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Bruce[_4_] April 10th 10 02:12 PM

Wi-Fi antenna
 

A new one.

I'm now residing ashore as I sold my sailboat. The place I rented is
nearly a mile for the marina and I can sometimes log onto the marina's
free Wi-Fi net using the laptop's built in antenna.. I am using a
Wi-Fi transceiver that has some level of amplification, or at least it
is sold as a "high powered" Wi-Fi.

I have built a parabolic antenna which (according to the rather crude
signal strength meters included with Linux) seems to approximately
doubles the signal strength and allows me to access two additional, of
the five or six different circuits at the Marina.

Question: I am now building a larger parabolic antenna system. The
original was a ten inch dish and the new one will be a 17 inch dish.
Are there any formula to estimate the additional gain of the 17 " over
the 10"? In addition the first effort was screen and the second will
be solid aluminum. Again any estimates of gain increase - decrease .

I realize that there are many slip between the cup and the lip and
nothing is certain about antenna systems so am looking for estimates,
best guesses, text book "rule of thumb" basically any information
about parabola size or material and gain.

I do have the basic formula to calculate the focus point and some
recommendations for F.L. versus diameter.
Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)

Harding E. Larsen April 10th 10 03:55 PM

Wi-Fi antenna
 
Maybe ths link can help you:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parabolic_antenna

Brgds

Harding

On 10 Apr., 15:12, Bruce wrote:
A new one.

I'm now residing ashore as I sold my sailboat. The place I rented is
nearly a mile for the marina and I can sometimes log onto the marina's
free Wi-Fi net using the laptop's built in antenna.. I am using a
Wi-Fi transceiver that has some level of amplification, or at least it
is sold as a "high powered" Wi-Fi.

I have built a parabolic antenna which (according to the rather crude
signal strength meters included with Linux) seems to *approximately
doubles the signal strength and allows me to access two additional, of
the five or six different circuits at the Marina.

Question: I am now building a larger parabolic antenna system. The
original was a ten inch dish and the new one will be a 17 inch dish.
Are there any formula to estimate the additional gain of the 17 " over
the 10"? In addition the first effort was screen and the second will
be solid aluminum. Again any estimates of gain increase - decrease .

I realize that there are many slip between the cup and the lip and
nothing is certain about antenna systems so am looking for estimates,
best guesses, text book "rule of thumb" basically any information
about parabola size or material and gain.

I do have the basic formula to calculate the focus point and some
recommendations for F.L. versus diameter.
Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)



Bruce in alaska April 10th 10 06:07 PM

Wi-Fi antenna
 
In article ,
Bruce wrote:

A new one.

I'm now residing ashore as I sold my sailboat. The place I rented is
nearly a mile for the marina and I can sometimes log onto the marina's
free Wi-Fi net using the laptop's built in antenna.. I am using a
Wi-Fi transceiver that has some level of amplification, or at least it
is sold as a "high powered" Wi-Fi.

I have built a parabolic antenna which (according to the rather crude
signal strength meters included with Linux) seems to approximately
doubles the signal strength and allows me to access two additional, of
the five or six different circuits at the Marina.

Question: I am now building a larger parabolic antenna system. The
original was a ten inch dish and the new one will be a 17 inch dish.
Are there any formula to estimate the additional gain of the 17 " over
the 10"? In addition the first effort was screen and the second will
be solid aluminum. Again any estimates of gain increase - decrease .

I realize that there are many slip between the cup and the lip and
nothing is certain about antenna systems so am looking for estimates,
best guesses, text book "rule of thumb" basically any information
about parabola size or material and gain.

I do have the basic formula to calculate the focus point and some
recommendations for F.L. versus diameter.
Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)


Yes, there are formula for calculating Parabola Antenna Gain.... Google
should get you those. The difference in parabola material is directly
related to Frequency in that The mesh size needs to less than 1/4 of
wavelength in order to be effective as a reflector. Solid is better.
Antenna Feed System is a critical point in the design, as well as
getting the feed system aligned with the dish's focal point. there are
literally hundreds of 2.4 Ghz Gain antenna designs around the net. I
would look at the Pringles Cantenna, and some of the cheaper Grid Corner
Reflector types with simple Dipole Feeds. I use some nifty little Patch
Antennas, on my 2.5 mile WiFi Links that provide LAN extensions, up and
down the beach, for my Close Neighbors. (close + 10 Sq Miles)

--
Bruce in alaska
add path after fast to reply

Bruce[_4_] April 11th 10 02:34 AM

Wi-Fi antenna
 
On Sat, 10 Apr 2010 09:07:51 -0800, Bruce in alaska
wrote:

In article ,
Bruce wrote:

A new one.

