Yes we have

Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry  

-----Original Message-----
From: "Tom DeReggi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2006 01:03:46 
To:"WISPA General List" <wireless@wispa.org>
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Re: Anyone using Exalt radios????

Bob,

They way you wrote it, you are correct its not to bad at all.
My post was based on what I thought I read from someone else's post that 
stated that the 200mbps model (raw) pushed 100mbps of throughput (real), I 
was assuming based on waste of protocol overhead like Wifi.  Trango has a 
very efficient MAC with little waste.  If the the Exalt does real throughput 
of 100mbps in each direction, than that is a completely different animal and 
value proposition.  And getting 50mbps Full Duplex in 32Mhz, also might be a 
speed leader in unlicensed.

Bob, have you confirmed actual real throughput?

Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bob Moldashel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List" <wireless@wispa.org>
Sent: Tuesday, November 14, 2006 9:18 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Re: Anyone using Exalt radios????


> Tom,
>
> You're gonna bond 2 atlas links and get close to 100 Mb full duplex????? 
> How is that??
> The 200 Mb Exalt is 100 Mb TX /100 Mb RX
>
> If you use your  equation you really need 4 Trango radios which is 5 x 
> $3000 = $15000 and that will give you 100 mb with 50/50 MIR.  Not to say 
> what you would use up in spectrum (20 Mhz. x 5 = 100 Mhz......OK...you 
> could play with polarity with good antennas and probably do better).
>
> So the Exalt doesn't look that expensive after all........  :-)
>
> And BTW:  I was told to expect MIR control for asymetrical bandwidth 
> soon...
>
> -B-
>
>
> Tom DeReggi wrote:
>
>>> The advertised throughput on a 200 Mhz radio is 100 Mb true throughput 
>>> in each direction port to port. The radio throughput is based on a 64 
>>> Mhz channel.
>>
>>
>> OK so lets compare to Trango Atlas or Alvarion Backhaul (which has 
>> similar metrics) with equivellent speed models. Taking that maybe only 1% 
>> of my market could pull off a 64Mhz channel.
>>
>> Exalt Specs... 200rating @ 64Mhz = 100 mbps then
>>                     100rating @ 32Mhz = 50 mbps... @ $16,000 list.
>>                        This of course being best case based on noise 
>> level and acheivalbe modulation.
>>
>> Trango Specs.... 54rating @ 20Mhz = 45 mbps, for $3000.
>> So, if I bonded two Atlas Links, I'd get equivelent performance to the 
>> high performance version at 30% less spectrum use, and 1/5 th the cost.
>> Now of Course Trango, is Ethernet only, and does not have the wayside T1 
>> support or Fiber/GPS features. And there is value to that for someone 
>> offering Voice services also.
>>
>> All I'm saying is that the street price sure better be a lot lower than 
>> the list price listed, as you suggeset it is. The second you are in the > 
>> $15,000 range, you might as well be doing licensed for the extra $1000 
>> bucks or two to make it survivable.
>>
>> Tom DeReggi
>> RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
>> IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Lakeland" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> To: "WISPA General List" <wireless@wispa.org>
>> Sent: Tuesday, November 14, 2006 7:44 PM
>> Subject: [WISPA] Re: Anyone using Exalt radios????
>>
>>
>>> Personally I couldn't be happier.  They work as expected and stated. 
>>> They have relatively straight forward GUI interfaces, you can move the 
>>> center of the channel to any 1 Mhz. division, it works on 5.3, you can 
>>> get a straight indoor only unit or an outdoor unit with integral antenna 
>>> or N connectors, they have 2 year warranty. OOB replacement guarantee, 
>>> the inegral antenna has electronic polarity control, it can syc all 
>>> units on a msite so you can use one channel, the gps option is very 
>>> reasonable and you don't need a central controller or cabling between 
>>> radios. User defined latency and channel bandwidth as well as free 
>>> upgrade to 5.4 when it becomes available.
>>> The advertised throughput on a 200 Mhz radio is 100 Mb true throughput 
>>> in each direction port to port. The radio throughput is based on a 64 
>>> Mhz channel.
>>> Now lets address the Motorola Orthogon for a minute. It has no GPS 
>>> syncing. It has no integral fiber interface.  The fiber "kit" is an 
>>> option that allows for cable runs in excess of POE lengths but you still 
>>> need external power.  I can put a media converter and external power on 
>>> a Exalt radio also.
>>> As far as the bandwidth is concerned the Orthogon still uses 60 MHz to 
>>> give full bandwidth.  It just uses 30 on vertical and 30 on horizontal.
>>> On a positive note for Exalt the C/I is much better on the Exalt radio 
>>> which ultimately guarantees better distance in noisy environments.
>>> The pricin on the Connectronics site is MSRP.  You can get it quite a 
>>> bit lower...
>>> -B-
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> John Scrivner writes:
>>>
>>>> Bob,
>>>> Tell us about your experiences with these. Work as advertised? 
>>>> Approximate cost per pair?
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> Scriv Bob Moldashel wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Just looking for experiences.... Personally I think they rock but just 
>>>>> looking to see if anyone else has any pros/cons.... www.exaltcom.com 
>>>>> 100 Mb FD 2.4 Ghz. radio.   Hmmmm.....   I bet Marlon would love to 
>>>>> have one of these for a neighbor!  :-) -B-
>>>>
>>>> -- 
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>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>
>>
>
>
> -- 
> Bob Moldashel
> Lakeland Communications, Inc.
> Broadband Deployment Group
> 1350 Lincoln Avenue
> Holbrook, New York 11741 USA
> 800-479-9195 Toll Free US & Canada
> 631-585-5558 Fax
> 516-551-1131 Cell
>
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