Hi,
At work we'd often bake our own but we'd also buy some solutions from
Solwise. Bare in mind the was 15 years ago, we've been retired for
nearly seven now.
Looks like they are still in the business.
https://www.solwise.co.uk/wireless-outdoor-bridging.htm
On Tue, Feb 04 at 12:04, Roger Munf
On 04/02/2025 15:44, Bob Dunlop via Hampshire wrote:
At work we'd often bake our own but we'd also buy some solutions from
Solwise. Bare in mind the was 15 years ago, we've been retired for
nearly seven now.
Looks like they are still in the business.
https://www.solwise.co.uk/wireless-outdoor-
Like Bob, it has been several years since I needed anything like this
and while the ones we used were business class they also had business
prices.
Have a look here:
https://www.broadbandbuyer.com/store/wifi-links/wifi-point-to-point-links/
They have some marketed by Ubiquity, and seem to cov
A friend of mine has asked for advice on an industrial network and I
think the solution is a 180m wireless link across a field.
Years ago I did this over short distances a few times from building to
building choosing a wireless pair plus antennae but that was with stuff
from Amazon
This has
Something like a mikrotik sxt can be used for this purpose. I lived in a
village where we had this in place it does require line of sight.
https://youtu.be/cz3kXkG1eHk?si=CPHVjWFIMuHQEKPM
On Tue, 4 Feb 2025, 12:09 Roger Munford via Hampshire, <
hampshire@mailman.lug.org.uk> wrote:
> A friend of
On Tue, 4 Feb 2025 at 12:09, Roger Munford via Hampshire
wrote:
>
> A friend of mine has asked for advice on an industrial network and I
> think the solution is a 180m wireless link across a field.
>
> This has to be very robust.
>
Hi,
When you say "This has to be very robust.", what do you me