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#1
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Please see subject line-- Help, Wifi Antenna-- on
alt.binaires.schematics.electronic for a picture of my concept. Looking to combine Helical antenna and Wifi adapter card in one unit. My experience is limited to MW bcb. I know there are many pitfalls at 2.4Ghz, so I'm looking for feedback on how to do this properly. I'm using the following page as my guide. http://www.wlan.org.uk/jhecker.html This is to extend the range of my laptop computer. Mike |
#2
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amdx wrote:
alt.binaires.schematics.electronic for a picture of my concept. Looking to combine Helical antenna and Wifi adapter card in one unit. My experience is limited to MW bcb. I know there are many pitfalls at 2.4Ghz, so I'm looking for feedback on how to do this properly. I'm using the following page as my guide. http://www.wlan.org.uk/jhecker.html Note that in almost all places there are legal limitations on EIRP (Effective Incident Radiated Power). In plain English, the more you narrow a signal, the stronger it becomes. Since you did not say where you are, I'll mention the two places I know for sure. In the U.S. WiFi EIRP is limited to 1 watt for mobile/portable use (e.g. laptops) and 4 watts for fixed links. With a 100mW source and a reasonablyshort cable the famous Pringles can antenna would be illegal for mobile/portable use and probably illegal for fixed links. It happened to be developed by an FBI agent in the process of an investigation, so he was covered, you may not be. Here in Israel it is limited to 100mw EIRP, so unless you have a very long cable, any gain antenna would be illegal. Someone wrote up (in Hebrew) and posted on a web site his use of a similar antenna. It's not obvious to the casual reader that he did it in an area under the jursidiction of the IDF (Israeli Army) and got permission from them. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM IL Voice: (07)-7424-1667 U.S. Voice: 1-215-821-1838 Visit my 'blog at http://geoffstechno.livejournal.com/ |
#3
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![]() "amdx" wrote in message ... Please see subject line-- Help, Wifi Antenna-- on alt.binaires.schematics.electronic for a picture of my concept. Looking to combine Helical antenna and Wifi adapter card in one unit. My experience is limited to MW bcb. I know there are many pitfalls at 2.4Ghz, so I'm looking for feedback on how to do this properly. I'm using the following page as my guide. http://www.wlan.org.uk/jhecker.html This is to extend the range of my laptop computer. Mike Hi Mike You sure find some great information on the Web. I consider this article Jason Hecker publishes http://www.wlan.org.uk/jhecker.html to be ALL the instructions anyone would need for constructing a 20 dB directivity WiFi antenna. I am looking for some feedback from you on its performance. If you plan to investigate basic effects of changing size and shape of Helix antennas, EZNEC sure makes Helix antenna investigation easy. I am just curious, what kind of coax and connectors are you using, and, ?how much coax?. Jerry |
#4
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![]() Note that in almost all places there are legal limitations on EIRP (Effective Incident Radiated Power). In plain English, the more you narrow a signal, the stronger it becomes. Since you did not say where you are, I'll mention the two places I know for sure. In the U.S. WiFi EIRP is limited to 1 watt for mobile/portable use (e.g. laptops) and 4 watts for fixed links. Bear in mind that 2.4GHz is also an amateur band where no erp limits exist!! Jeff |
#5
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On Wed, 25 Jul 2007 18:12:26 +0100, Jeff wrote:
Note that in almost all places there are legal limitations on EIRP (Effective Incident Radiated Power). In plain English, the more you narrow a signal, the stronger it becomes. Since you did not say where you are, I'll mention the two places I know for sure. In the U.S. WiFi EIRP is limited to 1 watt for mobile/portable use (e.g. laptops) and 4 watts for fixed links. Bear in mind that 2.4GHz is also an amateur band where no erp limits exist!! Oh , really ?! cite! |
#6
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Jeff wrote:
Note that in almost all places there are legal limitations on EIRP (Effective Incident Radiated Power). In plain English, the more you narrow a signal, the stronger it becomes. Since you did not say where you are, I'll mention the two places I know for sure. In the U.S. WiFi EIRP is limited to 1 watt for mobile/portable use (e.g. laptops) and 4 watts for fixed links. Bear in mind that 2.4GHz is also an amateur band where no erp limits exist!! Only 802.11b/g channels 1-6 fall in the amateur allocation of 2390-2450 MHz. If operating under amateur regulations you must identify by CW, phone, RTTY or TV image every 10 minutes or less (see 47CFR97.119), your transmissions must be intended for reception by another licensed amateur station or station authorized to communicate with amateur stations (see 47CFR97.111), that has to be the only reasonable way to effectively communicate, no other radio service available that accomplishes the same communications (see 47CFR97.113) and you have to use the lowest power level capable of accomplishing the communications (see 47CFR97.313). See http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/w...7cfr97_01.html for specific regulations. |
