> -----Original Message-----
> From: tcwug-list-admin at tcwug.org [mailto:tcwug-list-admin at tcwug.org]On
> Behalf Of Bob Gilbertson
>
> Depending on the angles involved to the tower, and the tower
> shape you may
> be able to just bounce the signal off the tower itself.
> Wouldn't take much
> to try it.  21 dB over isotropic is aiming quite a bit of
> signal in the
> desired direction.  Same concentrating effect is seen on the
> receive side.
> If you're driving, say, 100mW into the antenna this would
> give about 10 Watts
> ERP, which is a robust signal at 2.4 Ghz.


Those numbers don't go together to make a path estimate.  ERP doesn't affect
actual watts per square meter field strength at the tower: it's only saying
that a bigger transmitter on a dipole would do the same as the 100mW on a
parabolic.  The tower is probably cylindrical which is dispersive and thus a
lossy reflector at best, and its vertical angle isn't good for a bounce
either.  The receiving antenna's area is the only concentrating effect
there: square meters for an incoming wavefront of some watts per square
meter power density, so the result is some microwatts down the coax pipe.


Might work, but looks feeble.


Chuck