I doubt if you'd even be able to get Metrolinqs to connect to eachother at
1.9miles. They have integrated antennas, so 2' dishes aren't an option (not
that 2' dishes would be enough to make it work anyway).

There are lots of things that can do 100Mbps on that short of a link
though... in that rain zone an airfiber 24ghz link should handle that
distance pretty nicely, if you can't or don't want to use 5ghz.

On Mon, Aug 7, 2017 at 4:06 PM, Brett A Mansfield <
[email protected]> wrote:

> I have a 1500M link that is currently at 4 9's using the 35cm model. I get
> about 1Gb throughput including overhead.
>
> Thank you,
> Brett A Mansfield
>
> On Aug 7, 2017, at 2:27 PM, Eric Kuhnke <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Still wouldn't do it...  60 GHz with 2ft/60cm dishes is good for 900-1100
> meters max in rain zone D with high reliability where you can actually
> treat it like a fiber cable, and it won't drop out except in truly
> exceptional rainstorms. In the five nines per year statistical range.
>
> 1100 meters = 0.68 miles
>
> And definitely not in rain zone F with its higher mm/hour rates.
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Aug 7, 2017 at 12:55 PM, Jaime Solorza <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> Friend asking with 2 ft dishes....
>>
>> Jaime Solorza
>>
>> On Aug 7, 2017 1:45 PM, "Eric Kuhnke" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> 1.9 miles 60 GHz with those tiny antennas?
>>>
>>> I wouldn't even try that distance with the Bridgewave 60 GHz product
>>> with 60cm dishes on both ends in rain zone C...  Forget F.
>>>
>>> 100 Mbps at 1.9 miles seems like a good fit for two AF5X with the
>>> smallest dishes, does it have to be 60 for some reason?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Aug 7, 2017 at 12:42 PM, Jaime Solorza <
>>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Can these 60Ghz do 100 mbps at 1.9 miles in my area? Zone F
>>>>
>>>> Jaime Solorza
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>

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