I Totally agree with josh.

They have a specific purpose so if you can deploy within those parameters
they are great.

Unfortunately our area isn’t conducive to that type of deployment because
of terrain.  In the mountains you need antennas with a wider vertical beam
because your towers are on mtn peaks and some clients are same height as
the tower and other clients are on the valley floor.  It’s hard to use a
spot beam to cover all that.

In the Midwest or other flat areas I could see them being useful to spot
beam the population centers.

-Sean


On Tue, Apr 10, 2018 at 8:29 PM Josh Reynolds <j...@kyneticwifi.com> wrote:

> They are great for stuff like 30/40Mhz wide, gps sync, put 4-6 on a pole
> in a subdivision  or on a tower leg kinda thing.
>
>
> If anybody thought they were for something else (ie long range), they
> didn't read the data sheets.
>
> Lightweight, low size, low wind load, perfectly circular pattern - great
> spot beams. Good F/B ratio.
>
> On Tue, Apr 10, 2018, 9:12 PM Robert <i...@avantwireless.com> wrote:
>
>> I recently did a couple of tests with RF horns.   I was hoping for a lot
>> and was disappointed.   I was hoping that they could be colocated
>> closer than regular sectors that I use and the crosstalk signal levels
>> were just about the same as the shielded sectors.   As far as the
>> signals at the CPE's they were pretty good but not amazingly better for
>> as small as the target area got reduced to.
>>
>> On 4/10/18 6:43 PM, Steve Jones wrote:
>> > Can i get some non fanboy real world on these guys? Btw, i hate facebook
>> > groups almost as much as dslreports or the ubnt forums, this is
>> > literally the only place to get legitimate product info.
>>
>

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