Is there any way I can get in contact with you? I'm wanting to bring a wisp system to our community. We've given up on any one bringing internet here. I'd love to take a tour of the a function WISP system. I don't mind to travel a long distance.
is it possible to achieve 1000mbps connection with these? I really want gig internet but I dont want to waste money if the technology is not there to support it. I have clear line of sight to the internet source
One of my first projects with a manager that enabled us to start upgrading equipment was replacing a 200Mb/s bridge with a 1.2Gb. Not only through the rollout, but then some issues of a roofing company moving them severing the connection was an extremely gratifying experience. Not to mention the staff in that remote building were much happier after the replacement finished.
Yep, I've been using PtP to service "across the street" type bridges for some time now. Furthest I've had to bridge professionally was just a few KM though.
I don't think they will ever make proper entreprise router or stuff like 5G, that's only shit huawei or so do. UI is more like a prosumer kind of thing
I once used a long-range WiFi system for hosting a LAN party. Back in the day where 4G wasn't a thing yet, and we needed broadband in a random shed in the middle of nowhere. Aah good times. 2007 or so I think. Battlefront II and Rainbow Six.
@@davidbetancourt4028 Well our DSL was already sitting at 30 ms or so, I think we measured 35-40. It wasn't really meant to online-game anyway, we had a server and hosted our own games. 14 people. Good times.
Kirk, here's a potential topic or idea for a video. I'm very, very interested in WiFi 6E. I'd love to see how it help out in today's crazy households or apartments with tons of existing 5GHz coverage. @ my house, we have usually 30-45 devices connected at any time, over half being on 5GHz. We also see neighbors 5GHz which I know will interfere / cause drops in performance. My thought is that 6Ghz will make interference w/neighbors less significant plus better isolation for units _(because of attenuation @ higher frequencies)._ Also, wanted to know how 6GHz would work in a typical house. How bad does it degrade over distance and standard house building material. Haven't found a good article or video that truly covers this. Looking to upgrade to a 6E router _(or routers w/mesh)_ + endpoints. Getting an Intel 6E AX210 laptop Module is actually pretty cheap, like $30 bucks.
@@adoredtv Just a thought, but you could possibly reach out to Eric Sauvageau for ideas on this. He's been developing the custom firmware Asuswrt-Merlin for Asus routers. He's at "@RMerlinDev " on twitter. Maybe it's a bad idea, but a thought on my part. I figure a how-to or exploration on effectiveness would be something these companies would love to do, because there's no way they don't just obliterate 5GHz.
I know I'd prefer two nodes for mesh in my ~2k sq ft house _(placed opposite corners/sides of the building),_ but I'm not ready to pay $1000 for that luxury.
I fantasized about connecting 2400 Baud modem to short wave radio system that truckers used back in day. This was my idea in the 1993-1995 range. I wanted to have connection with my friend who lived about 3km away. I don't know if it would have been possible, even 300 Baud would have been worth it as it we could have used it for chatting.
A few of my WISP buddies have been using these for around 5 miles with a 5GHz backup. Wish Mikrotik's version had the upper band and more power, I much prefer Mikrotik to UBNT. I still have UBNT hardware in use but I don't have many shots where I can use 60GHz, my shortest point to point shots are 5 miles, most are ~15 miles.
Ive used them for a long time, usually great. Always ground your antennas and use FTP with a drain wire and metal connectors. Bonus points if you test your cable with a proper qualifier and verify your shielding. Mikrotik also has great 60ghz products but they aren’t as user friendly, but more powerful interface. Cheers
noice. always wished a had a good excuse to set one of these up. ran a point-to-point nanostation link between 2 apartments and couldn't have been happier for the tiny price paid.
It works well for offsite backup so you don't blow your data cap (if you're unfortunate enough to be saddled with one). Otherwise, network sharing with a buddy is another good reason (I'll let you extrapolate what that suggests). ;)
Thanks for the informative video. One thing struck me though. Where is the lightning arrester? There doesn't appear any mention of the device on the their website as well. Running a cable from an elevated position, then inside a home without a ground path for lightning which is also bonded to an electrical service path to ground/earth, seems like a disaster waiting to happen. Also, if you haven't already, you ought to use some mastic on those holes through your roof. That aside, thanks for the video. I learned something new from it, which is always appreciated. :-)
I had it propped on a tripod, so no mastic needed. If it was a permanent install, I'd have bonded it to the solar panel array since that's already properly grounded. Thanks for pointing that out though! I was debating including it in the video, but then we run into local building codes and I didn't want to muddy the content too much.
