Antenna Characteristicsand Placement
While
I am not a radio frequency (RF) engineer, I have had a lot of
practical experience setting up 802.11b networks. There
isn't nearly enough room here for a full examination
of the nuances of radio frequency communications. For more
authoritative sources, be sure to check out the great resources in
the Appendixes. Radio is an entire field of study unto itself.
Antenna selection has a tremendous impact on the range and usability
of your wireless network. Ironically, the design of almost every
external 802.11b card puts the antenna in the worst possible
orientation: sideways and very close to the laptop (or desktop). In
this position, the radiation pattern is almost straight up and down!
Not only does this drive half of your signal into the table, it
leaves your poor, underpowered radio susceptible to interference from
the computer itself. Fortunately, laptop manufacturers have responded
to this problem, and are now following Apple's lead
in building antennas into their screens and cases.
You will see a tremendous difference in signal strength by attaching a small
omnidirectional external antenna to your client card and orienting it
properly. Which way is proper? That depends on your environment. If
you are having trouble pulling in a signal, try every possible
position with your signal strength meter open. I've
put mine on top of my monitor, below the desk, sideways, on the table
behind me, and even slung over my shoulder. The best orientation of
your antenna is the position in which it receives the best
signal—don't be afraid to move it around.
If you use a PCMCIA radio and are without an external antenna, you
can watch the wonders of RF by opening up your strength meter and
tilting your laptop sideways. Watch that signal bar grow. Go for the
green! Learn to type sideways! Better yet, redesign your network to
extend your range, and always pack a spare external antenna.
Before looking at adding antennas to your network, make sure your
card can take an external antenna. Many low-priced cards
don't include external connectors anymore. You will
have trouble finding a connector to fit the ones that do, as every
manufacturer provides its own
"proprietary" connector (see Figure 6-6). Check out your friendly local radio supplier
for proprietary-to-standard adapters,
although they tend to be conveniently overpriced.
Of course, if you have good tools and moderate soldering skills, you
may have luck making your own adapter, similar to the one shown in
Figure 6-7.
The hack-it-in approach is really only practical for a fixed,
point-to-point link, as there is no strain relief on the joint. As
time marches on, bulk discounts for proprietary-to-standard pigtails
are becoming more common. You shouldn't have to
spend more than $15-$20 per adapter, particularly if you can buy in
quantity. Remember to buy the shortest cable you can use to minimize
signal loss in the cable (see the discussion later in this chapter on
choosing cable).
Pigtails are
manufacturer- (and even model number-) specific, so be sure that you
are getting the correct pigtail for the card you intend to use it
with. Interesting exceptions to this are the Cisco, Engenius/Senao,
and ZCom cards, all of which use an MMCX connector. Also, because PCMCIA
cards have limited space for connectors, the pigtail plugs tend to be
tiny and very fragile. One good tug can ruin
your pigtail, connector, or both. You have been warned! (Not that I
would personally know how easy they are to break. Not even at 2:00
A.M. after too much espresso and too many hours staring at the video
screen, trying to make a deadline. No sir.)
However you attach your antenna to your radio, always look for a way
to position your equipment so it can see the antenna at the other
end. This is called having Line of
Sight (LOS) to the other
node. While it helps on short links (such as from your laptop to your
access point), it is absolutely critical on long-distance,
point-to-point links. The ideal path between two antennas would be on
towers well above any ground clutter, with a valley in between,
pointed directly at each other. This is hardly ever the case, but try
to get as close to this ideal as possible.
For outdoor applications, trees are probably going to be your
single biggest signal killer (followed by metal, wet masonry, and
other 2.4GHz gear, not necessarily in that order). When choosing a
place to locate your antenna, consider how changes in the environment
will affect your link. Remember, what looks like the perfect place in
the winter may be completely obscured by leaves in the spring! Walk
around the space you have available, and try to find the best
possible place for the antenna. Don't just assume
that the highest point is the place to install it. After trying every
spot on my roof (in vain) to find line of sight to
O'Reilly, I got down and sat on my front porch in
frustration. It was then that I noticed that I could see the
building, about half a mile away, with nothing in between. Setting
the antenna on a tripod on my porch, I instantly got a solid signal.
