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#1
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I am a consultant for an AVL (automatic vehicle location system)
system used by the Southeastern counties of Michigan. The system is used on winter maintenance vehicles and works on 900 MHz. The vehicles are often stored overnight in metal buildings where it is difficult to obtain transceiver communication from the AVL system. Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings? Thanks, Eric Anderson |
#2
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![]() "eganders" wrote in message ups.com... I am a consultant for an AVL (automatic vehicle location system) system used by the Southeastern counties of Michigan. The system is used on winter maintenance vehicles and works on 900 MHz. The vehicles are often stored overnight in metal buildings where it is difficult to obtain transceiver communication from the AVL system. Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings? Thanks, Eric Anderson Hi Eric How inconvenient would it be to use two antennas, one inside and one outside, with coax connecting them, and *try it*? Jerry |
#3
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In article cPRdi.2837$Zh6.2290@trnddc04,
"Jerry Martes" wrote: "eganders" wrote in message ups.com... I am a consultant for an AVL (automatic vehicle location system) system used by the Southeastern counties of Michigan. The system is used on winter maintenance vehicles and works on 900 MHz. The vehicles are often stored overnight in metal buildings where it is difficult to obtain transceiver communication from the AVL system. Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings? Thanks, Eric Anderson Hi Eric How inconvenient would it be to use two antennas, one inside and one outside, with coax connecting them, and *try it*? Jerry Yep, Passive Repeaters are the way to go.......just make sure you use extreamly Low Loss Coax, and very good Connectors...... |
#4
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On Jun 19, 3:08 pm, You wrote:
In article cPRdi.2837$Zh6.2290@trnddc04, "Jerry Martes" wrote: "eganders" wrote in message oups.com... I am a consultant for an AVL (automatic vehicle location system) system used by the Southeastern counties of Michigan. The system is used on winter maintenance vehicles and works on 900 MHz. The vehicles are often stored overnight in metal buildings where it is difficult to obtain transceiver communication from the AVL system. Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings? Thanks, Eric Anderson Hi Eric How inconvenient would it be to use two antennas, one inside and one outside, with coax connecting them, and *try it*? Jerry Yep, Passive Repeaters are the way to go.......just make sure you use extreamly Low Loss Coax, and very good Connectors......- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I think they also make active repeaters that do this. If this works just send me $1000 consultation fee. Jimmie |
#5
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On 19 Jun, 12:08, You wrote:
In article cPRdi.2837$Zh6.2290@trnddc04, "Jerry Martes" wrote: "eganders" wrote in message oups.com... I am a consultant for an AVL (automatic vehicle location system) system used by the Southeastern counties of Michigan. The system is used on winter maintenance vehicles and works on 900 MHz. The vehicles are often stored overnight in metal buildings where it is difficult to obtain transceiver communication from the AVL system. Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings? Thanks, Eric Anderson Hi Eric How inconvenient would it be to use two antennas, one inside and one outside, with coax connecting them, and *try it*? Jerry Yep, Passive Repeaters are the way to go.......just make sure you use extreamly Low Loss Coax, and very good Connectors......- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Use a loud speaker to get the message in |
#6
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eganders wrote:
I am a consultant for an AVL (automatic vehicle location system) system used by the Southeastern counties of Michigan. The system is used on winter maintenance vehicles and works on 900 MHz. The vehicles are often stored overnight in metal buildings where it is difficult to obtain transceiver communication from the AVL system. Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings? Thanks, Eric Anderson One would expect a person who is acting professionally as an RF consultant to already have significant knowledge in this area. I realize this is a government job, but I wouldn't hire a day laborer to act as a master carpenter or project manager. Please don't bill the transit property for your time spent here trying to learn things in a subject are which you're supposed to already have mastered. |
#7
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Karl NVW wrote:
eganders wrote: I am a consultant for an AVL (automatic vehicle location system) system used by the Southeastern counties of Michigan. The system is used on winter maintenance vehicles and works on 900 MHz. The vehicles are often stored overnight in metal buildings where it is difficult to obtain transceiver communication from the AVL system. Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings? Thanks, Eric Anderson One would expect a person who is acting professionally as an RF consultant to already have significant knowledge in this area. I realize this is a government job, but I wouldn't hire a day laborer to act as a master carpenter or project manager. Please don't bill the transit property for your time spent here trying to learn things in a subject are which you're supposed to already have mastered. Our man Eric might not be a RF consultant, eh? Perhaps he's a software guy, or a system integrator, or looking for general ideas before leaping out and hiring an RF consultant? |