Yeah, I slipped by saying "tilt" as in "tilt back" rather than "elevation" (which I corrected with overlay text btw). I did say azimuth, but since that's too technical for most, I clarified right after. ;)
I have not, as the setup in the video was a temporary demo. The antennas in actual production use are only ~90ft apart, so get the full bandwidth with no interference problems, so nothing special.
Thanks .. I want to replace my old nanostations with these. Can you show configurations for setting up vlans. I have mutiple vlans that I want to pass through wireless bridge. My current setup one of my Rocket M2 (access point mode) was simply enable WSD mode and connected it(LAN port of the POE injector) to trunk port of cisco 2960. On the other end .. I setup nanostation M2 and also enabled WSD and connected to trunk port of csico SG250. The phone + data vlans get separated using this simple setup and worked without issue. Several vlans including phone were already configured on both managed cisco switches.
Hello, thanks for this nice report installation, I ve got microtik 60 ghz with 3.6 km but when it rains not a continual signal, when it is snowing or raining the quality is ok and stable with the ping ? Thx for your answer for. Regards from France Patrice
I assume it can also be used to run internal networks, right? So if I wanted to share files with my friend what would be the theoretical maximum speed achievable? Because it shows 1.75 Gbps as total bandwidth (from theoretical 1.8 Gbps, but on short ranges it might actually be slightly more). So perhaps there are other wireless solutions that allow for greater speeds? Obviously you didn't need anymore, and you were quite close to maximum in duplex test (though maybe duplex test in ideal conditions would be closer to 3.5 or 3.6 Gbps?) I'd probably have to run the frequency channel width and maybe compute from that. IDK - it's been years since I even done similar things.
we are a startup broadband ISP. there is a place where we can not run fiber to the customer so we are planning to deploy 1 airfiber60LR at our office and 1 at the customer rooftop. as a result the airfibers will be on the public internet site and we can not put public IPs on the radio systems for management. we are planning to manage them when needed via directly connecting our laptop to the device. so my question is are airfiber60LRs are going to work without entering any IPs on those radio systems ?
Probably not going to get that throughput, but the oldest setup like this I saw was about nearly 20+ years ago, using 2 satellite dishes (each pointing at the ground but aimed directly at each other, think about how dishes are normally pointing up at the sky by typically being mounted nearly vertically - it looks odd, like the work of an idiot when you see them pointing at the ground, but they worked great), using two wifi routers strapped to where the LNB would normally go!
How difficult was the aiming process? How long did it take to get a good stable link? Did you use any tools to aid in aiming it? I've had difficulty aiming two gigabeam plus 60ghz from half that distance, even in clear line of sight.
I'm about to install a pair of these. It comes with an aiming device that can mount in one of 3 spots on the dish. It's like a pinhole you look through to aim.
Doesn't a device like this only work if you have access to and from 2 different locations? Most of the public will only have their home location so is this designed more for businesses that have multiple buildings:? I guess I don't fully understand. Because I originally thought it worked similarly a home router. is the purpose is to send broadband Internet from a good access location to a bad access location they also can have a good connection. I guess that's great if you negotiate with someone who lives a distance away and negotiates to share signal with you
The primary purpose of these antennas would be point-to-point bridging. Ubiquiti sells variants that provide local WiFi signals like traditional Access Points, but also have the bridge, so you can easily point-to-multipoint blanket a park or other public space. Ubiquiti does sell home access point WiFi equipment as well, not to mention their business offerings, so you're not wrong in that. You're also spot-on for the broadband internet thought too, so if a neighbor or friend some distance away can get fiber internet and you're stuck with crappy DSL or data-capped cable, you could bridge over to them. You'll want to be careful in this though, as most/all ISPs have a no-sublet clause in their service contract.