Lesson learned: the "right" place
for the antenna is different in every installation.
6.2.1 Antennas
Antennas
do not give you more
signal than you started with (that's what amplifiers
are for). What they do is focus the available signal in a particular
direction, like turning the focus head of a flashlight. It
doesn't make the bulb any brighter, it just focuses
what you have into a tighter space. Focusing a flashlight gives you a
brighter beam that covers a smaller total area, and, likewise, more
directional antennas give you a stronger perceived signal in a
smaller area. All
antennas
are somewhat directional, and the measure of their directionality is
referred to as gain. Typically, the higher the gain, the
better the range (in the direction that the antenna radiates best
in).
There are four different
general
types of antennas suitable for 2.4GHz use. Each works well for its
own application, and no single antenna works best for every
application. Plan ahead of time what your goals are, and configure
your network to meet those goals. The following sections describe the
most common types of antennas, listed in rough order of increasing
directionality.
6.2.1.1 Omni
Omnidirectional
antennas, or omnis (shown in Figure 6-8), radiate
outward in all horizontal directions roughly equally. Imagine putting
an enormous donut around the center pole of an omni. That is what the
radiation pattern looks like. These are good for covering a large
area where you don't know which direction your
clients might come from. The downside is that they also receive noise
from every direction, so they typically aren't as
efficient as more directional antennas.
They look like tall, thin poles (anywhere from a few inches to
several feet long) and tend to be expensive. The longer they are, the
more elements they have (and usually more gain, and a higher price).
Omni antennas are mounted vertically, like a popsicle stick reaching
skyward. They gain in the horizontal, at the expense of the vertical.
This means that the worst place to be in relation to an omni is
directly beneath (or above) it. The vertical response improves
dramatically as you move away from the antenna.
6.2.1.2 Sector (or sectoral)
Picture
an omni with a mirror behind it, and you'll have the
radiation pattern of a sector antenna. Sectors radiate best in one
direction, with a beam as wide as 180 degrees (or even less). They
excel in point-to-multipoint applications, where several clients
access the wireless network from the same general direction.
Sector antennas (shown in Figure 6-9) come in a
variety of packages, from flattened omnis (tall, thin, and
rectangular) to small, flat squares or circles. Some are only eight
inches across and mount flat against a vertical wall or on a swivel
mount. They can also be ceiling mounted to provide access to a single
room, such as a meeting area, classroom, or trade show floor. As with
omnis, cost is usually proportional to gain.
6.2.1.3 Yagi
A yagi
looks like an old television aerial. It is either a flat piece of
metal with a bunch of horizontal cross pieces or a long pipe with a
bunch of washers along its length (see Figure 6-10).
The typical beam width can vary from 15 degrees to as much as 60,
depending on the type of antenna. As with omnis, adding more elements
means more gain, a longer antenna, and higher cost.
Some yagis are simply bare, like a flat Christmas tree pointed
vaguely in the direction of communications. Others are mounted in
long, horizontal PVC cans. They can work well in
point-to-point
or
point-to-multipoint
applications, and usually they can achieve higher gain than sectors.
6.2.1.4 Parabolic dish
In some ways, a dish is the opposite of an omni. Rather
than trying to cover the entire area, a dish focuses on a very tight
space (see Figure 6-11). Dishes typically have the
highest gain and most directionality of any antenna. They are ideal
for a point-to-point link, and nearly useless for anything else.
Dishes can be solid or mesh, as small as 18" across
or as big as you like (a 30-foot dish is possible, but probably not
very convenient). A dish that can send an 802.11b signal more than 20
miles can be as small as a few feet across. In terms of gain for the
buck, dishes are probably the cheapest type of antenna. Some people
have been successful in converting old satellite and DSS dishes into
2.4GHz dishes; see Chapter 7 for details.
Generally speaking, the difference between a mesh reflector and a
solid reflector has little to do with gain, but when mounting your
dish, remember that solid dishes tend to pick up more load from the
wind.
