywhere there is even minor 
ICE buildup.
The last thing you want is your network going down every time there is 
freezing rain, when the antennas are up a tower.

Also more likely the Crows will use your Yagi as their hangout sitting spot.

Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


- Original Message - 
From: Josh Luthman j...@imaginenetworksllc.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Sunday, May 02, 2010 8:33 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz 
H-PolSectorChoices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.


I know for a fact at least one person on the other list you and I share is
doing it.  It was suggested to me a few months ago.

Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373

“Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue
that counts.”
--- Winston Churchill


On Sun, May 2, 2010 at 6:52 PM, Kurt Fankhauser k...@wavelinc.com wrote:

 Is anyone here currently using 3 YAGI's to achieve 360 degree coverage 
 with
 3 Canopy 900 radio's? How is this working for you?

 Reason I am asking is because the 3 sectors are so huge that the windload
 on
 the tower is too much and looking for alternatives.

 Kurt Fankhauser
 WAVELINC
 P.O. Box 126
 Bucyrus, OH 44820
 419-562-6405
 www.wavelinc.com


 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Tom DeReggi
 Sent: Saturday, May 01, 2010 12:53 PM
 To: sarn...@info-ed.com; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz H-Pol
 SectorChoices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.

 SuperPass is an excellent antenna brand. The founder has several unique
 patents in antenna technologies, that other antenna manufacturers would
 love

 to get their hands on. There are several uique end results they offer... 
 1)
 They tend to make it possible to make shorter antennas for similar gain.
 For example with 5.x sectors, the make some of the most compact sector
 antennas on the market. 2) They can make them very cost effectively, and
 still have them perform well.  These are great for repeaters, where there
 is

 a low budget, and cosmetics and size is a concern, and closer to the 
 ground
 where less durable mounts are perfectly acceptable.

 Now everybody cant be everthing to everybody. Just like anything else
 in

 this industry, and Provider needs to define what they need and pick an
 antenna that matches their specific need.  SuperPass is NOT a MTI antenna,
 they really serve two different market segments.

 MTIs are EXPENSIVE and LARGE and HEAVY, the exact opposite of a Superpass
 antenna.  Of course the MTI is going to outperform the Superpass in most
 cases. The MTI was purpose built to get optimal RF characteristics out of
 the technology, and the trade off is expense, size, and weight. But the 
 MTI
 makes a VERY high quality antenna, if not one of the very best, from the
 perspective of RF pattern, isolation, and sturdiness.

 In 900Mhz, our personal favorite are the Tiltek sector antennas. We like
 them because they have excellent front to back isolation and quick drop on
 beamwidth edge comparatively, have rock solid mounting hardware thats easy
 to adjust, and priced a bot lower than other high end antennas. We find
 Winncom to be a good source for these, although I'm sure there are other
 good sources.   The Tilteks have both a Dual Pol and Single pol options. I
 dont think its possible to buy a better antenna. Again, with quality, also
 comes size.  This is a 4ft by 1.5ft antenna at about 10db for 120deg.
 (Thats

 not exact db spec)

 There also becomes a convenience factor to consider. We Almost always use
 the Trango built in antennas when we can, and I've heard that people using
 Canopy  are happy with the Canopy brand integrated 900Sector.

 When the sectors quality reallty starts to matter is when trying to
 colocatemultiple antennas near each other to get full 360 degrees.
 With the Tilteks, we can get 3 120degree sectors of the same polarity
 colocated without self interference (meaning all on adjacent channels),
 fasten directly to a Guyed tower structure (meaning very little horizontal
 seperation, maybe 3ft)  if we put about 15ft of verticle seperation 
 between
 each antenna.

 Originally, we put them back to back, which worked way better than the
 other

 native antennas could. The excellent F/B ratio and tight beamwidth made
 that

 possible.  But as our buildout grew, and we had more links and varying
 signal strengths, and more close to beamwidth edges than others, we
 recognized a clear improvement when we added the verticle seperation also.

 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


 - Original Message -
 From: Scottie Arnett sarn...@info-ed.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Friday, 

Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz H-PolSectorChoices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.........

2010-05-02 Thread Robert West
What about the front to back ratio with the yagis?  That's really gotta suck 
unless you're going with 5mhz channels.


