Building an Non-Wired Network for Pueblos? 60
wsxian asks: "We recently received a large grant to install a wireless high speed Internet system for our entire Pueblo here in the State of NM. This would encompass about 150 homes and the range from a central point would be no more than 6 miles, but there are hills, valleys and trees so line of sight is not an option unless we decide to drop homes. I welcome any suggestions for technology to look at, what to avoid, security concerns- and most important for us what companies to avoid. If any of you have had real life experience with doing such a scaled project like this, please give your input!"
signal through the walls (Score:1)
Amazing fact... (Score:2)
Re:Amazing fact... (Score:1)
Re:Amazing fact... (Score:2)
Re:Amazing fact... (Score:1)
Dude, as I said before, the keyword is OFTEN. I've been to New Mexico. Hell, I conceived a BABY in New Mexico. And, it was in a fricking Adobe house! I know there's at least a few of them around there.
Re:Amazing fact... (Score:2)
And you know very well what I mean anyway. Don't try to skate around it.
Re:Amazing fact... (Score:1)
Now, if Saeed al-Sahaf wants to inform the world of the TRUTH, I'm sure that he can get an audience down at the local comedy club.
Re:Amazing fact... (Score:2)
And the author doesn't live in this type of house.
Re:Amazing fact... (Score:2)
Re:Amazing fact... (Score:2)
True, and he probably meant it that way too, considering he said that it was 150 homes within a range of 6 miles.
Guerilla funny mod (Score:2)
by Ackmo (700165) on Friday March 18, @03:14PM (#11978946)
Yes it can, but you can only use it to transmit Postscript and PDF files.
Re:signal through the walls (Score:1)
MESH (Score:1)
No Non-Line-of-Sight (Score:5, Informative)
If all buildings don't have a clear, unobstructed view of a central point; the only way to make this work is to connect the buildings that can see eachother until you reach one that can see your point of origin.
Start by finding the best location that is the most visible, and most central to the most buildings. This is were you will install six radios each with a 60 degree sector antenna on a tower (less if you don't need a full 360 coverage, but don't go any wider then 60 degrees for each sector, or you'll be spreading your power too thin). Then survey each of the other locations to see which have perfect views of this tower. These locations will get an uplink radio with a unidirectional antenna focused on the tower. Plus a second radio operating in a different frequency range with an omnidirectional antenna. Try to use a lower frequency for the omni radios. These secondary radios will operate as a mesh network to pick up the other buildings that don't have line-of-sight to the central point. Finally the non-line-of-sight meshed-in locations can operate on their own omnidirectional antenna if they are close enough so they can pick up tertiary meshes. You really don't want to go any deeper than three into the mesh, speed starts to suffer too much. If the buildings are more than a couple hundred feet from each other the powerloss from transmitting in all directions will be too much and you'll have to go to directionalized antanna at one or both locations to direct the RF in a more focused pattern.
Re:No Non-Line-of-Sight (Score:5, Informative)
Get a good set of topo maps for the entire area you want to cover. Don't let anybody fool you, real paper maps and a good distance calculator like "Topo Companion" are the best way to do wireless design. Next, go to the FCC and download their Antenna Registration Database. You will need the "EN" and "CO" and one other table. Join the tables (useing MS Access would be easiest) using the unique site id and then query out the sites that have coordinates within the boundaries of Pueblo (latitude > y1 and latitude x1 and longitue Now use your "Topo" companion to mark existing towers on the map. Look for ones that are on hills or mountains near the desired coverage area. Some simple trig will tell you if you have line-of-site (LOS). Add the average tree height to your ground elevation when doing calcuations, 802.11x is very low power and high frequency, so you can't afford any pathloss burning through vegetation.
Unlike the parent, I would strongly recommend 30 degree panels for this kind of system, since you are likely to encounter capacity issues, and even log-periodic 60 degree panels have enough overlap between sectors to guarentee a huge interference problem if you use more then one transmitter. Find the equipment you are going to use and use your gains and losses to calculate the ERP / EIRP from your transmit antennas at each site. Now go ahead and use the free-space pathloss equation to figure out the signal strenght at you target locations. If you have adequate signal to meet the needs of the subscriber equipment you plan on using then great (Note: if you plan on supplying subscriber equipment then you can guarentee a minimum quality. If not, your design will need to be especially robust to accomodate low-quality receivers). If not, keep tweeking the design until it will work. Develop a plan for directing the different channels away from each other. Make sure you calculate your expected interference from other sites using the same channel. If you several mountaintop sites this will be a killer.
Once you have it built on paper, the rest is fairly straightforward. Have fun!
Re:No Non-Line-of-Sight (Score:4, Informative)
Good this be a job for a GIS program? (Score:2)
Re:Good this be a job for a GIS program? (Score:1)
Doing a search online could reveal some good data sources, but it
Re:No Non-Line-of-Sight (Score:3, Interesting)
I set up a similar project here in Nova Scotia to get internet to a group of people that were too far away to get ground lines. I used a string of directional antennas about 1km apart up the slope of the hill, then to a central station that radiated the internet signal to the houses.
