Mon, 3 Mar 2003:
D-Link have failed to release their
802.11g-draft gear so far, so I'm having a re-think about holding out for the
G's.. Last weekend I was hoping to run cat-5e and power to the top of my pantry cupboard, however Victoria's fine tradition of squeezing a plethora of seasons into one day put things on ice, so to speak (yes, har har - sorry). You have to admire this state's ability to change so rapidly between blue skies, rain, and hail, all within the one day. Did I hear it was snowing on the alps..?
Wed, 26 Feb 2003: Damn! Due to people dropping out of my
TIB bulk offer for
Hills 25dBi
parabolic grid antennas, I've had to forego my own order for one of these to save money. Hopefully I'll be able to do another bulk offer, and then finally get my hands on one of these beasties. Fortunately, it seems, my plans to see if I could link with
GHO using the 25dBi antenna would have been delayed anyway, since it appears
GHO isn't going to be up by the end of this month.
More delays, more delays -- It seems that
D-Link are also plotting against me! Their
announcement telling Australia that they are going to release
802.11g-draft gear this month still has not come to pass. Like
Saddam, I suppose, they have until the end of this week to act, or the world will be disappointed! Well okay, I'll be disappointed - Nobody else seems to care much about
802.11g! *sob sob*
I guess I could go and grab a
mast while I'm waiting. I'm planning to mount a 6-metre
mast just below my roof's apex, running the
feed line conveniently down to the top of my pantry. In one corner on the top shelf I'll install a pair of
RJ45's and run one or two
Cat-5e lines down to my patch rack in my "
server farm room" (I love calling it that!). Oh yeah, and I'll install a power point and a bit of extra ventilation in there too. There's enough room on a small shelf in the top of the pantry for me to put a handful of access points along with a power board and my old 300VA
Sola 310
UPS. With a new battery, that thing would run
access points for yonks!
Mon, 27 Jan 2003: Found a pole! Well okay, two poles. One is just an old broom handle (1.3m tall), the other is a length of 20mm box-steel (2.5m). For now, I'm going to use the broom handle, since the steel requires extra reinforcing I can't be bothered with right now. I added bits so that the broom handle can be added to the triangle-thingy when it's been secured on the roof. All seemed fairly secure, even in the gusty wind, but I think I still will make a few more modifications. Unfortunately my workstation I tested from is on the bottom story of this two-story house. Running the cable out of the window and up onto the roof didn't allow me to place the triangle-thingy very high on the roof.
Omni electrical-taped to the broom handle, and cable in place, I went climbing on the roof. I could see only one
SSID, "belmer", and although it had disappeared from site-survey within half an hour, it was originally reported with pretty decent signal strength. I ran out of day-light, so I'll do a proper test after I've modified the triangle-thingy and am able to test along with
BJD (3 mins walk from here).
Sun, 26 Jan 2003: Designed and built a temporary mounting triangle thingy for an antenna on my roof. I needed something that could be light (to carry or hoist up onto a roof) but also could hold ballast (such as a sandbags, or bricks). It needed to be robust enough to cope with a 2m pole in moderate wind, and be easy to transport if other people wanted to use it. It doesn't scratch metal roofs, and has a wide enough footing to distribute weight well. Since my roof is pitched at 30?, I decided on something along the lines of two right-angled triangle frames joined together, and a pole attached on the vertical side.
I had some scrap wood left over from cutting down an
Ikea 'Sten' shelving unit, so I needed to calculate how long each triangle's sides needed to be cut to. That stuff I knew I'd never use at school (I think they call it 'maths') turned out to be handy in the end -- A few far-side calendar pages of SOHCAHTOAs and unknown value solving later, and it was all worked out. I will use this triangle thingy on my roof for more
MW tests soon, when I can find a good pole and some easy to carry ballast...
Wed, 22 Jan 2003: Tested everything with the newly re-terminated cable. All looks well for initial tests with
BJD/
BJE, and possibly
FKU.. While I'm waiting, I really should build a temporary mount for the antenna so I can plonk it on the roof, running the cable out a window.
Tue, 21 Jan 2003: Finally cut off about 7.5 meters of my
RG-213/U, and reterminated the cut end with a female
N-connector (after finally finding a good quality one at
Just Communications in Ringwood). Now I finally have a
Male-N to
Female-N cable. Yes, it's awkward, but it's good enough for now. I thought I ordered a
pigtail with a
Female-N connector on the end, but I probably forgot at the time..
Sun, 19 Jan 2003: Tested my
omni with the
Alloy GL2422VP, the
pigtail from
Vak. Despite being awkwardly crammed behind my computer, it worked happily.
Fri, 17 Jan 2003: Finally received my
RP-SMA to
Male-N pigtail from
Vak (through
TIB). It worked out cheaper than me making one.
Mon, 4 Nov 2002: Received my
SuperPass 8dBi omni antenna (from
TIB).
Fri, 20 Sep 2003: Initial test, using
Alloy GL2422VP card and a (borrowed)
D-Link card of some description, with default antennae. 11Mbps maintained for ~250 meters, line of sight, using
PBCC (
802.11b+)
Wed, 18 Sep 2002: Received my
Alloy GL2422VP (from
TIB).