What do you consider reasonable.
Dragonwave 24 G would be good. Orthogon, Trango Giga, Ligowave.
If money is not an issue, I would go Dragonwave. Licensed or unlicensed.
- Original Message -
From: Rogelio scubac...@gmail.com
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Thursday,
Dragonwave would be my first suggestion. You can look at the Redline
an80s too - they're cheap but won't provide 100 megs.
On 1/1/09, Chuck McCown - 3 ch...@beehive.net wrote:
What do you consider reasonable.
Dragonwave 24 G would be good. Orthogon, Trango Giga, Ligowave.
If money is not an
And does he want 100Mb full duplex or aggregate? Motorola Orthogon radios
(specifically the PtP 500 Full) hits 105Mbps aggregate... that could be a
real winner.
100Mb full duplex would be Dragonwave... 24Ghz could be a nice solution so
they don't have to worry about the license.
If he wants
I'm not sure he knows what he wants, at this point.
He knows that I do stuff with wifi mesh using BelAir products and wanted
to know what that would cost. I told him BelAir might be good up to
only a certain Mbps (fairly steady ~30Mbps on 802.11a radios, which I've
tested many times), and
If all else fails you can use a pair of BelAir links and use
RouterOS/OSPF to concatinate them :)
On 1/1/09, Rogelio scubac...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm not sure he knows what he wants, at this point.
He knows that I do stuff with wifi mesh using BelAir products and wanted
to know what that would
Josh Luthman wrote:
If all else fails you can use a pair of BelAir links and use
RouterOS/OSPF to concatinate them :)
For long links, someone people I know claim to do something similar with
RSTP: put two panels up (one on each polarization) and then plug both
radios on each side into a layer