6.2.1.5 Waveguides and "cantennas"
An increasingly popular antenna design is the
waveguide. These
so-called
"cantennas"
are easy for home-brew designers to build and offer very high gain
for relatively little effort. Waveguides resemble plumbing—they
are boxes or cans with nothing in them but a tiny radiator. Figure 6-12 shows an ambitious design made from extruded
and milled aluminum.
The Pringles can and coffee can antennas are examples of simple (but
effective) home-brew waveguide antennas. I'll
describe how to build your own in Chapter 7.
One other property of antennas worth mentioning here is
polarization.
The polarization of an antenna refers to the direction that the
electrical part of the electromagnetic wave travels in. Both
horizontal and
vertical polarizations are common,
but in some exotic antennas, circular (clockwise or
counterclockwise) polarization is possible. The polarization of the
antenna on each end of a link must match, or the radios will have
trouble talking to each other. Omnis and sectors are generally
vertically polarized, although horizontally polarized variations do
exist. Yagis and dishes can be mounted vertically or horizontally,
depending on the application. On a point-to-point link, try both to
see which incurs the lowest noise. The polarization of a dish is
indicated by the position of the receiving element, not the rear
reflector (an oval dish that goes "up and
down" is probably mounted in horizontal polarization
and, therefore, won't be able to talk very well to a
vertically polarized omni).
You can also use
polarization
to your advantage. For example, you can run two parallel links on the
same channel, one with vertical and one with horizontal polarization.
If separated by a few feet, two dishes can operate quite happily on
the same channel without interfering with each other, and provide
twice the bandwidth on the same frequency. This setup would require
four antennas, four radios, and Ethernet channel bonding on each end,
but is entirely possible.
6.2.1.6 Cabling
Not all
coaxial cable
is appropriate for 2.4GHz use. The same piece of cable that delivers
high-quality video and audio to your TV is nearly useless for
connecting microwave antennas. Choosing the proper type and length of
cable is just as important as choosing the right antenna for the job.
A 12db sector antenna is useless if you lose 18db in the cable that
connects it to the radio. While all cable introduces some loss as
signal travels through it, some types of cable do better than others
at 2.4GHz.
LMR is a kind of coax
cable made by Times Microwave Systems (http://www.timesmicrowave.com) and is
possibly the most popular type of cable used for extending 802.11b
networks. LMR uses a braided outer shield and solid center conductor,
and comes in various sizes.
Heliax is another
kind of microwave cabling made by Andrew Corporation (http://www.andrew.com). It is
made of a semirigid corrugated outer shell (a sort of flexible copper
tubing), rather than the braided strands found in coax. The center
conductor can be either solid or a corrugated tube inner conductor.
It is designed to handle loads much greater than
(legal) 802.11b installations, it is very expensive, and difficult to
work with. It is also extremely low loss. The
foam
dielectric type part numbers start with LDF.
In addition to Times Microwave's and
Andrew's offerings, Belden, Inc. (http://www.belden.com) also makes a very
common piece of cable that works well in the 2.4GHz range.
You'll frequently see references to 9913; this is
Belden 9913.
Generally speaking, the thicker and better-built the cable, the lower
the loss and the higher the cost (see Table 6-1).
Cable in excess of half an inch or so in thickness is difficult to
work with and you may have trouble finding connectors for it.
Whenever possible, order the specific length you need, with the
proper connectors preinstalled, rather than trying to cut and crimp
it yourself. A commercial outlet will usually have the tools and
experience needed to make a well-built cable. The best cable in the
world won't help you if your connector
isn't properly installed.