I'm now residing ashore as I sold my sailboat. The place I rented is
nearly a mile for the marina and I can sometimes log onto the marina's
free Wi-Fi net using the laptop's built in antenna.. I am using a
Wi-Fi transceiver that has some level of amplification, or at least it
is sold as a "high powered" Wi-Fi.

I have built a parabolic antenna which (according to the rather crude
signal strength meters included with Linux) seems to approximately
doubles the signal strength and allows me to access two additional, of
the five or six different circuits at the Marina.

Question: I am now building a larger parabolic antenna system. The
original was a ten inch dish and the new one will be a 17 inch dish.
Are there any formula to estimate the additional gain of the 17 " over
the 10"? In addition the first effort was screen and the second will
be solid aluminum. Again any estimates of gain increase - decrease .

I realize that there are many slip between the cup and the lip and
nothing is certain about antenna systems so am looking for estimates,
best guesses, text book "rule of thumb" basically any information
about parabola size or material and gain.

I do have the basic formula to calculate the focus point and some
recommendations for F.L. versus diameter.
Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)


Yes, there are formula for calculating Parabola Antenna Gain.... Google
should get you those. The difference in parabola material is directly
related to Frequency in that The mesh size needs to less than 1/4 of
wavelength in order to be effective as a reflector. Solid is better.
Antenna Feed System is a critical point in the design, as well as
getting the feed system aligned with the dish's focal point. there are
literally hundreds of 2.4 Ghz Gain antenna designs around the net. I
would look at the Pringles Cantenna, and some of the cheaper Grid Corner
Reflector types with simple Dipole Feeds. I use some nifty little Patch
Antennas, on my 2.5 mile WiFi Links that provide LAN extensions, up and
down the beach, for my Close Neighbors. (close + 10 Sq Miles)



Had done some looking and read up on various types. Settled on the
parabolic as (hopefully) the type is not as directional as the
Pringles Can type. Aiming the thing is a bit iffy without a sensitive
signal strength meter. But of course, a tighter beam is higher gain
:-)
The parabolic is actually easier for me to build as "wok" type cooking
pans are a dime a dozen and in all sizes.

Anyway, will do more research and see whether I can locate the gain
calcs.

Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)

Bruce[_4_] April 11th 10 02:34 AM

Wi-Fi antenna
 
On Sat, 10 Apr 2010 07:55:17 -0700 (PDT), "Harding E. Larsen"
wrote:

Maybe ths link can help you:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parabolic_antenna

Brgds

Harding


Yes, had that URL. But was interested specifically in gain versus
diameter calcs. will look further. Thanks.


On 10 Apr., 15:12, Bruce wrote:
A new one.

I'm now residing ashore as I sold my sailboat. The place I rented is
nearly a mile for the marina and I can sometimes log onto the marina's
free Wi-Fi net using the laptop's built in antenna.. I am using a
Wi-Fi transceiver that has some level of amplification, or at least it
is sold as a "high powered" Wi-Fi.

I have built a parabolic antenna which (according to the rather crude
signal strength meters included with Linux) seems to *approximately
doubles the signal strength and allows me to access two additional, of
the five or six different circuits at the Marina.

Question: I am now building a larger parabolic antenna system. The
original was a ten inch dish and the new one will be a 17 inch dish.
Are there any formula to estimate the additional gain of the 17 " over
the 10"? In addition the first effort was screen and the second will
be solid aluminum. Again any estimates of gain increase - decrease .

I realize that there are many slip between the cup and the lip and
nothing is certain about antenna systems so am looking for estimates,
best guesses, text book "rule of thumb" basically any information
about parabola size or material and gain.

I do have the basic formula to calculate the focus point and some
recommendations for F.L. versus diameter.
Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)

Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)

Steve Lusardi April 12th 10 11:46 AM

Wi-Fi antenna
 
Just as a thought, why not use a Sat TV dish. They are everywhere. Just about the right frequency and they are parabolic. Be sure
to move the receiver element to the dish center, as they usually have a 30 degree included angle built in.
Steve

"Bruce" wrote in message ...
On Sat, 10 Apr 2010 09:07:51 -0800, Bruce in alaska
wrote:

In article ,
Bruce wrote:

A new one.