The big problem is speed and bandwidth... but, aslong as your clients are not all slashdot addicts who spend loads of time online, you should be fine. Make sure the company you go with knows their graph theory when it co
Re:No Non-Line-of-Sight (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm wondering if anyone has experience with the newer 802.16 WiMax stuff that's just starting to roll around.
The specs sound great.
Several Mile Range
Hi Speed
and Non-LOS, apparently the hardware can handle multi-pathing issues.
But I'm wondering if it actually works.
locally to me... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:locally to me... (Score:2)
Well, then use quite a few access points!!! AP's are dirt cheap - much much less expensive than proprietary alternatives. The last thing you want is some bizzare proprietary client hardware required at each house.
it's just not practical (Score:1)
Re:it's just not practical (Score:2)
Re:it's just not practical (Score:1)
The process works! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:amen! (Score:3, Insightful)
So, the valid questions that the submitter asks - which you make no effort to answer - are a) best practices (tech and security) and b) which companies to avoid using.
I think the submitter rightfully emphasizes the second qu
I never said "scam" (Score:1, Offtopic)
Another person pointed out that grants do not always come from the government. True, but the word generally connotes government sources, otherwise it would be "hired," "retained," or "paid.
Re:amen! (Score:3, Informative)
A grant is simply a sum of money that has to be used for a specific purpose; and in this case, I would say almost certainly, wasn't from the government.
it was (Score:1)
Re:amen! (Score:2)
Cellular? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cellular? (Score:3, Interesting)
You really think the cell provider is going to let you re-use their towers?
Those kind of groups don't care what your needs are outside of the services they can sell you.
Re:Cellular? (Score:2)
Re:Cellular? (Score:2)
I did, and I was asking for clarification since telco's don't often play nice.
The towers are probably on Pueblo land. Therefore, they are there by permission of the Pueblo. Therefore, there is leverage if they wanted to add antennas for a new network
Not living in the vicinity of anything that gets called a Pueblo, I had no idea there were ownership issues involved.
Not ever
Re:Cellular? (Score:2)
Maybe. Depends on a lot of details.
First of all, most cell providers do not own the towers, they lease space on them from a tower company. (When I checked into this 5 years ago they were paying $1000/month for the highest places on some towers!) There often (though not a majority) more than one provider on the same tower. The short of this is you can lease space from the tower people too.
Cell providers are looking at generation 3 cells which in theory allow broadband. This might be fast enough, a
Less Networks (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.lessnetworks.com/
Vivato outdoor wireless (Score:5, Informative)
Depending on how much wind you get . . . (Score:2, Funny)
BPL: Broadband over Power Line (Score:3, Informative)
I went to a demonstration with City officials and COMTek engineers and it was VERY impressive. Their technology will interoperate with any other TCP/IP transport (cellular radio, fiber, copper, etc.) and, in fact, Manassas uses fiber for their long haul.
Comtek said that you can currently get 4 megabit to end users and with repeaters can push about six miles. At least, I think it was six miles, it's been a little while. Buy anyway, you can use radio to bridge long line of sight gaps, then stick a BPL inducer on a nearby transformer and light up any house within a mile of it, easily.
One thing they did in downtown Manassas was light up a building w/ BPL and put a wifi hot-spot on the roof which gives downtown strollers high speed wireless Internet (as long as you are a subscriber
The technology is very flexible and very stable in a wide range of temperatures which is ideal for New Mexico. The BPL "modems" (for lack of a better term) cost around $200 a piece retail and the inducers can be installed on power transformers in about 30 minutes, so it is a very rapid deployment.
Oh, and COMTek had installed some hardware that looked for amateur radio operators and dropped pieces of their spectrum so that they wouldn't interfere with them. I thought that was pretty cool of them as it does slightly lower their overall capacity, but not by much.
Good luck!
solar (Score:2)
When you do your design (there are good posts on the subject that I won't repeat) consider power. If the weather in your area is typical for deserts (I don't know where in NM you live so this might or might not be the case) you can put up solarcells and batteries everyplace where you need power. You might even be able to get an extra grant from someone by demoing that it can be done. (Even if there are a lot of clouds you might consider it)
ICOM ID-1 & hilltop passive repeaters (Score:2)
The radio named in the Subj has
10 watts of transmitter output,
even before antenna gain is ta-
ken into consideration
The repeaters should help handle
the uneven topography.
Next problem...
900 MHz (Score:2, Informative)
One thing I would recommend is having an experienced professional do the network design. It's one thing to slap a 802.11x WAP into a building and plug it into the
IPSS (Score:2)
Obvious answers not provided... (Score:2)
To help fill in the basic gaps, go take a look at Building Wireless Community Networks [oreilly.com], Wireless Hacks [oreilly.com], as well as the larger city and national groups Seattle Wireless [seattlewireless.com] and NYC Wireless [nycwireless.net]. G
Antennas (Score:2)
It sounds like an interesting project. You'll probably want to post a web-site showing how you implemented it; It could prove useful to other groups trying to accomplish the same things in rural areas.