Table 6-1. Attenuation, size, and approximate cost of microwave coax
|
LMR-200 |
0.195" |
16.9 |
$0.37 |
|
LMR-400 |
0.405" |
6.8 |
$0.64 |
|
LMR-600 |
0.509" |
4.4 |
$1.30 |
|
LMR-900 |
0.870" |
3.0 |
$3.70 |
|
LMR-1200 |
1.200" |
2.3 |
$5.50 |
|
Belden 9913 |
0.405" |
8.2 |
$0.97 |
|
LDF1-50 |
0.250" |
6.1 |
$1.66 |
|
LDF4-50A |
0.500" |
3.9 |
$3.91 |
|
LDF5-50A |
0.875" |
2.3 |
$2.27 |
|
LDF6-50 |
1.250" |
1.7 |
$10.94 |
|
LDF7-50A |
1.625" |
1.4 |
$15.76 |
To sum up: use the best quality cable you can afford, at the shortest
length possible. A couple of dB here and there really adds up when
dealing with the very low power levels of 802.11b. If you want to put
an antenna on the roof, look into weatherproof enclosures for your AP
and mount it as close to the antenna as possible. Then run as much
Ethernet cable as you need (up to 100 meters!).
6.2.2 Connectors
You
have the radio, an antenna, and a length of cable. How do you connect
them together? You need to use connectors that work well in the
2.4GHz range, fit the kind of cabling you're using,
and mate with each other. Practically all common connectors have two
halves, a male and a female (or pin and socket). A few of the more
exotic types (such as the APC-7) are sexless, so any connector will
match up with any other. Here are the most common connectors you are
likely to encounter in the microwave bestiary.
The
BNC is a small, cheap connector using
a quick-connect half turn (the same connector found on 10base2
Ethernet). The BNC shown in Figure 6-13
isn't well suited for 2.4GHz use, but it is
mentioned here because, with the death of 10base2, the connectors are
frequently sold for pennies per pound. Don't be
tempted.
The
TNC (see Figure 6-14) is a threaded version of the BNC. The fine
threads help eliminate leakage at microwave frequencies. TNCs work
well all the way through 12GHz and are usually used with smaller (and
higher-loss) cable.
An
N connector is a larger, threaded
connector found on many commercial 2.4GHz antennas (see Figure 6-15). It is larger much than the TNC. It works
very well on thicker cable (such as LMR-400) and operates well up to
10GHz. The N is probably the most commonly encountered connector when
dealing with 802.11b-compatible gear.
The so-called
UHF connector looks like a
coarse-thread version of the N (see Figure 6-16).
It's not usable for 2.4GHz, but it is sometimes
confused with the N. According to the ARRL Microwave manual,
it's a PL-259 (which mates with the SO-239 socket).
It's not designed to work at microwave frequencies.
You should avoid it.
The
SMA connector (Figure 6-17) is a very popular, small, threaded connector
that works great through 18GHz. Their small size precludes using them
with large, low-loss cable without using a pigtail.
The
SMB (Figure 6-18) is
a quick-connect version of the SMC.
The
SMC (see Figure 6-19) is a very small version of the SMA. It is
designed to work well through 10GHz, but accepts only
very small cables.
The
APC-7 (see Figure 6-20) is a 7mm sexless connector, usable through
18GHz. It is a high-grade connector manufactured by Amphenol, and it
is expensive, fairly rare, and very low loss.
Remember that each connector in the system introduces some loss.
Avoid adapters and unnecessary
connectors
whenever possible. Also, commercially built cables tend to be of
higher quality than cables you terminate yourself (unless
you're really good and have the right tools).
Whenever possible, try to buy a pre-made cable with the proper
connectors already attached, at the shortest length you can stand.
802.11b gear doesn't put out much power, and every
little bit helps extend your range and reliability.
It's very easy to make a bad cable, and bad cables
can cause no end of trouble.
When matching
cables
to your equipment, you may encounter connectors of reverse gender
(male and female swapped, with same threads), reverse threading
(lefthand instead of righthand thread), or even reverse gender
reverse threading (both). Make sure you know what
you're getting before ordering parts online!
On outdoor installations, proper lightning protection is vital.
Gas tube lightning arrestors (shown in
Figure 6-21) can provide a high degree of protection
(both to your equipment and against fire) from lightning strikes to
your antenna. They cost anywhere from $30-$100, and can provide
multi-strike protection when properly installed. Most gas tube
arrestors I've seen have female N connectors on
either end, so be sure to factor that in when considering your
hardware installation.
