airMAX Gigabeam Plus - 1.5Gbit wireless connection

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 153

  • @CaseyDiers
    @CaseyDiers ปีที่แล้ว +33

    You only got 100Mbps before because of your cable issue. You had 250Mbps available over the air between the devices but your cable was only allowing the devices to negotiate at 100M, so that was the bottleneck in your 'before' speed test.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Yeah, I realised this too. Thanks for noticing Casey 😁

  • @andrewmccallum5699
    @andrewmccallum5699 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thanks Lars, great video on the AirMax setup you have, (I've done a few smaller ones with the older models a while back), think the newer and faster ones you have look really cool, nice to see it in action (firmware updates were always an issue, so would have to unbox prep and update at the main connection hub, then take them out to the relay locations.... defo cool!

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thanks Andrew. I've done a bunch of the older generation NanoStation too, and they are super realiable, but certainly not as fast as modern networks can be. I don't mind the fw updates as that usually means the product isn't dead 😁

    • @andrewmccallum5699
      @andrewmccallum5699 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech true, think the older kit just works (and you know yourself the pro's and cons...) I'm happy to be honest when the network is online, you're lucky to have the chance to work and use your setup, really impressed with how you've got it working, thanks again!

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@andrewmccallum5699 It is definitely one of those things that "just needs to work" and I don't have to think about it. This latest upgrade really makes a difference to my workflow too. Thanks for watching Andrew.

  • @Mitchvr32
    @Mitchvr32 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great video, glad someone doing a p2p link actually talked about the fresnel, its something so many people overlook and dont understand.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thanks mate. I saw the menu when I first started using NanoStations and it looked important so I figured I'd learn. And it was important!! 🤓

    • @Mitchvr32
      @Mitchvr32 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech I have installed many links over the years, and it's amazing how much effect it can have.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Mitchvr32 I can believe that. And the longer the distance the greater the curve I'd imagine.

  • @Vrtigo1
    @Vrtigo1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I think at 20:30 it's actually showing you the LAN link speed for each radio at the top (1 Gb/s connection to your switch), not the link speed between the radios.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, you are totally right. The link speed is just below under "capacity". Thanks mate 😊

  • @TheElleDj
    @TheElleDj ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I have a pair of GigaBeam (not the Plus version) running rock solid at 190 meters. Link capacity is always 1600 mbps in each direction, unless there is some seriously heavy rain is falling, then they might switch to the built-in 5 GHz failover radio, which still gives me ~4-500 mbps of actual throughput. My signal is usually -60 to -64 dB at this distance. They are great little devices!

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Nice! That is good to hear. Also, I was not aware that there is a 5Ghz failover? How do you see that?

    • @TheElleDj
      @TheElleDj ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech AFAIK the plus version has longer 60 ghz range but lacks the failover radio, the non-plus has both. There are additional signal bars for 5 ghz and a little indicator that says what frequency each side is using for data transfer. Switching from 60 to 5 ghz and viceversa is transparent to the user. Couldn’t be happier, only real downside imho is the passive 24v POE, I ended up buying Ubiquiti’s adapter to power the antenna from a standard POE switch

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TheElleDj Ah yes, you are correct. Interesting. I am using the included PoE adaptor, which works well with the USW-24-POE. I wonder why they didn't put the 5Ghz failover in the Plus...

  • @KeranMcKenzie
    @KeranMcKenzie ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I've been waiting for this one - I've been contemplating updating to GigaBeam (I don't think I need the plus model) .... thanks for sharing this buddy!

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I probably don't need the Plus model either, but MOAR GIGABITS!! And you're welcome. Thanks for your support at always my friend.

    • @KeranMcKenzie
      @KeranMcKenzie ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech Well you know .. I mean you at least have a 'legit' usage of that ... I don't even have a NAS let alone need to transfer large files - so maybe I should actually just be happy with what I have and save the $$ :D

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KeranMcKenzie Happiness is relative. More speed makes you more happy. Definitely.