- Original Message - 
From: Josh Luthman j...@imaginenetworksllc.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Sunday, May 02, 2010 8:33 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz 
H-PolSectorChoices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.


I know for a fact at least one person on the other list you and I share is
doing it.  It was suggested to me a few months ago.

Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373

“Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue
that counts.”
--- Winston Churchill


On Sun, May 2, 2010 at 6:52 PM, Kurt Fankhauser k...@wavelinc.com wrote:

 Is anyone here currently using 3 YAGI's to achieve 360 degree coverage 
 with
 3 Canopy 900 radio's? How is this working for you?

 Reason I am asking is because the 3 sectors are so huge that the windload
 on
 the tower is too much and looking for alternatives.

 Kurt Fankhauser
 WAVELINC
 P.O. Box 126
 Bucyrus, OH 44820
 419-562-6405
 www.wavelinc.com


 -Original Message-
 From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
 Behalf Of Tom DeReggi
 Sent: Saturday, May 01, 2010 12:53 PM
 To: sarn...@info-ed.com; WISPA General List
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz H-Pol
 SectorChoices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.

 SuperPass is an excellent antenna brand. The founder has several unique
 patents in antenna technologies, that other antenna manufacturers would
 love

 to get their hands on. There are several uique end results they offer... 
 1)
 They tend to make it possible to make shorter antennas for similar gain.
 For example with 5.x sectors, the make some of the most compact sector
 antennas on the market. 2) They can make them very cost effectively, and
 still have them perform well.  These are great for repeaters, where there
 is

 a low budget, and cosmetics and size is a concern, and closer to the 
 ground
 where less durable mounts are perfectly acceptable.

 Now everybody cant be everthing to everybody. Just like anything else
 in

 this industry, and Provider needs to define what they need and pick an
 antenna that matches their specific need.  SuperPass is NOT a MTI antenna,
 they really serve two different market segments.

 MTIs are EXPENSIVE and LARGE and HEAVY, the exact opposite of a Superpass
 antenna.  Of course the MTI is going to outperform the Superpass in most
 cases. The MTI was purpose built to get optimal RF characteristics out of
 the technology, and the trade off is expense, size, and weight. But the 
 MTI
 makes a VERY high quality antenna, if not one of the very best, from the
 perspective of RF pattern, isolation, and sturdiness.

 In 900Mhz, our personal favorite are the Tiltek sector antennas. We like
 them because they have excellent front to back isolation and quick drop on
 beamwidth edge comparatively, have rock solid mounting hardware thats easy
 to adjust, and priced a bot lower than other high end antennas. We find
 Winncom to be a good source for these, although I'm sure there are other
 good sources.   The Tilteks have both a Dual Pol and Single pol options. I
 dont think its possible to buy a better antenna. Again, with quality, also
 comes size.  This is a 4ft by 1.5ft antenna at about 10db for 120deg.
 (Thats

 not exact db spec)

 There also becomes a convenience factor to consider. We Almost always use
 the Trango built in antennas when we can, and I've heard that people using
 Canopy  are happy with the Canopy brand integrated 900Sector.

 When the sectors quality reallty starts to matter is when trying to
 colocatemultiple antennas near each other to get full 360 degrees.
 With the Tilteks, we can get 3 120degree sectors of the same polarity
 colocated without self interference (meaning all on adjacent channels),
 fasten directly to a Guyed tower structure (meaning very little horizontal
 seperation, maybe 3ft)  if we put about 15ft of verticle seperation 
 between
 each antenna.

 Originally, we put them back to back, which worked way better than the
 other

 native antennas could. The excellent F/B ratio and tight beamwidth made
 that

 possible.  But as our buildout grew, and we had more links and varying
 signal strengths, and more close to beamwidth edges than others, we
 recognized a clear improvement when we added the verticle seperation also.

 Tom DeReggi
 RapidDSL  Wireless, Inc
 IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


 - Original Message -
 From: Scottie Arnett sarn...@info-ed.com
 To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
 Sent: Friday, April 30, 2010 1:16 AM
 Subject: Re: [WISPA] Looking for iput on 900MHz H-Pol Sector
 Choices.Nothealthcare, taxes or government related.


  To start out with, I have heard nothing but bad news about Super Pass. I
  have never used them,