A simple rule of thumb is every 3dBm doubles your power and every 6dBm doubles your 
distance.

Sincerely,  Tony Morella 
Demarc Technology Group, A Wireless Solution Provider 
Office: 908-996-7995 Fax: 908-847-0202
http://www.demarctech.com 


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ivan Bojer
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 3:37 PM
To: BayArea Wireless UserGroup
Subject: [BAWUG] Antenna db gain and range

I know this question is very vague, but still I wonder if there is an answer to it.

Is there a theoretical formula that links antenna dB gain with increase in maximum 
range of the wireless signal. I understand that
in theory RF signal range is infinity, but I can not figure out if there is a 
correlation between antenna dB gain and signal range
at certain frequency. Following the common logic it is obvious that range will 
increase as antenna has better dB gain, but how much?

A formula for electric field goes something like: E=9500*power/distance (I might be 
wrong about this), but this does not take in
account the frequency of our signal.

P.S. I am not concerned with terrain configuration, weather condition, and other 
factors at this time.

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