  • @SIKOLOBULU-gr2oh
    @SIKOLOBULU-gr2oh 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks for the vidéo. I think i’ll be installing one Bridge in my remote place in my village here in the southern part of Cameroon using Starlink as the the internet connection, and I’ll let you know how it worked out. I’m also a user that needs such a bridge, because I do transfers of files from my devices to Western Digital storage hard drives.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You are most welcome, thanks for watching :)
      The range is up to about 1km, so you can get a fair range on it. I'd love to hear how it works out for you too ☺

  • @johnabriggs6044
    @johnabriggs6044 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Nice upgrade Lars. Hopeful it keep working as well as your video setup

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      If they are anything like the NanoStations I will never have to touch them again. They will just keep working 👌

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      An update for you John. It is still 100% uptime and working. I haven't touched it since the video 😊

  • @Aussie_Ham_Radio
    @Aussie_Ham_Radio ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Hey Lars, good explanation video. If I can make a suggestion in your future upgrades that you make the House pole more solid. I noticed the pole was moving around in the wind. This will improve your signal strength on windy days. The office setup to the pole looks good and solid. The fine adjustments will be changed by the house pole moving around, and if you guy the pole or a stronger solid pole your signal shouldn't move. regards Glen VK2HTV

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You are absolutely right. It's probably close enough between the devices that it won't make much of a difference, but I could attach a couple of wires to either side to make it more stable. Thanks mate 👌

  • @jeanmorin4580
    @jeanmorin4580 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Not trolling, and I'm sure you thought about it but genuine question : 44m? Why not run a single mode fiber to the other building for faster speeds and weather immunity? I understand not running copper to prevent voltage differential between both buildings. I am an Ubiquiti fan but always prefer wired over wireless.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Oh, I am with you on that one Jean. However, albeit a short distance, it is quite complicated to actually dig the trench, go under two buildings, run the cable, and attach it all. The wireless link is magnitudes cheaper and more simple. If I do need more than 1.5Gbit, fiber might be the next step up.
      I am not disagreeing though 😁

    • @LifeIsDigitalUK
      @LifeIsDigitalUK 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Would love to see the first transfer repeated with working gigabit rather than 100Mb, I'm guessing it would be about 2.5 times faster than your experiment. I just got some loco devices and working out the kinks, like how to power them as I had hoped the unifi flex would help me out, but it appears I also need a poe to passive poe convertor

  • @justindifabio482
    @justindifabio482 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi Lars awesome video!! I hope you're doing great! Something that can be a bit confusing is UISP measures throughput using Mbps (megabit per second), when Windows measures throughput using MBps (big B, megabyte per second).
    There are 8 bits in one byte, so when the file transfer over the Gigabeam link peaked at 103MBps during the file transfer, the link peaked at 824Mbps! That's CRAZY fast over wireless!!! Thats like fiber!

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks Justin for the comment. I am aware of the bit to byte conversion too, and to top it off, it is often measured in Mebibits and Mebibytes now too 🤯

  • @Deraco1
    @Deraco1 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Nice video. The NanoStation 5ACs can do both 24v and 48v passive/active PoE input (this excludes the loco for some dumb reason) as you can check under Power Method with the equipment datasheet. They will also output on the second port the same voltage as you feed it. Just make sure you have enough amperage to power both pieces of hardware

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh, right. I wasn't aware of that, but that makes sense. Thanks for the added info ☺️

  • @samhoward6980
    @samhoward6980 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Awesome video as normal, a good way to demo the speed would be to use Open Speedtest. Keep up the fab videos.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thanks Sam. That could totally work too, but I wanted to show something real and tangible that had time and size. Hence, the example I used.