From having similar device around 15 years ago, I'd say that ideally you need line of sight between 2 full dishes, not just the "horn". And obviously no trees or anything like that in the way - even a leafless branch of a tree in Winter might substantially reduce quality of Network. Though it obviously depends on the distance. 11 GHz platforms probably suffer less, but while I had this Internet for years, every 2-3 years we had to move antenna up, because there was a tree in the way and it kept growing up. Rain, Snow and such made it harsh to operate. And storms - oh boy. Distance was around 5.6 km in straight line, so we technically were above the maximum distance for that dish (3 km guaranteed range). And given that we were paying about 15$ a month, the ISP didn't want to supply us with better equipment (even though we were paying for some of it - like leasing an antenna, but the rest was on them). To the point that when we stopped using this Internet, because fiber optics was drawn nearby (couple hundred meters from hour house), our former ISP didn't even take single piece of equipment back. Probably worthless now to them. But they said that to supply us with 1.5 Mbit/s download and 0.3 Mbit/s upload, they had to run their antenna at like 60 Mbit/s. Our new ISP asked us to pay for the Pole for fiber optics (around 70$) and for router (90$?), because old one supported only 100 Mbit/s. And we now have 300/30 Mbit/s (I think) connection. For which we pay around 20$ a month.
Kirk or Alex, can you have Jim return to producing tech and AMD videos but prohibit Jim from reading the comment sections of Reddit or his youtube channel? You, Alex, and others such as Moore'sLawIsDead can just voiceover and/or explain Jim's position for us?
I work for the Cable company And I hate Vids like this.. People see this shyt and really believe that they can do it or there's some trick to getting faster Wifi for free.. I deal with these Idiots that down load a game to Xbox or steam and they see the Low MB's per second and think that's the actual down load speed LOL and SMH.... That is really your right speed to the in most cases a hard Drive that, they are looking at at the bottom of the screen on Steam while the game is downloading or being written to the drive.. And I get Trouble calls for this kind of crap once a day.. Cause some loser at his moms houses is Mining and gaming while costing his mom more money in power than he actually makes in monopoly money/Bitcoin.. Some guy the other day asked me if I had some kind of account so he could tip me in Bit coin.. Oh and he built his PC and it has an AMD mother board and He somehow has an Intel chip in it.. I was done with the tech talk after he said that.. He said he had an AMD Motherboard, I said cool I'm on AMD, what chip and motherboard do you have?? He reply's think it's an Intel chip.. And his story changed to someone else built it.. I was like yeah you can't run an Intel chip on an AMD Motherboard and then he didn't know what Kind of GPU he had, weather AMD or Nvidia either.. Now I know it sound's like I'm kicking the guy's back in. But bought an IBUYpower PC and He was going say he built it.. Anyway I fixed his WIFI and gave him some tips and advice.. But My point is most people don't even Understand how the Internet really works and then they want to argue with you it's crazy!! It's always the Wifi that is going out, Not the shyt App There on that freezes up and kick's them off, Oh and this Bitcoin Crap is messing Shyt up Bad for the real working man, I can't a GPU with cash in hand at MSRP..
I know I'm sorry I just went on a Rant, It was a Bad day.. But I walk into home's where people have these snake Oil home Net work config's Because they think that it will make their Internet go further or they will get more Bad width and speed, Out of some of these gadgets that are being sold on Amazon and eBay..
@@marcasswellbmd6922 Right. Most WiFi extenders are pretty terrible for improving home wireless. This is a wireless bridge device though, so meant for bridging wired networks between two buildings (like out to a remote garage on your property, or even your buddy's garage a few miles away)
Rain, myst and snow will completely block the 60GHz signal, this is absolutly not for outdoor setup. plus UBNT desivices sucks, use Mikrotik, better options and waaaaaay better price
Shortest range and lower-end components limited the PPS to 130k instead of the 1-2mil of the more-expensive airFiber options. I mentioned both in the vid.
as a Field Tech that works for a WISP and has actually deployed a few of these, I just wanna say "Just buy it. You wont regret it!"
Right!
