Mike Horwath wrote:
> On Sun, May 05, 2002 at 11:08:34AM -0500, olearysheehy at goldengate.net wrote:
> >   3. I remain interested in hearing recommendations for AP
> > hardware. Thanks to your comments, I am definitely convinced that
> > 802.11a is not the way to go.
> 
> Why do you not like 802.11a?
> 
> The 2.4Ghz freq is filled with a ton of things that shit over the
> whole spectrum, from phones to baby monitors to APs.
> 
> I dumped my 802.11b stuff because of this contant interference and got
> rid of my 2.4Ghz phones, jumped onto 802.11a and been reasonably happy
> since.

Ack.

If I was considering what network technology to equip
my house with today, cost wasn't a prime concern, I had
no need for an external antenna, and wasn't phased by
the oncoming products making me wish I'd waited; 802.11a
would be on the list.

I do not think it is the correct choice for a
community/block network at present. Here's my
thoughts:

 o Most of the equipment currently available uses the
   section of the band that the FCC regs say can only use
   built-in antennae (not just "difficult to modify", like
   RP-xxx, MMCX etc etc), so it is difficult/impossible to add
   external antennae. When using an external antenna, the
   cable loss is going to be higher a given type of coax,
   perhaps forcing you to move up to larger cable:
   
   Loss dB/100ft:
		2.5GHz		5.7GHz
		===========================
	LMR400	6.8		10.7
	LMR600	4.4		7.2
	LMR900	3.0		4.8

	(source - http://timesmicrowave.com/cgi-bin/calculate)

 o For a community project like this, client card re-use
   at {hot-spots, college, library} is a factor that
   is also worth considering. 802.11a is not widely
   deployed in these roles, yet.

I do agree that 2.4GHz is going to be a very crowded band, and
that the range of anything based in that band may ultimately
be interference-limited rather than noise-limited. Sounds
like this time has already arrived for Mike.

This is one of the reasons I shudder at the thought of
putting a 802.11b node on top of the IDS.
-- 
andyw at pobox.com

Andy Warner		Voice: (612) 801-8549	Fax: (208) 575-5634