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 Subject :2.4 and 1090Ghz antenna?.. 2014-09-22- 09:12:22 
KG5DPV
Member
Joined: 2014-09-03- 09:17:56
Posts: 6
Location: Coppell, TX
 

Just getting into this and I'm about to order some LMR-400 (I'd love 600 but $$$$ OUCH!) and to try and limit how much I have to spend on cable runs.  My thought was if it was possible to build/buy an antenna that works for both.  I'm thinking if I could put up one combo antenna at one corner of the house and a second 2.4 only antenna at the other corner (for diversity.)

If I can't build a dual band antenna how close can they be to each other.  One wave length for 2.4 is about 5in and one for 1ghz is about 1ft so I'm thinking if I build a mount that separates them by 2-2.5ft I should be good to not cause too much interference, especially considering that I won't be transmitting on 1Ghz.

This then brings up the discussion of diplexers/duplexers and bi-directional amplifiers.  I'm going to be on probably 60-70ft runs and on 1090 I'm looking at about 4.1db of loss and on 2.4 about 6.2db.

Right now I have 0 antenna's beyond what came with gear so I figure now is the time to plan this out.

Thoughts?

73

KG5DPV


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 Subject :Re:2.4 and 1090Ghz antenna?.. 2014-09-22- 09:50:31 
KG6JEI
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Joined: 2013-12-02- 19:52:05
Posts: 516
Location

Take a look at the Ubiquiti gear instead.  It is intended to be either directly attached to the antenna feed point or mounted with a couple inches of cable outside.

Power and Data is via cheap networking cable.

No need for a 500$+ amp no need for a 100ft LMR run, less than a DB of loss possible, more portable and more deployable.

Between the Ubiquiti node and cat cable it's cheaper than the LMR run at 100ft alone and that's not counting the cost of an amplifier you want to add (hint: amps that are less than 500$ often actually corrupt the data more than they improve it, those 50$ ones have caused havoc in the past ) 




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 Subject :Re:2.4 and 1090Ghz antenna?.. 2014-09-22- 09:57:14 
KF5JIM
Future Astronaut
Joined: 2013-07-17- 12:13:36
Posts: 250
Location: Nederland

Though LMR-400 is great, you are aware that at 2412MHz it has an attenuation loss of 6.6dB/100ft?  This means that a 70-ft cable run (after adjusting for insertion loss) would cost you ~5.2dB loss?  And then on top of that you are going to build your own antenna (which for microwave has to be pretty precise)?

Let's do the math (Assuming Linksys...Adjust accordingly for Ubiquity (600mw--> 27.8dBm & -95dB RX sensitivity))...
Assuming Linksys:
Pout=0.079W --> 18.9dBm
Linksys Pout (assuming no di/duplexer) & cable run --> 18.9dBm - 5.2dB = 13.7dB of power to antenna
Assuming you can have an antenna gain of 8dB we yield an ERP of 21.7dB.  Sounds good eh?
So let's assume you have another node 300ft away, Let's calculate the Free Space Loss:
L=32.4+20*log(D)+20*log(f) = 32.4+20*log(300/5280*1.609km)+20*log(2412MHz) = 79.2dB loss per 300ft path
So at a receiving antenna, the antenna sees a signal that is 21.7-79.2 = -57.5dB.
Now, let's look at the Linksys hardware...The Linksys device at the other end has a RX sensitivity that is around -65dB.
Assuming the antenna has no gain and the cable in the other Linksys device has no loss...
Now we compare the numbers...difference between the two is (-57.5)-(-65)=7.5dB margin.
This 7.5dB margin will likely work fine in fair weather, but it may not be enough to protect the link from extreme weather conditions.
A margin of 10 to 15dB is fine.  However, to give for some attenuation and multipath in the received radio signal, a margin of 20dB should be safe.

That's only half of it...Now we need to look at the RX signal that the Linksys device attached to 70-ft LMR-400 cables receives.  (Same equations...I'll just post the sequential numerical results).
18.9dB  --> (antenna) --> -79.2dB --> Antenna RX sig of -60.3 --> 8dB Antenna Gain:  -52.3 --> Feedline loss:  -57.5dB --> Margin:  7.5dB.
(I wasn't expecting it to be the same...)  So the same result applies.  Link will be intermittent.

Note:  Amplifiers are nice, but keep in mind that they also amplify any noise that they receive and introduce it into the signal and into the device.  You are better off with a nice antenna and a very short cable run (60-70ft is not short).

For link planning...Consult chapter 10 of the Wireless Networking in the Developing World.

I mean this post in good terms...plan out your link accordingly and think it out in detail before you do anything.

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 Subject :Re:2.4 and 1090Ghz antenna?.. 2014-09-22- 10:15:55 
KG5DPV
Member
Joined: 2014-09-03- 09:17:56
Posts: 6
Location: Coppell, TX
 
Thank you very much, both replies are exactly what I am looking for. A better way to do it. Hadn't thought about for the cost of the cabling, amplifier and all the other junk that I could just look at one of the ubiquity radios. I had gotten a little hyper focused on that I already have one linksys sitting here and access to several more of different versions. Going with the Ubiquity radios is an excellent plan considering I have a couple boxes of cat5e sitting up in my attic right now and I already have a POE+ switch so power won't be a problem. Where my house is I have to be able to hit much further out. It may be pointless without putting up something directional and a tower/mast of any sort is not going to happen. Thanks for the guidance. BTW is anybody going to tonight's DCARA meeting?
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 Subject :Re:2.4 and 1090Ghz antenna?.. 2014-09-22- 12:16:17 
AE6XE
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Joined: 2013-11-05- 00:09:51
Posts: 116
Location
Note that ubiquiti hardware uses 'passive' POE up to 24v. I plugged a couple different ubiquiti devices into an 802.3af compliant POE switch (~48v) and it didn't work (and fortunately didn't blow anything up :) ). Naturally ubiquiti sells POE switches and POE adopters for 802.3af compatibility. Be very cautious if you have the POE+ cisco implementation--it is definitely incompatible with ubiquiti and 802.3af. While I have not attempted, I understand this will damage unbiqiti device--a local user fried a Bullet M2 believed due to this. ubiquiti follows DC voltage on +4/5 and -7/8 pins of 802.3af.
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 Subject :Re:Re:2.4 and 1090Ghz antenna?.. 2014-09-24- 17:21:30 
KG5DPV
Member
Joined: 2014-09-03- 09:17:56
Posts: 6
Location: Coppell, TX
 


Thanks!  I'll look into it.  I have a Juniper 2200 and really can't afford to nuke it.  




[AE6XE 2014-09-22- 12:16:17]:

Note that ubiquiti hardware uses 'passive' POE up to 24v. I plugged a couple different ubiquiti devices into an 802.3af compliant POE switch (~48v) and it didn't work (and fortunately didn't blow anything up :) ). Naturally ubiquiti sells POE switches and POE adopters for 802.3af compatibility. Be very cautious if you have the POE+ cisco implementation--it is definitely incompatible with ubiquiti and 802.3af. While I have not attempted, I understand this will damage unbiqiti device--a local user fried a Bullet M2 believed due to this. ubiquiti follows DC voltage on +4/5 and -7/8 pins of 802.3af.

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