I run their AP (lite) in my home. They're great stuff. I considered Meraki but here in my country Ubiquiti was just easier to pick up for purchase.
Is there any way I can get in contact with you? I'm wanting to bring a wisp system to our community. We've given up on any one bringing internet here. I'd love to take a tour of the a function WISP system. I don't mind to travel a long distance.
is it possible to achieve 1000mbps connection with these? I really want gig internet but I dont want to waste money if the technology is not there to support it. I have clear line of sight to the internet source
@@joea.6017 Yes, they should definitely be able to reach 1gbps. But your mileage may vary if distance is over 5 miles.
I had a friend move into an apartment across the street from me. I had them buy the Ubiquiti hardware, and set it up; it worked great.
One of my first projects with a manager that enabled us to start upgrading equipment was replacing a 200Mb/s bridge with a 1.2Gb. Not only through the rollout, but then some issues of a roofing company moving them severing the connection was an extremely gratifying experience. Not to mention the staff in that remote building were much happier after the replacement finished.
Yep, I've been using PtP to service "across the street" type bridges for some time now. Furthest I've had to bridge professionally was just a few KM though.
Exactly what I was looking for!
ubiquiti's pricing + friendly-ish UI is really an industry changer. Cant wait for them to have some LTE/5G hardwares
Too bad their router only support L2TP VPN, otherwise i would have bought them.
I don't think they will ever make proper entreprise router or stuff like 5G, that's only shit huawei or so do. UI is more like a prosumer kind of thing
Excellent video... been looking for a breakdown on the AF60-LR-US for a while now, and there hasn't been much on YT. Thank you!
Great video. Yours was the only one that I could find with a real life demo. Thank you
I once used a long-range WiFi system for hosting a LAN party. Back in the day where 4G wasn't a thing yet, and we needed broadband in a random shed in the middle of nowhere.
Aah good times. 2007 or so I think. Battlefront II and Rainbow Six.
That's pretty awesome. Props for the idea back then. I suppose latency was pretty good since it was just a directional point-to-point signal?
@@davidbetancourt4028 Well our DSL was already sitting at 30 ms or so, I think we measured 35-40. It wasn't really meant to online-game anyway, we had a server and hosted our own games. 14 people. Good times.
@@GeoStreber That's awesome. Thanks for sharing.
Kirk, here's a potential topic or idea for a video. I'm very, very interested in WiFi 6E. I'd love to see how it help out in today's crazy households or apartments with tons of existing 5GHz coverage.
@ my house, we have usually 30-45 devices connected at any time, over half being on 5GHz. We also see neighbors 5GHz which I know will interfere / cause drops in performance. My thought is that 6Ghz will make interference w/neighbors less significant plus better isolation for units _(because of attenuation @ higher frequencies)._
Also, wanted to know how 6GHz would work in a typical house. How bad does it degrade over distance and standard house building material. Haven't found a good article or video that truly covers this.
Looking to upgrade to a 6E router _(or routers w/mesh)_ + endpoints. Getting an Intel 6E AX210 laptop Module is actually pretty cheap, like $30 bucks.
If we can find a device manufacturer that would like to sample us some equipment, I'd be open to the idea.
@@adoredtv Just a thought, but you could possibly reach out to Eric Sauvageau for ideas on this. He's been developing the custom firmware Asuswrt-Merlin for Asus routers. He's at "@RMerlinDev
" on twitter.
Maybe it's a bad idea, but a thought on my part. I figure a how-to or exploration on effectiveness would be something these companies would love to do, because there's no way they don't just obliterate 5GHz.
I know I'd prefer two nodes for mesh in my ~2k sq ft house _(placed opposite corners/sides of the building),_ but I'm not ready to pay $1000 for that luxury.
I fantasized about connecting 2400 Baud modem to short wave radio system that truckers used back in day. This was my idea in the 1993-1995 range. I wanted to have connection with my friend who lived about 3km away. I don't know if it would have been possible, even 300 Baud would have been worth it as it we could have used it for chatting.
I was contemplating something similar with packet radio so I'd have mobile internet over HAM radio :D
A few of my WISP buddies have been using these for around 5 miles with a 5GHz backup.