  • @Northflix_watch
    @Northflix_watch ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Hey Lars, super appreciative of your work as usual. Always seems to be making content in exactly what I’m currently stuck on.
    I have a similar property to you with an office in a detached shed in the Aussie bush, on uniform dream machine SE, but not sure how this UISP integrates with unifi.
    Would love to see a video on what the differences are and how they integrate, as I thought I had to go the building to building bridge UBB

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Thanks for the kind words, and thanks for watching :)
      There are two different product lines and systems at play here. The UDM SE is a Unifi device and runs the network controller. It can see all your access points, clients etc. The GigaBeam is a UISP device, and doesn't have anything to do with Unifi, other than being a client on it's network to get a connection. When you pair two GigaBeam devices you do that in the UISP system, and Unifi just sees two devices. Unifi can also suddenly "see" the devices on the network the GigaBeams connect, but it doesn't know why. It is like there is a network cable between the two networks.
      Think of Unifi as a network in a single location and UISP as connecting multiple locations. You can use UISP devices in the same location of course (as I am doing), but that is the idea.
      I hope that makes it a bit clearer.

    • @Northflix_watch
      @Northflix_watch ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech awesome. Thank you, it definitely does. I guess the only thing I don’t understand is if the UISP system is hosted on the devices themselves, or if I need a cloud key, or similar console to be able to host and manage these devices?

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Northflix_watch Yes, you need a UISP account, which both lets you use the mobile app, and gives you access to an online dashboard with a lot more stats. You don't need any additional hardware though.

    • @SeijinSA
      @SeijinSA ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Northflix_watch UISP is completely optional. You can self host for free, but are required to have 10 devices for the "free" cloud hosted option. The devices have a web interface and can be managed locally w/o UISP. UISP is only a management interface for groups of devices and is not needed to have it work.

  • @SeijinSA
    @SeijinSA ปีที่แล้ว +5

    In regards to the prior setup - if it was only to support a single point to point connection it could have been changed to an 80mhz channel to increase the available capacity to roughly 650mbps - depending on local regulations you can move this into the "DFS/TDWR" space 5.5-5.7ghz area, where most home devices will not reside. This would also lower the airtime usage, and noise that your local wifi may also be occupying. But Obviously since using large files, extra speed is always better, short of running outdoor shielded fiber along the fence between the two buildings this is a great use of gigabeam type equipment.

    • @SeijinSA
      @SeijinSA ปีที่แล้ว +1

      In regards to file transfer not using full speed, keep in mind these are half duplex devices. Since you are transferring in both direction the radio is splitting the load between both send and receive at the same time. Airtime usage vs total capacity tends to only be usable up to about 65(ish)% under optimal conditions if also downloading (even checksum/validation on TCP can cause this slowdown).

    • @SeijinSA
      @SeijinSA ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Very slight correction on the 60Ghz connection aiming - It is outside normal thought but the aiming is actually even more important at closer distances compared to further distances. Rain and weather will affect these devices quite strongly. As well as channel selection vs oxygen/humidity. Ideally at this sort of distance try to shoot for a -40 signal. Under a heavy rain, this connection could be impacted between by as much as -20dBm, or possibly knock out a -60 to -80 during such conditions (which tends to disconnect at -73dBm). And with regards tot the total capacity - the radio outperforms the port - so just treat it again as a half duplex radio. Ideally you can push 1GB in one direction yet still have enough speed to push 200-300 in the other direction. But since it has more airtime available to it for capacity these devices are great in contrast to AirMAX M or AC models with efficiency.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@SeijinSA That is super helpful! Thank you so much. I will try and adjust the channel width on the other NanoStation pairs I have and see the difference. The slow connection speed in the start was due to a faulty RJ45 plug. I redid it and it was back to Gb.
      Again, thanks for taking your time to share all this. Super super helpful.

