I have actually had some of my Cambium/Motorola FCC testing done at that site 
near Salt Lake City.  The whole building is fiberglass.

From: Ken Hohhof 
Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2017 12:13 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Infinite Electronics Acquires KP Performance Antennas

Years ago when I worked at Warwick Electronics, they had an anechoic chamber 
(for sound testing, I don’t remember if it was also for RF).  The cleaning 
people called it “the funny room” and refused to go in there because they 
couldn’t hear if someone came up behind them.  Those things cost a fortune and 
are often constructed so they can be detached from the building and taken with 
if the company moves.  Warwick also had a room set up as a suburban living 
room, it was named “the living room”.  I believe Warwick was the last company 
to make TV sets in the U.S., they had plants in Arkansas and Mexico.  This was 
1976, for those of you who think U.S. companies making things in Mexico is a 
recent thing.  It was a division of Whirlpool and was sold off to Sanyo shortly 
after I left.  They also made Thomas Organs and Moog Synthesizers.

 

A couple of the companies I worked for sent equipment out to test labs in Salt 
Lake City for FCC emissions testing.  In addition to indoor chambers, they had 
an outdoor range with mountains on 3 sides.  Later a few test labs sprung up in 
the Chicago area and we stopped going out to SLC.  I recall scratching my head 
because they took Coke breaks in the morning instead of coffee breaks, always 
super nice folks though.

 

 

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of George Skorup
Sent: Wednesday, January 4, 2017 12:23 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Infinite Electronics Acquires KP Performance Antennas

 

I've been in the chambers at Cambium HQ several times. Kinda creepy. You can 
hear everything from switching power supplies to your own heart beat. Drives me 
nuts.

On 1/4/2017 12:08 PM, Chuck McCown wrote:

  And everything was on elevated 100% dielectric towers.  

   

  If I was going to do it again, I would no a nearfield range inside an 
anechoic chamber.  

  That is how all the big boys roll these days.  

   

  From: Chuck McCown 

  Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2017 11:03 AM

  To: [email protected] 

  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Infinite Electronics Acquires KP Performance Antennas

   

  Yes computer controlled turn table with all the official stack of HP test 
gear.  

   

  From: Cameron Crum 

  Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2017 10:56 AM

  To: [email protected] 

  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Infinite Electronics Acquires KP Performance Antennas

   

  Did you have a turn table and the whole works or did you just do it manually? 

   

   

  On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 11:51 AM, Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote:

    I have no idea if Lanbowan actually does field testing.  I would think you 
have to do some because there are always reality issues that pop up when using 
a simulation.  But as far as exhaustive testing or third party testing, I have 
no idea.  I had my own far field test range and I used IEEE testing 
methodology.  So I knew that my performance in the field would be better than 
my published specs.  

     

    My guess is that KP will just get absorbed in to the L-COM product list.  
More importantly, L-COM absorbed the customer list.  

     

    From: Ken Hohhof 

    Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2017 10:06 AM

    To: [email protected] 

    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Infinite Electronics Acquires KP Performance Antennas

     

    I won’t ask if they will sell your design to someone else for money.

     

    But I will ask about testing.  Do they qualify the antennas with lab and 
open field testing, or is that your responsibility to do yourself or send out 
to an independent lab?

     

    -----------------------------------------------------

     

    I know you can test antennas yourself, and the KP guys talked about doing a 
lot of testing which I think they sent out.  But I see a lot of spec sheets 
that seem like they came right off a simulation program, often without 
qualifying if the numbers and plots are typical or guaranteed performance.  But 
then I also see elevation/azimuth plots that are so ugly they must be real 
because no marketing guy would make them up.  (I think there’s one Ubiquiti 
omni that struck me that way.)

     

    A lot of antenna vendors, I think we take their amazing gain numbers with a 
grain of salt, subtracting a fudge factor for marketing exuberance.  And 
without patterns and frequency plots, just a gain number isn’t that useful.

     

    Looking at published elevation/azimuth plots for dual pol omnis, the gains 
are often different for the two polarizations.  And with the 5 GHz wideband 
antennas, there may be a sweet spot at some frequency, and in any case the gain 
usually drops off several dB in the lower sub-bands.

     

    I also remember the KP guys went through what they called Gen I, II and III 
versions, influenced a lot by their interactions with Cambium.  I think the 
Cambium guys informed them that gain wasn’t everything in a sector antenna, you 
also needed a certain F/B ratio and sidelobe suppression.

     

    There’s also the issues of null fill and downtilt.  Electrical downtilt is 
especially relevant in an omni, since you can’t really do mechanical downtilt 
if you want it to be an omni.

     

    Bottom line, a lot of buyers look only at two numbers:  price, and gain.

     

     

    From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chuck McCown
    Sent: Wednesday, January 4, 2017 10:44 AM
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Infinite Electronics Acquires KP Performance Antennas

     

    Yes, Lanbowan will sell to anyone with money.  They will custom build or 
alter anything for money.  Easy company to work with.  

     

    From: Mathew Howard 

    Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2017 9:08 AM

    To: af 

    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Infinite Electronics Acquires KP Performance Antennas

     

    I think all (or at least most) of the KP sectors are pretty heavily 
customized, as I haven't seen anyone else selling the equivalents, but I 
suspect that they are all manufactured by Lanbowan... whether or not the 
internals are any different than what Lanbowan will sell to anyone else, I 
don't know. 

    The dual polarity 5ghz omnis they sell are certainly the same thing as 
Chuck's (there are probably at least half a dozen different companies selling 
those in the US... including L-Com, interestingly).

     

    On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 9:07 AM, Colin Stanners <[email protected]> wrote:

      From my bit of research I believe that KP dual-frequency "combo" sectors 
are their own design / build, although I've never asked them.

       

      On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 8:48 AM, Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote:

        Most of KP stuff came from Lanbowan.  Same place I got my customized 
omni antennas.  

        L-Com does similar, just import from China.  

        So just adding Lanbowan to L-Com is not much of a change it doesn’t 
seem to me.  

         

        I don’t think either company actually built anything themselves.  

         

        From: That One Guy /sarcasm 

        Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2017 5:42 PM

        To: [email protected] 

        Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Infinite Electronics Acquires KP Performance 
Antennas

         

        L-Com/KP presents some interesting potential

         

        On Tue, Jan 3, 2017 at 5:11 PM, Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote:

          Must be these guys:

          http://www.infiniteelectronics.com/

           

          From: Timothy Steele 

          Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2017 4:03 PM

          To: [email protected] 

          Subject: [AFMUG] Infinite Electronics Acquires KP Performance Antennas

           

          
http://www.antennasonline.com/main/news/infinite-electronics-acquires-kp-performance-antennas/
 





         

        -- 

        If you only see yourself as part of the team but you don't see your 
team as part of yourself you have already failed as part of the team.

       

     

   

 

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