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Bill and I took similar routes, but I didn't have a radar arch.
So, to your original question, I have what I believe you were asking for. The project has been discussed at length both here and in alt.internet.wireless, with both Bill and my "from" lines, so I'll not go into details other than to say: If you have a fixed computer, are willing to get up to speed on the router or bridge you use, and have a couple of NICs (one to configure the router or bridge to receive the signals, the other to then take and address from the AP you use), it's actually pretty simple. I have a NEMA box (aluminum in my case) atop the mast. It has on it an 8.5dbi omni antenna, coupled to a lightning arrestor (through the box), and thence to a 6" pigtail (inside) which connects to the output on the bridge. In my case, I started with a Senao, but am now using a LiteStation2 from Ubiquiti, a superior unit. That's powered over an ethernet cable, using a POE. Most of the gear if you choose 12V would tolerate a direct feed (e.g. 5-16 volts operating OK), and a correspondent in my Island Packet mailing list (we considered an IP in our search, and I stayed on the list) has said that using the two unused data pairs, one each for a conductor, is plenty to get the voltage up there. However, that requires you to have the appropriate tool and gear to terminate the other data pairs on both ends. In my case, I'd used a commercial unit to inject the power, buying it before hearing about that method. It avoided the tools issue, too, but the point is that it works. So, you have a receiving and transmitting unit atop the mast, with a cable to your computer. In my case, I studied the patterns for a long time before settling on my antenna. Bill's, while more powerful, has the downsides he's pointed out. Mine has very rarely failed to pull in a signal, wherever I've been, with a population nearby. The rocking of our boat, with its 64' top point, has not caused problems with reception, presumably due to the fatter donut resulting from the lower gain. In our most current trip, I was able to pick up stations a couple of miles offshore, picking up my mail as we approached the inlet. On the hook here, we have several to choose from. None are good enough to use our internet telephone (the same number we've had for 30 years), but plenty good enough for browsing, web searches and email. However, we've had adequate broadband for our Vonage router's requirements in probably half of our locations. Skype and GoogleChat both work at lower bandwidths so those persist, and nearly always we're able to use those, giving up the convenience of the standard telephone handset to do so. The only times I've not had a connection since we left last July has been when we're on the hook in a remote location - without cell service, either, FWIW, which would render those services dead. We're very happy with our outcomes. Our next step, always having been pushed back due to the efficacy, if nuisance value, of our current setup (we have to swap NICs from acquisition to communication steps) and the other myriad projects of higher importance, will be to do as Bill did and have another router which will allow seamless communication with the mast-top gear as well as provide a wifi signal to the boat and - depending on how you set the power and/or encryption - any around you who care to share the signal. And, finally, another correspondent on the Island Packet list uses something similar to Bill's, and since he's been entirely inter- coastal, has been able to upload MOVIES while under way, an entirely acceptable broadband service. However, that card isn't a cell phone, nor would it allow the use of our internet telephony, either, so, and especially as we expect to spend the bulk of our cruising lives in the Caribbean (once we get some obligations stateside finished up), our setup appears best for us. YMMV :{)) L8R Skip Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery ! Follow us at http://groups.google.com/group/flyingpiglog and/or http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheFlyingPigLog "You are never given a wish without also being given the power to make it come true. You may have to work for it however." (and) "There is no such thing as a problem without a gift for you in its hands. You seek problems because you need their gifts." (Richard Bach, in The Reluctant Messiah) |
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