"Jon Arbuckle" <(E-Mail Removed)> hath wroth:
>I am curious. I am considering setting up a temporary antenna for a friend
>of mine, however I don't want to invest the time in building a Cantenna if
>it most likely won't work for me.
>
>I need to be able to get internet access to someone that is 1 mile away.
>The only thing that is disrupting the LOS is about 2000 feet of some pretty
>thick trees (which I read to be the worst thing for this application).
>
>Has anyone used a Cantenna through some pretty thick woods? If so, what was
>your result?
I live in a very thick over grown oak, redwood and douglas fir forest
and have considerable experience trying to shoot through the trees. I
suggest you give up now. The water in the trees are like a brick
wall. The trunks, are impervious to RF. At one mile, the Fresnel
Zone is about 19ft radius at midpoint. That means you'll need to have
a 38 ft wide hole at midpoint in order for the path to be reliable. It
also means that your antennas at both ends will need to be at least
19ft off the ground.
I've also gone through the trouble of mapping the local access points
and some clients in the area. Using this map, I've played with
various antennas on my rooftop trying to see what works best for
"drilling" through the trees. I've also tried to setup a WISP
(wireless ISP) in a nearby town also full of trees.
What happens is that if you can visually see the other end of the
link, it will work, but may not stay working. For example, we have a
neighborhood WLAN/LAN with about 6 houses on the wireless system. All
are line of sight, and most have at least one tree in the way. I
can't go through the trunks at all. The leaves allow some
penetration, but when it rains, those go dead. The only long shot
that's stable is a 400ft shot with clear line of sight.
I also have a series of point to point links scattered around the
forest using panel and dish antennas. They're also affected by the
weather but have sufficient fade margin to prevent total loss of
signal. The biggest source of unreliability over the years has been
squirrels chewing on the cable and lightning hits.
Even if you get 24dBi dish antennas at each end of the link, you're
going to have problems going through the trees. A can antenna is
about 8-10dBi gain, which is insufficient for a 1 mile link even
without the trees.
--
Jeff Liebermann
(E-Mail Removed)
150 Felker St #D
http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060
http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558