Hi,
Have been reading through this forum and it has a lot of great technical advice. Looking for an optimal solution to a relatives rural lot.
This lot is undeveloped at this time, and somewhat hilly. We believe we can centrally locate a tower for ISP access and it will have line-of-sight to the three primary sites on the lot we'd like to develop/have wifi access. Each of these would be less than 800' feet from this single access point but are in completely different directions.
We could do a mesh, but there's no power here and a central location would be easier to deploy with solar-power. So, simple, rugged, optimized power and hopefully not costing an arm and leg.
My ideas:
1) Would prefer a single rugged router/access point (2.4 or 5GHz or both) and 3 directional antennas to cover the areas of interest. I can't find many 200mW solutions that support three ~9-14 db antennas. I've found a couple that support two. I know something like an Asus N66 or RT-ACC66 can be ramped up to 120-200 mW, which is probably enough, and there are optional 9db antennas - but not sure about putting this into an enclosure and dealing with non-directional antennas with beam forming and all that (it would be a pretty big enclosure with optional antennas). Temps are going to range from 40 to 105F.
2) From the ISP access point, we could just buy a gateway and 3 outdoor tp-link, engenius or something like this: http://routerboard.com/RBSXT-5nDr2 AP's and point them where we need them. But I'm concerned what happens when instead of having a mesh, the three APs are on the same pole. Won't I get interference?
I'm guessing option #2 would end up being cheaper. Any suggestions?
Thanks!
Have been reading through this forum and it has a lot of great technical advice. Looking for an optimal solution to a relatives rural lot.
This lot is undeveloped at this time, and somewhat hilly. We believe we can centrally locate a tower for ISP access and it will have line-of-sight to the three primary sites on the lot we'd like to develop/have wifi access. Each of these would be less than 800' feet from this single access point but are in completely different directions.
We could do a mesh, but there's no power here and a central location would be easier to deploy with solar-power. So, simple, rugged, optimized power and hopefully not costing an arm and leg.
My ideas:
1) Would prefer a single rugged router/access point (2.4 or 5GHz or both) and 3 directional antennas to cover the areas of interest. I can't find many 200mW solutions that support three ~9-14 db antennas. I've found a couple that support two. I know something like an Asus N66 or RT-ACC66 can be ramped up to 120-200 mW, which is probably enough, and there are optional 9db antennas - but not sure about putting this into an enclosure and dealing with non-directional antennas with beam forming and all that (it would be a pretty big enclosure with optional antennas). Temps are going to range from 40 to 105F.
2) From the ISP access point, we could just buy a gateway and 3 outdoor tp-link, engenius or something like this: http://routerboard.com/RBSXT-5nDr2 AP's and point them where we need them. But I'm concerned what happens when instead of having a mesh, the three APs are on the same pole. Won't I get interference?
I'm guessing option #2 would end up being cheaper. Any suggestions?
Thanks!