Lightning arrestors won't actually do anything at
all unless they are properly grounded. A gas tube is effectively a
grounding shunt, making an alternate path for the lightning to
travel. Generally, wide copper strap is used to connect to the earth
instead of wire, as strap has much lower impedance. Keep your
grounding strap as short as possible, and connect it from the gas
tube directly to a good grounding rod (no, grounding to the water
pipe isn't nearly good enough). If you have more
than one antenna, run separate ground straps back to your grounding
rod. You want to make it as easy as possible for lightning to find
its way back to the earth through your grounding rod, not through
your equipment.
There is a wealth of information available online about lightning
protection. Check out the following links to get started:
- http://www.polyphaser.com/ppc_pen_home.asp
- http://lightning-protection-institute.com/
Be sure to read up on proper installation and, when in doubt, call in
a professional. It is much cheaper to prevent lightning damage than
to clean up after it.
6.2.3 Calculating Range
How far will your signal go? That's a very
good question. It depends on all sorts of factors, including the
power output and sensitivity of your card, quality of your cable,
connectors, and antenna, intervening clutter and noise, and even
weather patterns (on long-distance links). While
it's impossible to take all of these variables
precisely into account, you can make a good estimate before buying
any hardware. Here's a simple way to build an
estimate (frequently referred to as your link
budget).
First, figure out how much loss the signal will incur in the space
between the two sites. This is called the path
loss.
One common formula for estimating path loss at 2.4GHz is:
- L = 20 log(d) + 20 log(f) + 36.6
where L is the loss in dB, d
is the distance in miles, and f is
the frequency in megahertz.
Suppose you wanted to set up a five-mile link between two points,
using channel 6 (2.437GHz):
- L = 20 log(5) + 20 log(2437) + 36.6
- L = (20 * 0.69) + (20 * 3.38) + 36.6
- L = 13.8 + 67.6 + 36.6
- L = 118
At five miles, with no obstacles in between, you will lose
118dbof signal between the two points. Our link
must tolerate that much loss (plus a bit extra to account for weather
and miscellaneous interference) or it will be unreliable.
Next, add up all of your gains (radios + antennas + amplifiers) and
subtract your losses (cable length, connectors, lightning arrestors,
and miscellaneous other losses). Let's assume you
are using Orinoco Silver cards (15dBm), no amplifiers, with a
12dBisector on one side, and a 15dBiyagi on the other. We'll assume
you're using one meter of LMR-400 and a lightning
arrestor on each side, allowing 0.25dBloss for
each connector, and 1dBfor each pigtail. Since
all of the units are in dB, we can use simple addition and
subtraction:
- Site A:
- Radio - Pigtail - Arrestor - Connector - Cable - Connector + Antenna
- 15 - 1 - 1.25 - .25 - .22 - .25 + 12 = 24.03
- Plus Site B:
- 15 - 1 - 1.25 - .25 - .22 - .25 + 15 = 27.03
- Equals: 51.06 total gain
Now subtract the path loss from that total:
- 51.06 -118 = -66.94
This is the perceived signal level at either end of the link:
-66.94dBm. But is it enough for communications? Table 6-2 gives the receiver sensitivity specifications
for several radio cards.
Table 6-2. Receiver sensitivity matrix for some common radio cards
|
Orinoco (Silver or Gold) |
-82 dBm |
-87 dBm |
-91 dBm |
-94 dBm |
|
Cisco 340 |
-83 dBm |
-87 dBm |
-88 dBm |
-90 dBm |
|
Cisco 350 |
-85 dBm |
-89 dBm |
-91 dBm |
-94 dBm |
|
D-Link DWL-520 |
-80 dBm |
-83 dBm |
-86 dBm |
-89 dBm |
|
EnGenius / Senao 2511CD |
-89 dBm |
-91 dBm |
-93 dBm |
-95 dBm |
|
Linksys WPC11 |
-76 dBm |
-80 dBm |
-80 dBm |
-80 dBm |
|
Netgear MA101 |
-84 dBm |
-87 dBm |
-89 dBm |
-91 dBm |
The Orinoco Silver card has a receive sensitivity of -82 dBm @
11Mbps. As we are generating a signal of -66.94dBm, we have a
"fudge factor" of 15.06db (82 -
66.94 = 15.06). Theoretically, this will usually work at 11Mbps (in
good weather), and should have no problem syncing at 5.5Mbps. The
radios should automatically sense when the link becomes unreliable
and resync at the fastest possible speed.