Wish Mikrotik's version had the upper band and more power, I much prefer Mikrotik to UBNT.
I still have UBNT hardware in use but I don't have many shots where I can use 60GHz, my shortest point to point shots are 5 miles, most are ~15 miles.
Ive used them for a long time, usually great. Always ground your antennas and use FTP with a drain wire and metal connectors.
Bonus points if you test your cable with a proper qualifier and verify your shielding.
Mikrotik also has great 60ghz products but they aren’t as user friendly, but more powerful interface.
Cheers
The antenna behind me on the roof was a Mikrotik ;)
As a lay person I still get PTSD flashbacks from the first time seeing the web interface of RouterOS 😵
I have a location where there are trees in the way, I am going to try 802.11ah/HaLow this summer when/if I get there.
.99 ms 😲well that is something I wasn't expecting out of this video review
Even their 5Ghz antennas have been 1-3ms for me too (depending on interference at the time). :)
Hi, thanks for the video. What if no LOfS??
4km away trees and building. Thank you
noice. always wished a had a good excuse to set one of these up. ran a point-to-point nanostation link between 2 apartments and couldn't have been happier for the tiny price paid.
It works well for offsite backup so you don't blow your data cap (if you're unfortunate enough to be saddled with one). Otherwise, network sharing with a buddy is another good reason (I'll let you extrapolate what that suggests). ;)
@@adoredtv You are a good friend ❤ haha
Thanks for the informative video. One thing struck me though. Where is the lightning arrester? There doesn't appear any mention of the device on the their website as well. Running a cable from an elevated position, then inside a home without a ground path for lightning which is also bonded to an electrical service path to ground/earth, seems like a disaster waiting to happen. Also, if you haven't already, you ought to use some mastic on those holes through your roof. That aside, thanks for the video. I learned something new from it, which is always appreciated. :-)
I had it propped on a tripod, so no mastic needed. If it was a permanent install, I'd have bonded it to the solar panel array since that's already properly grounded. Thanks for pointing that out though! I was debating including it in the video, but then we run into local building codes and I didn't want to muddy the content too much.
if you made same depth analysis on antennas as new tech this would become my new favorite channel. 2 bad this not that common interest :/
Depends if Ubiquity (or Mikrotik) wants to support us doing more I guess. :)
very nice video, good job man 👍
Glad you liked it!
Can I have 2 or more aimed at main building source air fiber 60 to extend my network to 2 separate buildings within 4 blocks away?
At $399 each, it's very affordable. Great video!
Azimuth and Elevation all I have to say about that. Cool product.
Yeah, I slipped by saying "tilt" as in "tilt back" rather than "elevation" (which I corrected with overlay text btw). I did say azimuth, but since that's too technical for most, I clarified right after. ;)
Did you ever do an update video on the setup?
I have not, as the setup in the video was a temporary demo. The antennas in actual production use are only ~90ft apart, so get the full bandwidth with no interference problems, so nothing special.
Thanks .. I want to replace my old nanostations with these. Can you show configurations for setting up vlans. I have mutiple vlans that I want to pass through wireless bridge. My current setup one of my Rocket M2 (access point mode) was simply enable WSD mode and connected it(LAN port of the POE injector) to trunk port of cisco 2960. On the other end .. I setup nanostation M2 and also enabled WSD and connected to trunk port of csico SG250. The phone + data vlans get separated using this simple setup and worked without issue. Several vlans including phone were already configured on both managed cisco switches.
these antennas shouldn't strip the vlan info and will just send the full packet, vlan header and all.
great demo thank you very much!
Hello, thanks for this nice report installation, I ve got microtik 60 ghz with 3.6 km but when it rains not a continual signal, when it is snowing or raining the quality is ok and stable with the ping ? Thx for your answer for. Regards from France Patrice
I assume it can also be used to run internal networks, right? So if I wanted to share files with my friend what would be the theoretical maximum speed achievable? Because it shows 1.75 Gbps as total bandwidth (from theoretical 1.8 Gbps, but on short ranges it might actually be slightly more). So perhaps there are other wireless solutions that allow for greater speeds? Obviously you didn't need anymore, and you were quite close to maximum in duplex test (though maybe duplex test in ideal conditions would be closer to 3.5 or 3.6 Gbps?)