#7
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gwatts wrote:
Jeff wrote: Note that in almost all places there are legal limitations on EIRP (Effective Incident Radiated Power). In plain English, the more you narrow a signal, the stronger it becomes. Since you did not say where you are, I'll mention the two places I know for sure. In the U.S. WiFi EIRP is limited to 1 watt for mobile/portable use (e.g. laptops) and 4 watts for fixed links. Bear in mind that 2.4GHz is also an amateur band where no erp limits exist!! Only 802.11b/g channels 1-6 fall in the amateur allocation of 2390-2450 MHz. If operating under amateur regulations you must identify by CW, phone, RTTY or TV image every 10 minutes or less (see 47CFR97.119), your transmissions must be intended for reception by another licensed amateur station or station authorized to communicate with amateur stations (see 47CFR97.111), that has to be the only reasonable way to effectively communicate, no other radio service available that accomplishes the same communications (see 47CFR97.113) and you have to use the lowest power level capable of accomplishing the communications (see 47CFR97.313). See http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/w...7cfr97_01.html for specific regulations. I forgot to mention amateur communications cannot be encrypted, so no https, see 47CFR97.113 again. |
#8
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That may be true but to use it that way legally you would need an
amateur license, and this is not just a paperwork exercise, you have to pass FCC exams covering electronics and radio theory (plus laws and regulations) to get one. For most people, it's not an option. Allodoxaphobia wrote: On Wed, 25 Jul 2007 18:12:26 +0100, Jeff wrote: Note that in almost all places there are legal limitations on EIRP (Effective Incident Radiated Power). In plain English, the more you narrow a signal, the stronger it becomes. Since you did not say where you are, I'll mention the two places I know for sure. In the U.S. WiFi EIRP is limited to 1 watt for mobile/portable use (e.g. laptops) and 4 watts for fixed links. Bear in mind that 2.4GHz is also an amateur band where no erp limits exist!! Oh , really ?! cite! |
#9
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"gwatts" wrote in message
... If operating under amateur regulations you must identify by CW, phone, RTTY or TV image every 10 minutes or less (see 47CFR97.119) Most amateurs set the SSID of the access point to their call sign, since this is beaconed numerous times per minute. Apparently that's close enough to RTTY to keep most people happy. your transmissions must be intended for reception by another licensed amateur station or station authorized to communicate with amateur stations (see 47CFR97.111) Sure. that has to be the only reasonable way to effectively communicate, no other radio service available that accomplishes the same communications (see 47CFR97.113) This particular regulation creates plenty of argument, since realistically the vast majority of activity on amateur radio frequencies these days could be just as readily accomodated by either cell phones or the Internet; I doubt the FCC has cited anyone for violating this rule for decades now. and you have to use the lowest power level capable of accomplishing the communications (see 47CFR97.313). Indeed, although this too is subject to debate because people will argue that while, e.g., 1W will get them a bit error rate of 10%, they "need" a near-zero bit errorr rate and therefore transmit at 100W. You point about not being able to use HTTPS or other encrypted protocols is probably the most significant change in moving from using WiFi in an unlicensed mode to using it under the amateur radio service's rules. However, note that it is perfectly OK to obfuscate *authentication* data such as passwords -- packet BBSes have done this for decades. ---Joel |
#10
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"Barry Watzman" wrote in message
... That may be true but to use it that way legally you would need an amateur license, and this is not just a paperwork exercise, you have to pass FCC exams covering electronics and radio theory (plus laws and regulations) to get one. For most people, it's not an option. Very few people would have significnat difficulty passing the technician class license exam that's needed to operate on 2.4GHz. Indeed, there are many month-long (meet a couple times a week) classes and even weekend "cram" classes that have near 100% success rates in getting people their tickets. A passing score is 80%! |
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