Typically, a margin of error of 20db or so is safe enough to account
for normal intervening weather patterns. Using more powerful and
sensitive radios (such as the Cisco 350 at 20dBm, or the
EnGenius/Senao at 23dBm) and higher-gain antennas would help shore up
this connection to 11Mbps. Using higher-gain cards in conjunction
with high-gain dishes makes it possible to extend your range well
beyond 25 miles, but be sure to observe the FCC limits on power and
gain. See Tim Pozar's paper in Appendix A for more
information.
Online tools such as Green Bay Professional Packet
Radio's Wireless Network Link Analysis can give you
a good ballpark estimate on what it will take to make your link
possible; simply fill in a couple of blanks on a web form. Check out
their excellent resources at http://www.qsl.net/n9zia/wireless.
If you need radio sensitivity data
for a card not included in Table 6-2, look through
the documentation provided by your manufacturer. You could also try
the table available at http://www.freenetworks.org/moin/index.cgi/ReceiveSensitivity.
6.2.4 Power Amps and the Law
Frequently, when people think of extending range, they immediately
think of using amplifiers (I suppose it's only
natural; you have an amplifier for your home stereo, why not an
amplifier for your network?). Good amplifiers that work in the
microwave range have several nontrivial technical obstacles to
overcome:
-
Amplifiers blindly amplify everything that they're
tuned to, both signal and noise. A greater signal
won't help you if the noise in the band is increased
as well, as the signal will just get lost (like shouting to your
friends at a concert).
-
802.11b radio communications are half duplex: they send or receive, but
never both at the same time. An amplifier attached to the antenna
line must automatically detect when the radio is sending and quickly
switch the amp on. When it's finished, it has to
quickly cut it off again. Any latency in this switching could
actually impair communication or, worse, damage the radio card. Such
amplifiers exist, but are not cheap.
-
Amplifiers can help a bit on receive by adding some pre-emphasis, but
they are really meant for transmitting. This means that if you have
an amp only on one end of a link, the other end may be able to hear
you, but you may not hear them. To make amps effective,
you'll need them on both ends of the link.
-
All amplifiers require power to operate. This means adding a DC
injector to your antenna feed line or using an external adapter. This
further drives up the cost of your node and makes yet another device
that you have to provide power for.
As a result, amplifiers that work well with 802.11b gear
are expensive ($400+) and difficult to come by. But do you really
need them? Using standard gear and high-gain antennas, you can extend
a point-to-point link to 25+ miles, without amplifiers. Your money is
probably better spent on high- quality directional antennas and
cabling, and possibly even adding another node for further
saturation.
As far as U.S. federal law is concerned, you'll have
to read Part 15 and draw your own conclusions. Hire a lawyer if
you're really paranoid. BAWUG member Tim
Pozar has put
together an excellent paper on interpreting the Part 15 rules; see
Appendix A for his excellent work.
In short, the amount of power you can legally run (and the gain of
your antenna) is limited, depending on how you use it. Fixed
point-to-point links are allotted the most power, while
omnidirectional point-to-multipoint configurations are the most
restricted. Unless you use amplifiers, you aren't
likely to run into the FCC limits, because standard client cards
don't put out nearly enough power. But
don't just take my word for it, because I am not a
lawyer. (Besides, the person responsible for making sure that your
rig is legal is you, the operator!)
I do believe that the intent behind the rules is to limit
interference in the band, which is something we should all fight to
make happen. Noise is everyone's enemy. To that end,
try to use the least amount of power necessary to keep your link
going, and use the most directional antennas that will work for your
application. Be a good neighbor, and you may find that you
enjoy your neighborhood more.