Not exactly. Given one endpoint, the link directly next to it has
anazimuth ~30ft down at the same distance. Yes, FD.
Josh Reynolds, Chief Information Officer
SPITwSPOTS, www.spitwspots.com <http://www.spitwspots.com>
On 10/14/2014 01:30 AM, Eric Kuhnke via Af wrote:
Yes, 5 on one site, but aimed in different directions.
Do you have two af24 pairs in parallel, FDD, each using the full 200
MHz, linking two sites on exactly the same azimuth and elevation?
On Oct 13, 2014 11:58 PM, "Josh Reynolds via Af" <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
That's incorrect. You have "link 1" on one set of freqs, then on
"link 2" you swap the TX/RX freqs.
We have a site with 5 AF24s on it currently. No problems.
Josh Reynolds, Chief Information Officer
SPITwSPOTS, www.spitwspots.com <http://www.spitwspots.com>
On 10/13/2014 05:49 PM, Eric Kuhnke via Af wrote:
No you can't, in 750Mbps mode an af24 link takes all available 24
GHz bandwidth in both polarities. Will not work in parallel ptp
between the same two sites. Will work if one af24 is aimed
off-azimuth at least 10 degrees at another third site.
On Oct 13, 2014 4:48 PM, "Jerry Richardson via Af" <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
1 Gig both ways?
You **could** theoretically use two AF24’s and a Mikrotik
router to bond the connections.
This would give them <1.0Gbps with redundancy.
*From:*Af [mailto:[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>] *On Behalf Of *TJ Trout via Af
*Sent:* Monday, October 13, 2014 3:59 PM
*To:* [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
*Subject:* [AFMUG] Cheapest way to bachaul 1gig fiber 1 mile?
What is the cheapest method of backhauling a 1gig fiber about
1 mile? I'm assuming you can't reliably bond or aggregate
airfiber 24's can you?
TJ