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Okay well the answer is relatively simple.
"Height is might". Antenna system should be as high as possible, clear of path obstructions and provide gain in the direction of interest. For equal coverage in all directions this generally means a vertical collinear design. The idea is to have a very small angle vertical pattern as close to horizontal as possible. (ie radiates most of its power to the horizon) In my experience, end fed (ie at the bottom) collinear systems (especially home made ones) tend to have current imbalances in the elements such that the lower ones get slightly more than the upper ones. the result is that the pattern skews undesirably upwards at a slight angle. You also get less gain per unit length using systems that feed from one element to the next rather than (say) a number of dipoles fed directly in parallel. There is an optimum spacing between elements for best gain that is difficult to get in element to element systems. Of course 2.4GHz antennas are harder to size accurately and test equipment can really drain the hip pocket! If I was doing it for a community system I wouldnt bother doing antenna construction as such. I'd probably go and buy maybe 4 of a well known base design of moderate gain and stack them for gain. These may end up being in panels rather than simple verticals. Keep in mind though what you are trying to achieve and best bang for your buck. Doubling your antenna size gives best case an extra 3dB (often less) of gain. In a free space model the extra distance covered is double the distance for every 6 dB. This initially sounds good but once you are no longer line of sight, that gain is nothing compared to the losses. I dont know the 2.4GHz numbers off hand but the range numbers might be something like 5km, then 5.1km with an extra 6dB. Of course those users that have a signal already will get a slightly stronger one and thus may get a higher data rate but there will be a point where more gain and a different system design is better. Using multiple channels and WAP repeaters or bridges/links although likely bringing the bandwidth down will give you greater coverage albeit sometimes at the tradeoff of speed. I dont have any modeling stuff for 2.4GHz networks as such. You tend to need a lot of obstructive rather than terrain data information. You can however take some photos and hand enter some near field terrain info to look like buildings. Have a look at "Radiomobile" as a prediction tool. As far as I remember it is GPL software that you will find other users have used for WiFi networks. You can see the effects of gain and height very easily and it will give you a lot of go/nogo help for particular areas you want to supply access from. Apologies for the length! Bob Penang wrote: It's for a community-type wifi network, and I'm cracking my head trying to figure out a way to make the basestations' broadcast cover a wider area. I am reading all your suggestions right now and am trying as hard as possible to digest them all. ![]() |
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