I'd probably have to run the frequency channel width and maybe compute from that. IDK - it's been years since I even done similar things.
First a FreeNAS with ZFS, now ptp long-range Wi-Fi. What's next, 40G Fibre-to-the-Home (FTTH)? :D
I'm trying to get my local ISP to do FTTH. They started digging a couple years ago, but had to stop for the pandemic after breaking for the winter.
we are a startup broadband ISP. there is a place where we can not run fiber to the customer so we are planning to deploy 1 airfiber60LR at our office and 1 at the customer rooftop. as a result the airfibers will be on the public internet site and we can not put public IPs on the radio systems for management. we are planning to manage them when needed via directly connecting our laptop to the device.
so my question is are airfiber60LRs are going to work without entering any IPs on those radio systems ?
Probably not going to get that throughput, but the oldest setup like this I saw was about nearly 20+ years ago, using 2 satellite dishes (each pointing at the ground but aimed directly at each other, think about how dishes are normally pointing up at the sky by typically being mounted nearly vertically - it looks odd, like the work of an idiot when you see them pointing at the ground, but they worked great), using two wifi routers strapped to where the LNB would normally go!
Giga beaml lm or Power beam Ac 5ghz 620mm for ptp ?
I need the same speeds but for a point to multi point
any recommendations
How does it perform in rain?
5km won't link to each other, please help me how to configure it, thank you.
Jeez! The comments section is over run with crypto spam bots.
Trying to keep up :)
How difficult was the aiming process? How long did it take to get a good stable link? Did you use any tools to aid in aiming it? I've had difficulty aiming two gigabeam plus 60ghz from half that distance, even in clear line of sight.
I'm about to install a pair of these. It comes with an aiming device that can mount in one of 3 spots on the dish. It's like a pinhole you look through to aim.
Doesn't a device like this only work if you have access to and from 2 different locations? Most of the public will only have their home location so is this designed more for businesses that have multiple buildings:? I guess I don't fully understand. Because I originally thought it worked similarly a home router. is the purpose is to send broadband Internet from a good access location to a bad access location they also can have a good connection. I guess that's great if you negotiate with someone who lives a distance away and negotiates to share signal with you
The primary purpose of these antennas would be point-to-point bridging. Ubiquiti sells variants that provide local WiFi signals like traditional Access Points, but also have the bridge, so you can easily point-to-multipoint blanket a park or other public space. Ubiquiti does sell home access point WiFi equipment as well, not to mention their business offerings, so you're not wrong in that. You're also spot-on for the broadband internet thought too, so if a neighbor or friend some distance away can get fiber internet and you're stuck with crappy DSL or data-capped cable, you could bridge over to them. You'll want to be careful in this though, as most/all ISPs have a no-sublet clause in their service contract.
Can the device get an ip address over the wan? One of them will be connecting to a bridge at one end?
Thank you!
Excellent Video! TYVM. Liked and Sub. done!
What will result in 8 km
is it worth if the client side have 60 pc/laptop?
exeptional units . my personal best is 18 km . isp design does not like this xD . but work greate in my are ( low to no rain out of season )
Wie hoch ist der Stromverbrauch der Antenne in Watt? Laut Hersteller 18W. Hat jemand reale Werte/Ergebnisse?
On the table (not in actual use) the base antenna was 8.4W and the client antenna was 7.8W. These would likely go up under load though.
Man his voice is coming along!
J/k, great video
Thanks
What's the tower height needed for this?
From having similar device around 15 years ago, I'd say that ideally you need line of sight between 2 full dishes, not just the "horn". And obviously no trees or anything like that in the way - even a leafless branch of a tree in Winter might substantially reduce quality of Network. Though it obviously depends on the distance. 11 GHz platforms probably suffer less, but while I had this Internet for years, every 2-3 years we had to move antenna up, because there was a tree in the way and it kept growing up. Rain, Snow and such made it harsh to operate. And storms - oh boy. Distance was around 5.6 km in straight line, so we technically were above the maximum distance for that dish (3 km guaranteed range). And given that we were paying about 15$ a month, the ISP didn't want to supply us with better equipment (even though we were paying for some of it - like leasing an antenna, but the rest was on them). To the point that when we stopped using this Internet, because fiber optics was drawn nearby (couple hundred meters from hour house), our former ISP didn't even take single piece of equipment back. Probably worthless now to them. But they said that to supply us with 1.5 Mbit/s download and 0.3 Mbit/s upload, they had to run their antenna at like 60 Mbit/s.
