Since the link was 2 miles, it will work, but if any intermittent interference, etc. 
pops up, this might be your starting point in resolving the matter.  If it works, it 
works....no sense in changing it out.

All 802.11b cards are radios.  So we just call them radios sometimes.....sorry for the 
confusion.

If you are looking for some good 200mW radios, look for the following:

Senao 2511CD-EXT2 200mW 
Demarc 200mW
SMC 200mW 

You will need MMCX pigtails for these cards, and hyperlinktech.com is an example of a 
source of these.  

I think the SMC is the cheapest, but there have been posts on availability issues 
(read the thread on this mailing list called "200-250mw").  Read this thread for more 
specific model numbers and sources.

Good luck, you'll need it on this wacky 10 mile shot.  Let us know if it worked.


>-----Original Message-----
>From: George [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Sent: Friday, July 25, 2003 12:11 AM
>To: Casey Halverson; 802.11B NEWS GROUP
>Subject: Re: [BAWUG] 802.11b Long Range non line of sight
>
>
>No Casey, I used  the omni on my WAP11  and  they are already running.
>
>My concern now  is  this  10 mile link,  yeah  I would  give  
>it a try.  You
>said  actual Radio..  Can you give  me a particular  brand 
>where i can find
>it.  I am planning  to used 2  24db dish on my 10 mile  link,  
>I reserved
>them for  this purpose.
>
>Pls  point where I can read  about  this radios.
>
>tnx
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Casey Halverson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: "George" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "802.11B NEWS GROUP"
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2003 2:02 PM
>Subject: RE: [BAWUG] 802.11b Long Range non line of sight
>
>
>Yes, and there's a big chance think link will not work.  Unless you can
>clear this building (and really, it only needs to be by 
>several feet -- do a
>fresnel zone calc to be sure), you are probably not going to be able to
>punch through it.   But it doesnt hurt to try.
>
>The first problem we have here is making use of 15dBi omnis in 
>a directional
>link.  Besides this being a low gain antenna, you are 
>receiving noise in all
>directions and possibly receiving multipath reflections you would not
>normally receive with a highly directional antenna.  Even 35mW 
>into a pair
>of 24dBi antennas will work better.  You can try this first.
>
>The WAP11 is not a good piece of hardware for any sort of real 
>operation
>(besides personal use) and I would find something else.  A 
>soekris box or
>actual radio intended for "bridging" might be more appropriate.
>
>Since we have a potential obstruction that can cause 
>multipath, high powered
>amps would not be recommended in this situation.
>
>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: George [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2003 11:22 PM
>>To: Casey Halverson; 802.11B NEWS GROUP
>>Subject: Re: [BAWUG] 802.11b Long Range non line of sight
>>
>>
>>This sounds  HOPE  to me.  Only where  can  I  find  200mW
>>802.11b  gears.
>>I made  it to a 2km link using WAP11 v2.6 of  linksys at 2mbps.  BUt
>>sometimes  it  hangs normal  for  this product.  But my  task
>>is on a 10
>>mile link.  Line  of  sight  situation is  really  not  that
>>stiff.  along
>>the  way there  is no  obtrcution of  any kind.  But  near the
>>remote  site
>>it is partially  being  covered  by this 10 floor building.
>>
>>I can give  it a try  with  a more  powerful radio  like  what  you
>>recommend 200mW .  My WAP11 v2.6  are  only  giving  out 35mW
>>paired  with
>>15db omni on each  end.  Can you point me to sites  where  I
>>can read  about
>>them  specs  and price.
>>
>>I have at  hand a pair  of  24dbi Parabolic  dish  from
>>hyperlink.  guess I
>>want to give  it a try.   Power issue is  not  a really  a
>>concern  here  in
>>my side.  I can even use  amps  with out  having  problem 
>with the  big
>>guys.
>>
>>tnx,
>>
>>George
>>O2Runsystems
>>
>
>
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