Yeah, The 450i 900 system would definately do the trick
How much bandwidth do you need?
The 900 on a 10Mhz channel we see around 35Mbs in a noisy environment on 8x/4xmimoB rate.
If your doing ptp with it then open it up to 20Mhz wide and bang on.


On 05/21/2018 10:49 AM, Travis Johnson wrote:
Ok. I'll give those a try and see what happens. Thanks.

Travis


On 5/21/2018 9:37 AM, Mathew Howard wrote:
You could very likely get a bit more speed out of that by going to the new AC radios... my guess is that the airFibers would be even better, but I haven't used any of those in the 2.4ghz variety.



On Mon, May 21, 2018 at 10:31 AM, Travis Johnson <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    The current signal level is -71. I have a 2ft dish on each side.

    Travis


    On 5/21/2018 9:15 AM, Mathew Howard wrote:
    Yeah... 900mhz PTP 450 is probably the best option.

    What kind of signal level do you get with the 2.4ghz radios? you
    could probably get a bit more out of it by going to airFiber 2x
    or Rocket 2AC radios... and maybe a bigger dish.

    On Mon, May 21, 2018 at 10:09 AM, Jeff Broadwick - Lists
    <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

        900 PTP 450 from Cambium

        Jeff Broadwick
        CTIconnect
        312-205-2519 Office
        574-220-7826 Cell
        [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>

        > On May 21, 2018, at 11:05 AM, Travis Johnson <[email protected]
        <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
        >
        > Hi,
        >
        > I'm looking for suggestions for an 8 mile link that will
        be shooting through a single wall of trees about 1/8 mile
        from one end of the link. Currently using 2.4ghz Ubnt
        radios. Works great during the winter, but once the trees
        fill back in, the link drops to about 5Mbps actual
        throughput. Would be nice to get 20Mbps.
        >
        > Any suggestions? The trees are 80ft tall, so putting up a
        100ft tower at a residence is not really an option. The
        other side is on top of a 1000ft tall hill.
        >
        > Travis
        >






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