#8
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In article ,
Jim Lux wrote: Karl NVW wrote: eganders wrote: I am a consultant for an AVL (automatic vehicle location system) system used by the Southeastern counties of Michigan. The system is used on winter maintenance vehicles and works on 900 MHz. The vehicles are often stored overnight in metal buildings where it is difficult to obtain transceiver communication from the AVL system. Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings? Thanks, Eric Anderson One would expect a person who is acting professionally as an RF consultant to already have significant knowledge in this area. I realize this is a government job, but I wouldn't hire a day laborer to act as a master carpenter or project manager. Please don't bill the transit property for your time spent here trying to learn things in a subject are which you're supposed to already have mastered. Our man Eric might not be a RF consultant, eh? Perhaps he's a software guy, or a system integrator, or looking for general ideas before leaping out and hiring an RF consultant? sounds more like a Bookkeeper, turned Corp. IT Guru, only because noone else wanted the job, and he got stuck with it. Lack of Knowledge of the Technology, doesn't make one incompitant, Not asking the right questions, DOES..... |
#9
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![]() "You" wrote in message ... In article , Jim Lux wrote: Karl NVW wrote: eganders wrote: I am a consultant for an AVL (automatic vehicle location system) system used by the Southeastern counties of Michigan. The system is used on winter maintenance vehicles and works on 900 MHz. The vehicles are often stored overnight in metal buildings where it is difficult to obtain transceiver communication from the AVL system. Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings? Thanks, Eric Anderson What the heck....I'll give an opinion, since no one else has. You might try a passive repeater antenna system. It would consist of an outside antenna (preferrably directional with gain) pointed at the distant station, connected by a transmission line to an antenna as near as possible to the maintenance vehicles. I say "try" because only a small part of the radiated power is intercepted by the passive repeater receive antenna. Then that small part is re-radiated in a pattern such a much smaller signal arrives at the ultimate antenna. If you have homebrewing 900 mHz antenna skills, test hardware can be constructed rather inexpensively. |
#10
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Jim Lux wrote:
"Is there a low cost (possibly passive) way to port 900 MHz radio transmissions into these buildings?" I`m assuming full-duplex (simultaneous transmissions and receptions are required. Half-duplex 2-way extensions indoors, through tunnels, etc. are routinely obtained using a land-mobile station antenna port connected to TV twinlead run through the building, tunnel, etc. It works like gangbusters. Special Andrew Corp. rafiating Heliax is not required. For full-duplex, it is only slightly more complicated to do something silimiar. A metal building which can keep radio signals out should also keep them in. First I would try the simple expedient of antennas back-to-back, one outside the building and the other inside. Problem is in the huge signal loss in the first few feet from the re-transmission antenna. As much as 99% of the signal is likely lost. That may or may not be acceptable. For the full-duplex solution, you will need two amplifiers, one for each direction of transmission. These go inside the buildiing. The input of one amplifier is connected to one of the outside antennas. The amplifier output is connected to 300-ohm TV twinlead which is run around the interior of the builrding so that some part of the twinlead is never very far from anyplace a vehicle may be parked in the buillding. The input of the second amplifier is connected to a similarly placed run of twinlead. The two twinlead runs are separated so that the input of the second amplifier isn`t overloaded by the output of the first amplifier and that a feedback loop isn`t created. output of the second amplifier is fed to its antenna outside the building. Separate frequencies are used in full-duplex systems so the probability of feedback is small. I suppose the AVL system is using a satellite and highly directive antennas can be used. 900-MHz is a low microwave frequency so cheap consumer-electronics amplifiers may be applicable. A 900-MHz dish antenna with significant gain is much larger than those used for the Dish TV network. Ordinary microwave systems use circulators to connect their receivers and transmitters to a common antenna. The vehicles in your AVL system surely don`t use big dishes so there is probably no need for high-gain antennas. Your system may be a one-way system for all I know. You can use applicable parts of what I described above. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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