Our new ISP asked us to pay for the Pole for fiber optics (around 70$) and for router (90$?), because old one supported only 100 Mbit/s. And we now have 300/30 Mbit/s (I think) connection. For which we pay around 20$ a month.
Dude, I really think that was a Fan 😂
:P
Is this a sponsored video?
Nope. These antennas were purchased.
@@adoredtv cool I found it pretty interesting. I love how much were advancing in the consumer space for wireless solutions.
Someone should make a tutorial. How to make with old fans.
Kirk or Alex, can you have Jim return to producing tech and AMD videos but prohibit Jim from reading the comment sections of Reddit or his youtube channel? You, Alex, and others such as Moore'sLawIsDead can just voiceover and/or explain Jim's position for us?
That is something entirely up to Jim.
@@adoredtv I appreciate all of your efforts. Thank you for all you do for this channel.
عاشت ايدك
zip tie.. wow..
I work for the Cable company And I hate Vids like this.. People see this shyt and really believe that they can do it or there's some trick to getting faster Wifi for free.. I deal with these Idiots that down load a game to Xbox or steam and they see the Low MB's per second and think that's the actual down load speed LOL and SMH.... That is really your right speed to the in most cases a hard Drive that, they are looking at at the bottom of the screen on Steam while the game is downloading or being written to the drive.. And I get Trouble calls for this kind of crap once a day.. Cause some loser at his moms houses is Mining and gaming while costing his mom more money in power than he actually makes in monopoly money/Bitcoin.. Some guy the other day asked me if I had some kind of account so he could tip me in Bit coin.. Oh and he built his PC and it has an AMD mother board and He somehow has an Intel chip in it.. I was done with the tech talk after he said that.. He said he had an AMD Motherboard, I said cool I'm on AMD, what chip and motherboard do you have?? He reply's think it's an Intel chip.. And his story changed to someone else built it.. I was like yeah you can't run an Intel chip on an AMD Motherboard and then he didn't know what Kind of GPU he had, weather AMD or Nvidia either.. Now I know it sound's like I'm kicking the guy's back in. But bought an IBUYpower PC and He was going say he built it.. Anyway I fixed his WIFI and gave him some tips and advice.. But My point is most people don't even Understand how the Internet really works and then they want to argue with you it's crazy!! It's always the Wifi that is going out, Not the shyt App There on that freezes up and kick's them off, Oh and this Bitcoin Crap is messing Shyt up Bad for the real working man, I can't a GPU with cash in hand at MSRP..
Not sure what you mean by "vids like this" as none what you said involves wireless bridging....
I know I'm sorry I just went on a Rant, It was a Bad day.. But I walk into home's where people have these snake Oil home Net work config's Because they think that it will make their Internet go further or they will get more Bad width and speed, Out of some of these gadgets that are being sold on Amazon and eBay..
@@marcasswellbmd6922 Right. Most WiFi extenders are pretty terrible for improving home wireless. This is a wireless bridge device though, so meant for bridging wired networks between two buildings (like out to a remote garage on your property, or even your buddy's garage a few miles away)
Rain, myst and snow will completely block the 60GHz signal, this is absolutly not for outdoor setup. plus UBNT desivices sucks, use Mikrotik, better options and waaaaaay better price
The antenna behind me on my roof to the left of camera is a Mikrotik ;)
How in earth those Myst block WiFi?
That's a real mistery to me!
5:29 shower head
Shower Horn ;)
Nobody gonna question why the 60GHz is the cheapest option?
Shortest range and lower-end components limited the PPS to 130k instead of the 1-2mil of the more-expensive airFiber options. I mentioned both in the vid.