Hi anyone have some experience
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Hi anyone have some experience
Hi anyone have any experience with this device
Amarok (GL-X1200) Industrial IoT Gateway | Dual-band | 4G LTE.
Amarok (GL-X1200) Industrial IoT Gateway | Dual-band | 4G LTE.
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Re: Hi anyone have some experience
If this is your first set up would go with something from the The Wireless Haven store.
Would get more help and support.
The hardware is the easy part getting SIM/data plan is the trick
Would get more help and support.
The hardware is the easy part getting SIM/data plan is the trick
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Re: Hi anyone have some experience
I need something stable I got before Something from here but I don't get stability.
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Re: Hi anyone have some experience
Do you need 5g WiFi? Are you going to use your own WiFi home router or a mesh network? If you don't need 5g or are going to use your own home router/mesh then the NEXQ6GO The Wireless Haven works great.
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Re: Hi anyone have some experience
Hi thanks yeah is enough for mi lte , but only a kit stable , which modem I can use? Thanks again ,derekjsmith wrote: ↑Sat Aug 21, 2021 4:03 pm Do you need 5g WiFi? Are you going to use your own WiFi home router or a mesh network? If you don't need 5g or are going to use your own home router/mesh then the NEXQ6GO The Wireless Haven works great.
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Re: Hi anyone have some experience
I've got an EM12 in both of my LTE routers, no issues.Ivanesteva90 wrote: ↑Sat Aug 21, 2021 8:55 pm Hi thanks yeah is enough for mi lte , but only a kit stable , which modem I can use? Thanks again ,
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Re: Hi anyone have some experience
Thanks , wow do you have two LTE ROUTERS,derekjsmith wrote: ↑Sun Aug 22, 2021 12:22 am I've got an EM12 in both of my LTE routers, no issues.
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Re: Hi anyone have some experience
Actually I've got 3, two with the EM12 and the other with a EM7455. All connected to a TP-LINK ER605 router for load balancing.
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Re: Hi anyone have some experience
The reason for this antenna array. 3 pairs of crossed polarized. Each pair going to a LTE router. This is 8 miles from the tower over two ridges heavily forested in the Cascade mountains .
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Re: Hi anyone have some experience
Thanks for share,derekjsmith wrote: ↑Sun Aug 22, 2021 2:10 pm The reason for this antenna array. 3 pairs of crossed polarized. Each pair going to a LTE router. This is 8 miles from the tower over two ridges heavily forested in the Cascade mountains .
Re: Hi anyone have some experience
So this TP-LINK ER605 combines all the speeds into one?derekjsmith wrote: ↑Sun Aug 22, 2021 2:03 pm Actually I've got 3, two with the EM12 and the other with a EM7455. All connected to a TP-LINK ER605 router for load balancing.
Re: Hi anyone have some experience
Not meant to be a wise-ass remark but genuinely curious why with open space available, everyone without question seems to crowd antennas so closely? It seems for ultimate diversity one might split at least the 4 over two seperate router boxes and two seperate poles. Also wonder why everyone always mounts the out of phase yagi antennas right on top of each rather than spreading out as much as practical within at least the full extended range of the short cable runs going into the router box?
The fact that mimo technology demands cheating by nature (e.g. stacking multiple antennas on small phone PCB or putting rows of them mounted around the perimeter of a small metal router box and with the design seemingly wrapped only around what will sell and with no real consideration for mimo channel isolation), the trend seems overwhelmingly to not consider inter-transmitter interference and to just get the antenna apart where any distance will do with none being too-short. Logically since cell phones rely on the mimo technology today, perhaps the part I am missing is that this close proximity to other companion transmitting antennas is someone handled within the firmware handling.
I would also be curious about the large dish some use and recommend, the one with 2-4 mimo antennas packed into a single module at the focal point of the dish, and why this would be chosen over several single dishes for individual mimo antennas. The answer to this may be that the mimo concept design (again) is such that the firmware of the communication devices expects antennas to be near lying on top of each other. Still I wonder if anyone has done any testing to see how much that extended seperation for the antennas would improve the overall performance.
The fact that mimo technology demands cheating by nature (e.g. stacking multiple antennas on small phone PCB or putting rows of them mounted around the perimeter of a small metal router box and with the design seemingly wrapped only around what will sell and with no real consideration for mimo channel isolation), the trend seems overwhelmingly to not consider inter-transmitter interference and to just get the antenna apart where any distance will do with none being too-short. Logically since cell phones rely on the mimo technology today, perhaps the part I am missing is that this close proximity to other companion transmitting antennas is someone handled within the firmware handling.
I would also be curious about the large dish some use and recommend, the one with 2-4 mimo antennas packed into a single module at the focal point of the dish, and why this would be chosen over several single dishes for individual mimo antennas. The answer to this may be that the mimo concept design (again) is such that the firmware of the communication devices expects antennas to be near lying on top of each other. Still I wonder if anyone has done any testing to see how much that extended seperation for the antennas would improve the overall performance.
Re: Hi anyone have some experience
For 2x2 MIMO and "X" phase I don't think it would make much difference since the signals are out of phase, however, if working with 4x4 then yes, spread them apart. It wouldn't hurt to spread the 2x2 setup apart either since there could potentially be some interference I suppose.
While mounting my antennas I did try to separate the antennas as much as possible, however, when mounting on a tower structure it takes additional hardware to extend 'horizontally' and then turn back vertical to ultimately mount the antenna. That extra hardware added to the weight and wind load to the tower and additional cable lengths and was kinda a pain to get setup when working high up on the tower. Was hard to make adjustments to the antennas once mounted in a horizontal pattern also since they were extended out from the tower. I eventually went back to just spreading them out as far as possible vertically along the tower, LOL.
While mounting my antennas I did try to separate the antennas as much as possible, however, when mounting on a tower structure it takes additional hardware to extend 'horizontally' and then turn back vertical to ultimately mount the antenna. That extra hardware added to the weight and wind load to the tower and additional cable lengths and was kinda a pain to get setup when working high up on the tower. Was hard to make adjustments to the antennas once mounted in a horizontal pattern also since they were extended out from the tower. I eventually went back to just spreading them out as far as possible vertically along the tower, LOL.