home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky comp.dcom.lans:2048 comp.misc:4755
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.lans,comp.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!spool.mu.edu!torn!watserv2.uwaterloo.ca!watserv1!rwwatt
- From: Roger Watt <rwwatt@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca>
- Subject: Re: Info on wireless ethernet link needed
- Message-ID: <C0CM0w.FpE@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca>
- Followup-To: comp.dcom.lans
- Keywords: wireless ethernet bridging
- Sender: rwwatt@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca (Roger Watt)
- Organization: Computing Services, University of Waterloo
- References: <1993Jan4.145730.7888@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu> <930104143201@cream.ftp.com>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Mon, 4 Jan 1993 21:22:07 GMT
- Lines: 53
-
- > My office at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia would like to establish
- > a wireless ethernet connection with another office building that is across
- > a busy street somewhere between a quarter mile and a half mile away,
- > clearly visible via line of sight. The university refuses to trench
- > between the two for various reasons including cost and disruption of
- > traffic. Hence we'd like to know all there is to know about wireless
- > ethernet products...
-
- I don't know beans about microwave, but we use something that perhaps
- others might find interesting. It is an "ARLAN 620" SPREAD-SPECTRUM RADIO
- matched pair of Ethernet bridges. Cost for the pair, CA$9000. Speed is
- 1Mbps. Requires line-of-sight path between two "yagi" antennae, which we
- mount on masts on roof (or equivalent bolted to side of building). Max
- distance is 8km with antennae that have 16m line-of-sight clearance. We
- put a pair of these in service in Jan92. The weather has cooperated nicely
- to let us verify that transmission is not fazed by fog, drizzle, rain, or
- snowstorm. Made by a Canadian company in the Toronto area called
- Telesystems SLW, distributed by another Toronto-area company called Brak
- Systems. Spread-spectrum radio operates way below the level that requires
- licensing in Canada (don't know about regulations in other countries).
-
- We have one antenna on a 3m mast on our Library building, from which one
- can see the top of every other building on campus, and have put the other
- antenna in interesting places ... such as on a microphone stand in an
- office in a just-moved-into building about 500m away; it worked fine ...
- except for the day the occupant closed the venetian blinds.
-
-
- * //////////////////////// *
- | |
- | |
- | |
- .--------+-. .-+--------.
- | ARLAN 620| |ARLAN 620 |
- '-----+----' '-----+----'
- coax Ethernet | | coax Ethernet
- ==================+== ==+==================
-
- There is a second and less expensive member of the product family, called
- the ARLAN 650/610, which is a "headend" unit that can communicate with
- multiple card-in-PC "clients"; all of the clients contend for the 1Mbps
- bandwidth. CA$2900 for the headend and CA$1400 for each client card. We
- are currently using a 650/610 pair to connect to a rented building about
- 300m off campus, across a city street (fibre would have cost us
- CA$20K). We are using them in the same concept as a 620 pair ... we have
- the card-in-PC unit at the on-campus side, using the PC as a router
- (running PCroute routing software), and the "headend" unit connected to
- the Ethernet backbone in the off-campus building.
-
- Our contact is:
- Brak Systems Inc
- Mississagua, Ontario
- 416-272-3076
-