You could probably do it with SIAE or Bridgewave navigator a fair amount
cheaper, but it would still need to be the same configuration. I suspect
running fiber would be cheaper.

A more realistic way to do it, would be to spit it into a few hops and use
80ghz (of course that only works if there are suitable locations that you
can use in between)

On Tue, Feb 19, 2019 at 11:54 AM Adam Moffett <[email protected]> wrote:

> Multiple links.
> Eight PTP820's or Ceragon IP20C (which are the same thing), all XPIC, and
> all on the maximum channel size.  Probably a blend of both 18ghz and 11ghz
> in order to find enough channels.
>
> You'll have a total of 16 chains which will be a little over 600mbps
> each.  So just about 10gig.  I believe you can put them on 4 dishes using
> dual radios and dual mounts. Use switches with link aggregation on each
> end.  You don't want unequal paths in link aggregation, so in bad weather
> you can't be having 18ghz paths slow down by x amount while 11ghz paths
> slow down by y amount, so use link state propagation to kill a link if it's
> ever degraded.
>
> Definitely an arm and a leg.  Each XPIC link is going to be north of $20k,
> so probably a $160,000+ solution.
>
> Definitely no guarantee you have all that bandwidth available to be
> licensed, but it's not impossible.
>
>
> On 2/19/2019 12:35 PM, Carl Peterson wrote:
>
> Assuming this just ins't possible in the real world but I thought I'd
> throw it at the list and see if anyone knew of anything even if it cost an
> arm an and a leg.  Obviously wireless, fiber would be too easy.
>
> --
>
> Carl Peterson
>
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>
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>
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>
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