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Old May 13th 04, 01:45 AM
Xanax
 
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That is one of the most ingenious sites I have ever seen those guys in NZ
are quite creative!
Xanax.
"DaveC" wrote in message
al.net...
Working with 2.4 GHz 802.11b wireless signal. Using USB adapter (one of
those
thumb-sized products) and an old 18-inch satellite TV dish.

Calculating dish's focus point as f = ( d^^2 ) / ( 16 * c )
f = focus point above center of dish
d = diameter of dish
c = depth of dish at center

With a circular, symmetrical parabolic dish, I presume that the focus is
directly above the center. I've located the tiny antenna within the
adapter
as close to this point as i can.

( Odd thing about this dish -- this one is a DishTV brand -- is that in
the
original design for satellite reception, the driven element [ the "can",
the
input to the LMB ] was located low on the dish. In other words, the focus
used in this design was off-center, about 30 degrees below the center axis
of
the dish. This would mean that aiming would be off-axis, too, yes? What is
the reasoning behind this design? )

Setting up on the roof, finding the wireless access point's signal, I
moved
the wireless adapter around the focus point a little to maximize signal
strength (I use the word "maximize" loosely...). I then aimed the dish
around
in the general direction of the access point, looking for a leap in signal
strength (using a signal strength utility program to verify my aim ).

I find 2 things:
1. It doesn't really matter where I point the dish. The signal varies a
little bit when I approach the direction of the access point, but no
"leaps
and bounds" in the signal strength between being "dead on" and way off.

2. I pick up signals that aren't even in the direction of the access
point.

I tried rotating the dish on its axis to account for polarity mismatch (
would this really be an issue? ). No joy.

The wireless adapter can receive signals well, generally, w/o a dish, but
because of my location, reception of the desired signal is not great.

I'm aware that reflections can be strong from nearby objects, so that
could
account for some pickup of signals in directions other than from their
origin. Also, I suspect that the shallowness of the dish is a contributor.
But the lack of directionality of the dish, in general, has me stumped.
Have
I miscalculated the focus? I understand that the ratio of
focus-to-diameter
of the dish is important; for 2.4 GHz, is best in the 0.25-0.55 range
(this
one is 0.69). Is this contributing to my problem?

I used this web page as a reference:

http://www.usbwifi.orcon.net.nz

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

If this is off-topic for any NG here, please let me know what is a more
appropriate forum. Are there mailing lists for such topics?

Thanks,
--
DaveC

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