I'm now residing ashore as I sold my sailboat. The place I rented is
nearly a mile for the marina and I can sometimes log onto the marina's
free Wi-Fi net using the laptop's built in antenna.. I am using a
Wi-Fi transceiver that has some level of amplification, or at least it
is sold as a "high powered" Wi-Fi.

I have built a parabolic antenna which (according to the rather crude
signal strength meters included with Linux) seems to approximately
doubles the signal strength and allows me to access two additional, of
the five or six different circuits at the Marina.

Question: I am now building a larger parabolic antenna system. The
original was a ten inch dish and the new one will be a 17 inch dish.
Are there any formula to estimate the additional gain of the 17 " over
the 10"? In addition the first effort was screen and the second will
be solid aluminum. Again any estimates of gain increase - decrease .

I realize that there are many slip between the cup and the lip and
nothing is certain about antenna systems so am looking for estimates,
best guesses, text book "rule of thumb" basically any information
about parabola size or material and gain.

I do have the basic formula to calculate the focus point and some
recommendations for F.L. versus diameter.
Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)


Yes, there are formula for calculating Parabola Antenna Gain.... Google
should get you those. The difference in parabola material is directly
related to Frequency in that The mesh size needs to less than 1/4 of
wavelength in order to be effective as a reflector. Solid is better.
Antenna Feed System is a critical point in the design, as well as
getting the feed system aligned with the dish's focal point. there are
literally hundreds of 2.4 Ghz Gain antenna designs around the net. I
would look at the Pringles Cantenna, and some of the cheaper Grid Corner
Reflector types with simple Dipole Feeds. I use some nifty little Patch
Antennas, on my 2.5 mile WiFi Links that provide LAN extensions, up and
down the beach, for my Close Neighbors. (close + 10 Sq Miles)



Had done some looking and read up on various types. Settled on the
parabolic as (hopefully) the type is not as directional as the
Pringles Can type. Aiming the thing is a bit iffy without a sensitive
signal strength meter. But of course, a tighter beam is higher gain
:-)
The parabolic is actually easier for me to build as "wok" type cooking
pans are a dime a dozen and in all sizes.

Anyway, will do more research and see whether I can locate the gain
calcs.

Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)



Bruce[_4_] April 12th 10 03:39 PM

Wi-Fi antenna
 
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010 12:46:52 +0200, "Steve Lusardi"
wrote:

Just as a thought, why not use a Sat TV dish. They are everywhere. Just about the right frequency and they are parabolic. Be sure
to move the receiver element to the dish center, as they usually have a 30 degree included angle built in.
Steve

"Bruce" wrote in message ...
On Sat, 10 Apr 2010 09:07:51 -0800, Bruce in alaska
wrote:

In article ,
Bruce wrote:

A new one.

I'm now residing ashore as I sold my sailboat. The place I rented is


I would but I'm not sure whether I can buy just a disk. Most companies
prefer to install a system :-)

I built a new parabola using a 17 inch aluminum "wok". Common as dirt
here. The 17" was 225 baht (about US 7.25) and I used a 2 inch piece
of 1" X 3 mm stainless for the mount and a piece of aluminum scrap to
hold the active element.

It appears to be more powerful then the previous model which was a 10
inch strainer for frying bananas.

If I had a signal strength meter I'd be in the catbird seat but I
don't and suspect that for that frequency and power it would be more
then a diode and single npn amplifier :-)

So, I can only try and see if I can pick up new stations and try and
decide if it drops out more then the last one.

I may try a corner reflector as I can bend up a big one out of
screening.

Cheers,

Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)

johnsmith23687 May 31st 10 03:45 PM

Here some basic type of Wi-fi antenna which currently used in routine like WLAN antenna 2.4 GHz Do-It-Yourself,802.11b Homebrew WiFi Antenna Shootout,Vertical antenna,13 cm Helix Antenna, 2.4GHz 10 Element Brass Yagi,2.4 Ghz High gain antenna,43.33 Km LOS with USB WiFi stick,2.4Ghz Helix antenna, Simple double-quad Antenna


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