I’ll bet you could build a triangle out of magnesium. Maybe with 8’ legs with ring at the end. Hoist it with a large balloon. Use the three rings for guy wires. Run a small tube down a guy to replenish the helium. Run power and Ethernet down another leg for the APs.
From: Ken Hohhof Sent: Friday, October 9, 2020 9:29 AM To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' Subject: Re: [AFMUG] The covid, again Steve mentioned licensed links. I don’t know if that’s “building back better” or if they had licensed links previously. But you’re not going to put licensed links on a flying COW. Even temporary unlicensed links may need to go on a permanent structure. The days when we’d feed a small site with an SM are over, and apparently this site has 80 subs. As an indication how things have changed, when we got started in wireless, we gave every customer a backup dialup account. Of course that would be useless today, and we got out of dialup entirely in 2009. Even then, customers would drive into town to use free WiFi rather than use dialup. They could maybe get 80 mobile hotspots and give them out to customers, I think on a business account they might be genuinely unlimited. If they use Mikrotik CPE routers, there are several models with LTE built in, or get some Cradlepoints. I like the mobile hotspots better because they could be repurposed more easily. Once upon a time I would have said WiFi only with no Ethernet is a big problem, but most customers these days are 100% WiFi anyway. From: AF <af-boun...@af.afmug.com> On Behalf Of ch...@wbmfg.com Sent: Friday, October 9, 2020 10:14 AM To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' <af@af.afmug.com> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] The covid, again How high do you need to be for a 3 mile cell? I wonder about a tethered drone. Powered from the ground. Or perhaps a balloon. Not for this instant case but for the future. COWs that fly. New company “Over the Moon”. From: Ken Hohhof Sent: Friday, October 9, 2020 8:48 AM To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' Subject: Re: [AFMUG] The covid, again I think Steve said it was a grain elevator or leg that got destroyed in a derecho wind storm. I seem to remember he posted some photos. I’m not sure if they are deploying on a concrete silo at the same site or a different site. We used to avoid grain legs and pay the rent to be on commercial towers, but everything is forcing all of us to shrink our cells from 7-10 miles once upon a time to more like 3 miles today, so you really can’t avoid using whatever structures are available unless you want to build a lot of towers. That said, we are on a 400 ft commercial tower with 5 licensed links and 10 sectors. If that sucker blew over, I don’t know what we’d do, there are no nearby tall structures, and we couldn’t bring in a 300 ft COW and put all that stuff on it. Luckily the tower was reinforced to Rev. G and is unlikely to blow over, but stuff happens, I remember one tower fell down when a vehicle went off the road and snapped some guy wires. And there was an old AT&T Long Lines tower in our area that blew over in a wind storm. From: AF <af-boun...@af.afmug.com> On Behalf Of Matt Hoppes Sent: Friday, October 9, 2020 9:26 AM To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group <af@af.afmug.com> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] The covid, again Or did the site actually fall over? On Oct 9, 2020, at 10:25 AM, Matt Hoppes <mattli...@rivervalleyinternet.net> wrote: I am just kind of curious here if you lost the site why has it been such a disaster getting it back on line? You couldn’t just put new equipment up? On Oct 9, 2020, at 10:05 AM, David Milholen <dmilho...@wletc.com> wrote: All I can say to that situation is damn.. Find new people... sheesh On 10/9/2020 12:19 AM, Steve Jones wrote: We lost a primary sight in July during the storms. This is a remote site feeding around 80 customers and has been a shitshow getting back online. They were patient for a bit. We've hit wall after wall, new lease delays, 5ghz interference, multiple licensed links, wrong equipment, new hardware failures, electricians running 220 to 110 circuits, contractors wife kidnapping a kid, if it could go wrong it did. The town has had meetings over this and we last promised to be production ready and problem free 2 weeks ago. At this point they're shopping our lease probably. We have a multi year breakout on the lease and can fix it, but in the interim they'll probably colocate a competitor. Honestly, I cant blame them. On Thu, Oct 8, 2020, 11:54 PM Darin Steffl <darin.ste...@mnwifi.com> wrote: Can you clarify what you mean by "80 customer site loss"? Does this mean you'll miss out on potentially 80 new customers or you'll lose 80 current customers if you don't do said work? If it's 80 new customers waiting for service, most will wait an extra 2 weeks if you explain COVID has taken out a guy. Some may go with a competitor but if they suck, they'll be back to you eventually. We had people wait up to 5 weeks for an install when we were backed up from the COVID rush for service between March-August. On Thu, Oct 8, 2020 at 11:46 PM Steve Jones <thatoneguyst...@gmail.com> wrote: So, I have a probable covid positive contractor. I know the answer here, I'm just sounding it out. I'm behind as fuck with this guys work. I worked with him last weekend, I've been sick with harvest flu since a couple days before, his daughter tested positive the next day, his wife and other daughter the day after that and he got sick wednesday. Everybody is over symptoms (wife and daughter still have no taste or smell, but that lasts a long time) My harvest flu symptoms havent changed, not worried about me. Hes wanting to catch up behind work saturday. I'm usually very risk tolerant, and my house has been directly exposed a ton of times, so I know it's not as easily spread as they say. Its mid harvest, a farmer getting this shit right now could be devastating. Its gonna cost us alot if he doesnt get caught up, a substantial amount. Like 80 customer site loss substantial. We arent big, that's more than 5 percent. My boss respects me after all these years, if I make a call, knowing the costs like this, he will back my call, but it burns all those years of trust. Theres like a .0001 percent chance he would spread it, zero direct interaction. But hes present at grain elevators mid harvest. Grain dust will drop anything airborne like a rock. It takes an exposure to a high viral count to even get symptomatic. Tell me I'm wrong to push his work out another week or 2 -- AF mailing list AF@af.afmug.com http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com -- Darin Steffl Minnesota WiFi www.mnwifi.com 507-634-WiFi Like us on Facebook -- AF mailing list AF@af.afmug.com http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com -- AF mailing list AF@af.afmug.com http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- AF mailing list AF@af.afmug.com http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- AF mailing list AF@af.afmug.com http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com
-- AF mailing list AF@af.afmug.com http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com