I was thinking the same thing. 16 miles. Most radios want a 2 or 3 foot dish on both ends minimum to do those lengths. But maybe it is a 1 watt radio and a very quiet noise floor? One would hope UBNT could jump in here and answer the question.
From: Jerry Richardson Sent: Tuesday, March 24, 2015 1:31 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 10 GHz Ubiquiti radios My first though was “that’s a long shot” Second thought was “math is math…” so it would depend on the Tx power, noise floor (probably non-existent), Rx sensitivity, and the antenna gain. Jerry R From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jaime Solorza Sent: Tuesday, March 24, 2015 9:45 AM To: Animal Farm Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 10 GHz Ubiquiti radios Thanks Mike for reading what I wrote....I know allot of folks think El Paso is part of Mexico, even Texas treats us as a step child, but alas I am in the US. This list is international and not US-only as far as I know. The question was to those in other countries that might have used these radios. As far as I know the 10GHz is allowed in Mexico under a licensing process via CofeTel and SCT. I was hired to configure them and make sure they "talked" to each other passed traffic before they go to customs and get exported to Mexico. The integrator hired me due to recommendation from the Syscom/Epcom distributors sales representative. I don't know about the conversion but case was huge! Jaime Solorza Wireless Systems Architect 915-861-1390 On Tue, Mar 24, 2015 at 10:05 AM, Mike Hammett <[email protected]> wrote: He did say Maxico and Chihuahua... ;-) ----- Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: "Kurt Fankhauser" <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Tuesday, March 24, 2015 11:03:03 AM Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 10 GHz Ubiquiti radios What country are you in? Here in the US we can't use that band except maybe under HAM radio operations so your not going to find very many people that have used that radio... Kurt Fankhauser Wavelinc Communications P.O. Box 126 Bucyrus, OH 44820 http://www.wavelinc.com tel. 419-562-6405 fax. 419-617-0110 On Tue, Mar 24, 2015 at 11:58 AM, Jaime Solorza <[email protected]> wrote: I configured a pair of 10GHz PTP Ubiquiti radios and 3 2.4GHz M2 with sectors for a cement company outfit out of Mexico that is going to install them in a canyon. I had never played with the 10GHz product before and it was same interface as M5 pretty much. The box with dishes was good size. I didn't take them out as the radios connected to each other on bench. What kind of distance can these radios provide? The integrator installing the radios, cameras, UniFi and phones says they are going to shoot from a tower on mountain to quarry about 16 miles down the canyon. Can these work that far? I asked why they didn't use 5GHz and told me someone at Syscom in Chihuahua recommended these for long distance. Any one use these before? Jaime Solorza Wireless Systems Architect 915-861-1390
