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On Wed, 15 Sep 2010 21:01:47 -0400, "JR" wrote:
Just curious here, how do you connect the cantenna to the laptop? I have a wifi - USB converter that connects to the antenna probe using a tiny UHF connection and then USB to the computer. This works up to about 10 ft. after that there is too much signal drop in the USB connection. If I ever finish the 4 ft. dish I'll use a wifi to Ethernet and then Ethernet to USB at the computer. That should allow me over a hundred ft. "Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message .. . On Tue, 14 Sep 2010 19:16:32 +0100, Justin C wrote: In article , Bruce in Bangkok wrote: Yup. Built a super cantenna and ended up with approximately 4 times the laptop alone signal. But as of two days ago we moved and the new place is behind several concrete buildings which offsets the antenna gain somewhat. I've got a 4 ft. ex-satellite TV antenna that I am re-doing, using a cantenna for the feed element that I'll install on a light pole, hopefully soon, that ought to improve things up a bit. So far I've built a "pringles", a corner reflector and a quad antenna in addition to the various cantennas and no doubt that the cantenna is the way to go..... but of course they are directional and the higher the gain the more directional. Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) I was talking about these with a radio engineer that I know. He said that the coffee can (big Nescafe 2kg(?) size) is better than the pringles can, with only one 'wrap' of the - what's it called, filament? I can't remember the numbers that he claimed, but they were considerable. Might be worth a try if you have time on your hands. Justin. The original Pringles can antenna was essentially just a yagi type antenna. Had reflectors and directors made as washers inside the can. The Cantenna, i.e. coffee can, is a wave guide type of design. There are design formula on the web, but the diameter, length and position of the single radiating element (they call it a probe) all interact. My own experience was that a 3.5 inch diameter can worked best. My findings, and I built four of them, was that the longer the tube the more gain you got. The last one I built is 26 inches long and 3.5 inches in dia. I do not have an accurate way to test gain but the software I have (Wavemon) shows a gain of 4 - 5 times over the built in laptop antenna. Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) |
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