On Wed, Jun 25, 2003 at 05:45:48PM -0400, S Woodside wrote: > If they're on non-interfering channels (there are 3 in USA, 1, 7, 11) > then no problem.
Let me put this question another way. A local WISP puts two radios into each of its routers. Each radio attaches to a high-gain antenna: one to an omni, the other to a patch. They tell me they went to great lengths to achieve great enough separation of the two radios' signals, lengths that went *way* beyond tuning the radios to different channels, before one radio would not routinely activate the other's carrier sense (thus inhibiting transmissions). The lengths that they went to included moving the antennas to different masts, and crossing their polarization. Does anybody know if it is ordinarily so much trouble to isolate 802.11b radios? Dave -- David Young OJC Technologies [EMAIL PROTECTED] Urbana, IL * (217) 278-3933 -- general wireless list, a bawug thing <http://www.bawug.org/> [un]subscribe: http://lists.bawug.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless
