Use the polyphasers. There are not meant to save you from a direct hit, but to disipate a near by hit. They will add to the stapility of the unit in poor weather conditions. Don't forget that the extra cable and poly will reduce insert a 1.5-2db loss so you can make up for it using a higher gain antenna and still be under legal limits.
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Lancaster Networks Sent: Friday, July 18, 2003 12:50 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re[5]: [smartBridges] New Firmware Hello, Thanks for the help, I was told by a couple people, don't bother with the poly's, as it's so close of a hit if the radio is 2 feet away it will get nailed also. But, hey they are only $50 or less and not a lot of loss. I'm not going to risk the AP's... Take a look at my site http://www.lancastertowers.com and look at the tower on the right hand side... I'm considering mounting to the top 10% but not right at the top possibly. Any thoughts on this? Thanks again for your input, and you sure moved a long way to the Bahama's! No Amish down there I would gather? lol Friday, July 18, 2003, 1:33:07 AM, you wrote: jbc> Return-Path: <> jbc> Received: from [66.150.163.162] (HELO m5) jbc> by spamarrest.com (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 4.0.3) jbc> with ESMTP id 10162053 for cbunting; Thu, 17 Jul 2003 22:35:36 jbc> -0700 jbc> Received: from part-15.org ([198.63.203.3]) jbc> by mail.fission2.com (Merak 5.9.4) with SMTP id CPA74271 jbc> for <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Fri, 18 Jul 2003 01:34:15 -0400 jbc> Received: from jazz [24.244.191.226] by pdqlink.com with ESMTP jbc> (SMTPD32-4.07) id A86B19012A; Fri, 18 Jul 2003 00:40:59 CDT jbc> Received: from jparr (helo=localhost) jbc> by jazz with local-esmtp (Exim 3.35 #1 (Debian)) jbc> id 19dNrg-0008MZ-00 jbc> for <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Fri, 18 Jul 2003 01:33:08 -0400 jbc> Date: Fri, 18 Jul 2003 01:33:07 -0400 (EDT) jbc> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] jbc> X-X-Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED] jbc> To: Bill Flood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> jbc> In-Reply-To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> jbc> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> jbc> MIME-Version: 1.0 jbc> Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII jbc> X-Sender: Jeremy Parr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> jbc> Subject: Re[4]: [smartBridges] New Firmware jbc> Precedence: bulk jbc> Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED] jbc> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] jbc> On Fri, 18 Jul 2003, Lancaster Networks wrote: >> I need to provide them with a COMPLETE proposal of this whole thing, >> and right now, this is what I am going to propose to them: >> >> (3) SmartBridges AirPoint Pro Outdoor @ $330.00 ea = $990.00 >> (3) Maxrad 120 degree beamwidth antenna @ $407.52 ea = $1222.56 >> (3) LMR-400 4ft jumper coax cable @ $24.00 ea = $72.00 >> (3) Polyphaser 2.4ghz coaxial lightning protectors @ $35.66 ea = >> $106.98 jbc> Looks good. >> Has anyone needed to use polyphasers? We use them as a standard where >> you have 100-300 foot hardline runs, but in this case, it's ethernet >> cable. But I don't feel like climbing up the 300 foot tower to >> replace a blown radio either. jbc> Polyphasers rock. But you know this already. Put a Coax protector jbc> on the N connector at the radio, and run your antennas pigtail off jbc> of that. Be sure to ground the polyphaser well. The SmartBridges jbc> use a plastic case, so you can't ground em. Once the ethernet comes jbc> inside, put a Polyphaser IS-T1 protector on the ethernet. They make jbc> a three port model, would be perfect for you. Bear in mind you will jbc> need to protect the PoE seperately. The IS-T1 only protects two jbc> pairs. (Or 2 pairs X 3 ports on the IS-3T1) >> This brings me to another point, are SB's products reliable enough >> that I won't need to spend my entire life climbing the tower to fix >> them or reflash them? them? jbc> There are no serial ports on the units, and you can reset the jbc> configuration from the power injector, so I don't see why you would jbc> need to climb, except to replace the entire radio. My APs are all jbc> Cisco or Trango, never used SmartBridges anywhere other than a CPE. jbc> Not sure if I would trust them. >> I plan on mounting the antenna's with a bit of a downtilt, but all at >> the top of the 300' tower, because I am looking for long-range >> performance. Any methods for calculating downtilt that work good? >> I've used my knowledge in the broadcast/radio industry to make my own >> calculations, and with the use of ComStudy (an excellent program for >> calculating RF propagation) jbc> YDI (www.ydi.com) has a number of javascript forms that will do all jbc> the common calculations for you. Check em out. jbc> Jeremy jbc> (Fromer Lancasterite) jbc> The PART-15.ORG smartBridges Discussion List jbc> To Join: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (in the body type subscribe jbc> smartBridges <yournickname> To Remove: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] jbc> (in the body type unsubscribe smartBridges) jbc> Archives: http://archives.part-15.org The PART-15.ORG smartBridges Discussion List To Join: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (in the body type subscribe smartBridges <yournickname> To Remove: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (in the body type unsubscribe smartBridges) Archives: http://archives.part-15.org The PART-15.ORG smartBridges Discussion List To Join: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (in the body type subscribe smartBridges <yournickname> To Remove: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (in the body type unsubscribe smartBridges) Archives: http://archives.part-15.org
