JT

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Everything posted by JT

  1. Even if they disagree, it is about everything they can do with it. MimCom expressed it exactly right.
  2. You can use two 2x2 horns with one mimosa A5c. Check on facebook or shoot us PM if you need references to some WISPs who already use it. I would in any case first test the setup with horns before do any conclusions or comments of particular competitive antennas or Mu-MiMo/4x4/etc setup..
  3. I am not sure that typical customers of LHG-5 would be willing to pay a fair price for solid mounting bracket.
  4. Vdaka za info, urcite sa na to pozrieme v detaile. Aj sa niektory pigtail zlomil alebo ste mali problem so signalom? Povodne sme mali v zamere trochu iny koncept pre RB a verte, ze najradsej by sme tam koax pigtaily nemali ziadne. Pripadne ak mate este nejake ine navrhy co zmenit/zlepsit, sem s nimi - uz ked o tom diskutujeme.
  5. We have no plans to do it as Rocket M5 Titanium was discontinued while ago.
  6. Aaron - it will not. You can use Symmetrical Horn Carrier Class antennas with M5 Titanium.
  7. I moved it to correct section (TwistPort™ products) 30° Horns have enough gain to cross multiples of distances than you tested them for. Current 3-6 km you can comfortably handle with much less than 18 dBi, basically any of our Horn antennas can do that. The goal is to increase peak throughput for the area without necessity to replace CPEs. Generally speaking, you can use Horns with purpose of either selective offloading your current APs / or more aggressively scale into high density of co-located narrow beam sectors. Before we give you any particular answer or advise to your problem, can you provide us any more details about how dense the CPEs are / how many on current AP(s) / screenshots / GPS data ("one picture is worth of 1000 words") , so we have clear understanding of the situation? Or if you prefer to keep the data off the public and take it offline, shoot PM to Mike or myself and we can follow up in private messages / emails.
  8. Predpokladame marec (brezen) 2017. Ak budeme mat testovacie kusy aj skor, dame vediet!
  9. New products announced at WISPAPALOOZA 2016! Let´s fix the noise issues for Point-to-Point deployments! Brand new UltraHorn TP Antennas for Point-to-Point links in high interference environment. More There is nothing like this on the market today! No side lobes secure ultimate noise rejection and forward facing 21 or 24dBi of antenna gain deliver breakthrough beam performance! More More new products on parabolic dishes: Second generation of UltraDish TP antennas are here! Suppressed side lobes, wide band performance, new mounting system. More All antennas here are a TP (TwistPort) products, increasing the coverage of our wireless broadband ecosystem. New to TwistPort? Check here! We also added more TwistPort Adaptors to enable UBNT Rocket 5AC PRISM a AF5X radios into TwistPort ecosystem! More Feel free to post your comments here!
  10. do you observe any issues / lack of performance with R5ac prism + TP adaptor?
  11. tak potom vsetko funguje ako ma nie ste jediny kto sa pyta na nejake ulahcenie pri instalacii, zakaznici nemaju vela skusenosti s tymto typom anten, a vzhladom na ich vlastnosti (ktore su v podstate ich obrovskou vyhodou) zistuju, ze sa musia zbavit starych navykov (ona povestna zelezna kosela), a ziskat nove, a to by sme vam mali ulahcit ako sa len da. Urcite nad tym porozmyslame, mame par napadov ako na to. Fotky z kostolnej veze nemaju chybu. Myslite ze ich mozeme pustit do sveta na socialnych sietach? Mnohym ISP vo svete by sa to pacilo
  12. Frank, we are out of stock on these and there will not be more of TP380/520. The next batch is scheduled for October and it will be the updated version - 2nd generation of TwistPort parabolic dishes. We will try to locate if someone in Europe has some stock of TP380 next week - we have company summer holiday until Sunday 7th August, team is out of office having holiday.
  13. Jonathan - part number shall be TP-ADAP-R5AC-PRISM First units appeared on our stock this week, so it will take about 7-14 more days for them to reach Distributors. The complete product info will appear on our website by Monday (Aug 1st). We have company holiday until end of next week (Aug 7) and only few people are on duty, so sorry for our slow reactions these days. We will keep you updated.
  14. This is smaller: http://www.rfelements.com/products/integration-platforms/stationbox-s-carrier-class/overview/ We do custom design, but you have to consider that it is costly and takes time. Unless you are ready to pay for design services, tooling and order & pre-pay an MOQ (usually 2.000 units), do not even think about such option. You will only spend your valuable time searching for an "suitable supplier" that basically does not exist.
  15. Daniel - yes, gps antenna pigtail connects to the connector you see near the red release button
  16. For MikroTik™ we offer TwistPort™ Adaptors for RB912, RB911 etc. (= board only). We do not have plan to create specific TwistPort™ Adaptors for NetBox, BaseBox (and NetMetal) radios in near future. We will introduce new series of antennas that will solve the problem for these users.
  17. They are connected directly to the antenna structure (soldered) so it is not recommended to replace them if you broke them, unless you are skilled rf engineer. They are pretty easy to work with, they are semi flex so the stay as you leave them, no need to do loops, just screw down the connectors and you are done. You can pull the pigtails out of the antenna body or push them back inside, if you need an extra inch or opposite. So far we were reported with No issues with broken pigtails or connectors, as far as I know. But we focused very much to make it as much bulletproof as we can. + I can confirm that coax connectors generally are source of pain, that's why we created TwistPort
  18. Brad - pigtails are build-in the antennas (we use semi-flex cables), so you do not need to buy them separately. You can check videos on our website or here is the un-boxing video done by our customer that shows the integrated pigtails:
  19. Mariol - TowerCoverage.com (TC) is a third party online service independent to us. We do not sell their service, we announce that our antennas are now available in their database, so anyone who is using TC can pick them in the menu and use for the project. We understand you are confused with some settings in the TC tool (as I was the same way), so we created the short video serving as the quick how-to. Hope it will help.
  20. zag - the charts we show in datasheets are result of computer simulation. As regards back side radiation, the computer data show more radiation than we measure on real sample. It is known feature to us, it is related to the mathematical apparatus used in the simulation tool and I will not explain it, because I simply am not enough qualified to do it Long story short: we display (rather conservative) simulation, but you will achieve better result in real deployment. 50° horn shows better FtB, but unless FtB has specific reason for your deployment, let me point here that FtB as a mathematical number is not the "true magic" of these antennas. The main point of horn antenna is, that horns have no side lobes - they radiate the energy into one main lobe. On top of it, they have narrow beam width and moderate gain, so they do not pick the signal (noise) the same way as patch array sectors do. Patch array sectors display truly opposite mix of features: heavy side lobes / high gain / very wide beam width. There is truly no comparison. Simply use the beam width that fits your coverage requirement. Let us know how the deployment went.
  21. Rick Hughes of SOS Communications visited our booth @ #WISPAmerica2016. See Rick speaking about their experience with RF elements® Symmetrical Horns, Carrier Class Sectors and the new UltraDish™ antennas.
  22. No firm date yet. As soon as we have some we will post here.