I have used both 900 Mhz and 2.4 Ghz Wifi with mixed results through trees.
In the past we used Moxa wireless RS-485 bridges which were 900 Mhz devices.
The lower frequency tends to work better with obstructions but not sure about 
over the top of a hill.
Depends on how far over the hill you are.

Do you have access to the hill top ?
If yes, using a directional antennas and a passive repeater (back to back 
directional antennas) at the hill top to bend the signal.
If you go this way then you probably want to go with 2.4 Ghz since you will 
need multiple high gain antennas.
You will read much pros and con debate about if passive repeaters do or do not 
work.
With short path lengths, short coax trimmed for low VSWR and very high gain 
directional antennas it can.
I have done it successfully in the past and it worked better than the 
calculations would indicate.

There are multiple suppliers of directional 2.4 Ghz antennas.
Here is a link to a 24 dB antenna from a local CA retail electronics house.
http://www.frys.com/product/7411495;jsessionid=5vsRnGBpd1iiZqjr7HmfLg__.node2?site=sr:SEARCH:MAIN_RSLT_PG

Best Regards,

John Berdner
General Manager, North America



SolarEdge Technologies, Inc.
3347 Gateway Boulevard, Fremont CA 94538 USA  (*Please note of our new address.)
T: 510.498.3200, X 747
M: 530.277.4894


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of William Miller
Sent: Friday, February 22, 2013 1:35 PM
To: RE-wrenches
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Remote Sunny boy Monitoring

Steve, Ryan:

I don't quite have line of sight.  There is the brow of a hill...  I will look 
to see if any of the wireless solutions will handle this scenario.

Wm


At 12:57 PM 2/22/2013, Steve Jefferson wrote:
>Content-Language: en-US
>Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
>
>boundary="_000_41FE255D65D554478C3B17F3EB5410EF5768618DSVRUSEXMBX01sma_"
>
>There is a company called Digi.com. they make a wireless bridge for the
>RS-485 protocol. Needs to be line of sight, but it will travel about 1000'.
>
>They are familiar with installers using their radios to communicate
>with our inverters, set up is pretty straight forward.
>
>I am looking for a part number.
>I have a couple of systems from my install days with these being used.
>
>I like Ryan's solution as well.

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