From my recollection, most radio vendors had proprietary mounts and they had contracts with the antenna OEMs that forbade them from selling or even manufacturing these..
Sent from my iPad > On Nov 8, 2019, at 2:40 PM, Daniel White <dwh...@atheral.com> wrote: > > > If they are 2ft dishes the cost for adapters and what not will outweigh the > cost to just install new antennas. > > If they are 4ft or bigger then makes sense. 3ft is a wash. > > Many vendors do make adapter plates... I think Cambium has one for instance. > It used to be the antenna manufacturers wouldn't sell you plates because then > they couldn't certify the antenna (i.e. make more money). > > You do need to know if the flange on the antenna is rectangular or round. If > rectangular I'd once again recommend just installing a new dish. > > > Daniel White > Co-Founder & Managing Director of Operations > phone: +1 (702) 470-2766 > direct: +1 (702) 470-2770 > Nate Burke wrote on 11/8/19 10:46: >> One of my customer has a private link with an old set of Exalt Extendair >> rc11000 radios in the air on Radiowaves dishes. We're looking to get them >> re-licensed into new radios with higher bandwidth, but if we don't have to >> touch the dishes that would be great. >> >> Is that a REMEC antenna connection? The Exalt Datasheet says antenna >> interface is 'WR-75' But looking at pictures online, it sure looks like a >> REMEC Bracket. I figured someone here has/had these radios and just knows. >> >> Nate >> >> > > -- > AF mailing list > AF@af.afmug.com > http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com
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