Re: Revised goran's post
> > Get some 3" PVC, some copper and go to town! How will you
> > adapt the 802.11(b,a or g) to what you were trouble
> > shooting? Just curious.
>
> If I built the antenna myself, I'd use a metal enclosure
> sized out to the wavelength, put some shielded coax into it
> and expose a multiple of the wavelength of copper inside the
> enclosure in a position so that the exposed antenna element
> catches the proper reflected wave off in the inside of the
> enclosure. To find a suitable cover, stick different shrink
> wraps in the microwave...if it gets hot, then it absorbs
> microwaves and you can't use it. I'd stick an amplifier on
> both ends...so if I could get like 10dB of gain on the
> passive antenna, plus the amp, it just may work. If that
> fails, stick an amp on a 15dBi directional yagi

>
> The access point plugs directly into the network of the
> studio building. A PC on that end runs the Windows Media
> encoder, like that internet radio encoder from Spacial Audio
> since that doesn't require an external server to broadcast.
> The transmitter end has a network bridge with a PC running
> Windows Media Player that connects to the studio encoder.
> Depending on the quality of the network connection over the
> distance (1Mb - 11Mb...I wouldn't use 802.11g) you can send
> AMAZING digital quality down the line.
>
> The only issue is it'd be unlicensed. Since wireless is
> encrypted, it's secure...but some kiddie can drown out the
> signal by amplifying his own AP on the same channel. I'm
> also unsure how the wireless equipment would react to a 20
> year old 5kw leaky blowtorch next to it...and 2 80 meter
> antennae 100 yards away.
>
> AudioTX has the STL-IP which is a hardware solution to what
> I'm trying to ghetto rig for free. Just needs the net
> connection.
>
> I think we're moving the entire facility to VoIP very soon,
> so any play money is gone...but since I'm such a nerd, I
> might pay for this little endeavor myself just to see if it
> works.
>
Have you thought about taking your telco loop and putting a pair of DSL modems back-to-back on it? If your loop's not too long this might work (I've seen articles about ordering dry pairs/alarm circuits and using DSL modems that will bridge to deploy what essentially becomes an Ethernet bridge over 1.5MBit or 3MBit SDSL).
I'm assuming the telco loop is cheaper than a T1, otherwise you can use T1 STL systems.