Halfpint
Member
OK... {WAN GRIN!} I wonder if anyone here has ever played with a `passive repeater'? *Many* years ago I set up such a thing for use on CB using a 5 element beam on the receive side and a `Supper Maggie' on the output side to enable us to talk into Casper, Wyoming from Alcova Lake. We mounted the antennas on a pair of towers about 5/8 wavelength apart and connected them together with exactly 1 wavelength of RG-8 coax suspended from a `runner' of fairly heavy-duty `wire rope' approximately every couple feet. While we were not originally able to get into Casper before after setting up the `lashup' we were able to get into just about all of Casper with a `readable' signal. The `problem' I now have is that I have forgotten just *how* it was that we had figured out just how it was we selected the antennas and the length of coax.
The reason I am trying to `revisit' this is that I have a Davis Vantage Pro2+ wireless weather station setup that I am having some reception problems with. It really is not totally a matter of not actually having enough signal strength already but, instead is a matter of `interference' that I have been experiencing. (Mainly it is people walking between the Instrument Sensor Suite, a couple temperature only stations, and the console though I do also have a few slight problems with our 900MHz DSS cordless phone now and then.) The weather station operates between 902MHz and 928MHz FHSS w/ around 8mw output. What I would like to be able to do is be able to put an antenna up outside our house that would be high enough to not have the signal path `walk through-able' *and* maybe also far enough away from the cordless phone to reduce it's effect on my reception. (If I could just get the outside antenna up just over roof level the metal roof would probably almost totally eliminate the interference from the phone as I suspect that the main interference from the phone is from the base not the handset.) Now there is another `kicker' in this... The `extra' temperature only stations are not on the same `line' from the console as the ISS. One is almost 180° behind the ISS and the other is close to 90° off to the side. The 180° degree one really isn't that much of a problem as it is actually inside our house and is approximately 20' or so away. The 90° one, OTOH, *is* a problem. That one is mounted just outside our pumphouse and is used to monitor the temp inside the pumphouse. We have it set to sound an alarm if something occurs and the temp drops low enough that we could have a problem and we have to get out to it and either start up a genset or hook up a backup propane tank to hopefully correct the problem. (Thankfully we have only have had to do either just a couple times. Last December and January was the last time when we had those 2 big snowstorms with their long series of below 0°F days. Our propane dealer was scheduled to come out about a half a week *after* the first wave came through and we ended up going through a 3/4 full 250# tank and had to hook up a backup 100# tank to get us through until he could finally get in to fill the main tank. We have since replaced the 250# with a 500# and the 250# is now our backup.) Hopefully I can use some sort of omni antenna (array) w/gain outside and a simple antenna inside? I am also wondering if I can use more than just one wavelength (Some multiple of 1 wavelength?) of coax between the two antennas?
The reason I am trying to `revisit' this is that I have a Davis Vantage Pro2+ wireless weather station setup that I am having some reception problems with. It really is not totally a matter of not actually having enough signal strength already but, instead is a matter of `interference' that I have been experiencing. (Mainly it is people walking between the Instrument Sensor Suite, a couple temperature only stations, and the console though I do also have a few slight problems with our 900MHz DSS cordless phone now and then.) The weather station operates between 902MHz and 928MHz FHSS w/ around 8mw output. What I would like to be able to do is be able to put an antenna up outside our house that would be high enough to not have the signal path `walk through-able' *and* maybe also far enough away from the cordless phone to reduce it's effect on my reception. (If I could just get the outside antenna up just over roof level the metal roof would probably almost totally eliminate the interference from the phone as I suspect that the main interference from the phone is from the base not the handset.) Now there is another `kicker' in this... The `extra' temperature only stations are not on the same `line' from the console as the ISS. One is almost 180° behind the ISS and the other is close to 90° off to the side. The 180° degree one really isn't that much of a problem as it is actually inside our house and is approximately 20' or so away. The 90° one, OTOH, *is* a problem. That one is mounted just outside our pumphouse and is used to monitor the temp inside the pumphouse. We have it set to sound an alarm if something occurs and the temp drops low enough that we could have a problem and we have to get out to it and either start up a genset or hook up a backup propane tank to hopefully correct the problem. (Thankfully we have only have had to do either just a couple times. Last December and January was the last time when we had those 2 big snowstorms with their long series of below 0°F days. Our propane dealer was scheduled to come out about a half a week *after* the first wave came through and we ended up going through a 3/4 full 250# tank and had to hook up a backup 100# tank to get us through until he could finally get in to fill the main tank. We have since replaced the 250# with a 500# and the 250# is now our backup.) Hopefully I can use some sort of omni antenna (array) w/gain outside and a simple antenna inside? I am also wondering if I can use more than just one wavelength (Some multiple of 1 wavelength?) of coax between the two antennas?
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