Thanks
@dlandiss . I follow that from the perspective of the just the receiver. But I was thinking of it in terms of where the transmitter has a high gain directional antenna pointed at the receiver. The receiver sees the same noise and interference but the transmitter's signal has increased. Or am I missing something obvious.
We get into an odd area here, and for some, it's counter intuitive - in Broadcast, or point to point, where the transmitter and receivers are on an assigned channel - higher gain works... on narrow band amateur radio (HAM, CB Radio, etc), again, it works...
On single frequency networks, like 3G, LTE, and cdmaOne, we really need everyone to keep power low, and at the same level at the Base Station - because we look not just at the physical energy on the channel, but the actual code energy (this is referred to as Eb/No, sometimes as Ci/Nr or Ec/Io, these all basically mean the same thing).
WiFi is similar to the other SFN's, in that the stations are designed around a set point, but it's not as sophisticated And much less control over adjacent networks - which makes staying within design parameters that much more important.
Which goes back to the point that WiFi does do a level of open-loop AGC, and I see it in my data - it's driven by two factors - the RF link (RxAGC) and the Eb/No (or CINR)... RxAGC determines the Tx level based on the Rx Level, and Eb/No determines the rate set used based on bit error rates (and retransmissions) - and this is pretty consistent across different AP's and clients and chipsets...
Add more gain, get more noise, add more power, and the other end reduces power, and this makes things asymmetric and unbalanced as one usually increases power (to a limit) on one end, and misses the other end.
In an Analog world (AM/FM/1G cellular) more power/more gain makes sense... in a digital world, esp. now that we're well into single frequency networks - digital modulation gain is more important, lower power is better, and more spatial streams (SU-MIMO is huge, along with Space Time Block Codes).
(MU-MIMO gives and takes - more energy on the like, but also more non-orthoginal interference for the non-MU stations on the same BSS, and it's not very friendly when there are adjacent BSS's - and that cuts both ways)
In the digital realm, it's not power and gain - it's interference that is the limiting factor - and higher gain, higher power AP's in the WiFi sector, it increases interferences, both intentional, and the unintended side effects...
I've been doing this stuff for close to 25 years now (actually longer) as my day time job as an engineer and a personal interest...
Anyways, you now know my thoughts, and I've provided an informed opinion - make your own choices - if it works, great! There's enough latitude in the specs across the board, that corner cases will work...