Difference between revisions of "Understanding WiFi Networking"

From Free Knowledge Base- The DUCK Project: information for everyone
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
Line 20: Line 20:
 
[[Category:Networking]]
 
[[Category:Networking]]
 
[[Category:WiFi]]
 
[[Category:WiFi]]
 +
[[Category:Radio]]

Revision as of 05:36, 7 August 2010

WiFi is bi-directional

Use antenna gain in preference to transmitter power. Antenna gain benefits both directions of the link. The access point should have as much antenna gain as is practical:

For full omni-directional coverage: use a 12 or 14 dBi antenna with no more than 3 ft. of low-loss coax. This antenna's gain comes from creating a doughnut-shaped radiation pattern rather than a sphere as in low gain omni's.

For sectorized coverage: Choose an antenna with the horizontal gain you want and the beamwidth that's practical.

On the client device side: If practical, use a gain antenna there too. Or a USB dongle for WiFi and elevate that into a more optimal RF line of sigth situation, using USB extension cords (no coaxial cables needed).

Decreasing data speed will benefit range. If you limit data speed from 10mbps to 2mbps, you have just increased the link range.