    • @SeijinSA
      @SeijinSA ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@LarsKlintTech While not helpful after the fact - the dashboard of the devices can also show a "cable quality" down at the very bottom. If this number is "red" or any value outside of 29-30db, there may be a fault between the radio and the switch.
      If you SSH into the device, or open Terminal View via UISP you can run the following command and determine which pairs the fault is on. "ethtool -S eth0" This shows what pairs are giving bad data and how long the cable detects as. Damage on pairs 0 and 1 affect data the most, with pairs 2 and 3 usually affecting voltage on 2 pair24v devices the most - same with some 48v devices. But it can also help determine if it is simple cable/connector corrosion and just put a new end on vs running a whole new cable.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @ Amazing. I have never really used the SSH functions of the devices. Definitely an area I need to learn. Thanks again.

  • @jeroenrevalk
    @jeroenrevalk ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Cool to be out in the middle of nowhere.... No interference from anybody! :D

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Haha, yes that is one of the perks. We just have a bit further to the shops 😂

  • @andrewsauter8749
    @andrewsauter8749 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks for this video as well. I am contemplating this instead of fibre. How does it go in bad weather and do trees make a big difference with interference? Sorry another question, who do you buy your Unifi gear from in Australia if you don't mind me asking? I'm on the NSW central coast hinterland and I use Mwave who have been pretty good.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Bad weather doesn't seem to affect it at all, but trees can. I only notice it though, if I am actively measuring it through trees. I have 1.5-1.6Gbps capacity every time I look.
      I get a lot of the devices from Unifi for review, so that is directly from the US, and then I use a range of online stores, including Mwave, Kogan, UBWH, eBay and more.

  • @ReinoutSchotman
    @ReinoutSchotman 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Nice video. Wouldn't this frequency require a license? Works great, but you may interfere with ISP's. You live in a remote area, so that might be less of an issue, but in urban areas you don't want long range radios because it limits frequency re-use. (One's signal is another one's noise).

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks. No, no license required. They are off the shelf units that you can buy off any UI retailer. They run on 60Ghz and the current IEEE 802.11ad standard and also the IEEE 802.11ay standard cover that frequency. I know several people that share a connection via a 1-2km link, and that is perfectly legal too.

  • @anton1284
    @anton1284 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    i Are the LAN ports Gigabit or Megabit?

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The port on the device is Gigabit. Which makes you wonder why it transmits at 1.5Gb 🤔

  • @paultech9385
    @paultech9385 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You should mention your cabling fix, new cable, replace RJ45’s?
    Can you upgrade the firmware on these via the Unifi Network App or do you have to be at the location with the UISP app?

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      The fix was just to replace the RJ45 on one end. Easy.
      The firmware upgrade/management is done via the UISP app or dashboard (which I didn't show in the video). Unifi Network doesn't know about the UISP devices, so it can't access their management features.

  • @kevinhughes9801
    @kevinhughes9801 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great vid looks like you need a 2.5gb lan upgrade next lol

  • @richhambloch
    @richhambloch ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Would this work with NDI???
    So for example, have a NDI camera at the office, the camera is plumbed into the switch in your office, via ethernet cable into network, with ndi you can then send a video signal to your home over the gigabit and recieve a ndi video signal at home? I think it would work...
    NDI is free and has massive potential....
    your thoughts?

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah, that should work fine. It is just a data connection, and as far as the network is concerned, the GigaBeam just provides another connection. It doesn't matter whether it is wired or wireless.

  • @Krakkel
    @Krakkel ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wireless links are nice but fiber is future proof and easy to run ❤

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      "Easy" is a very relative term. Easier to run than building a house: definitely. Easier than setting up a wireless link: definitely not.
      I am with you though, that I'd prefer a fiber connection too, but in my case it is just not feasible without major works and risks. We have to dig through established garden beds, up steep inclines, and through a part where there is both electricity and water pipes. Being an old farm, these aren't documented, so you can't just use a trenching machine. In addition there is no infrastructure to get the fiber inside the two established buildings on either end, and all the wiring is in the roof space, so you'd have to get the cabling up there too from the ground. Compared to installing two wireless devices to existing infrastructure, for the same internal speed, it is an easy choice in this case 😊

  • @jamess1787
    @jamess1787 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    If both your buildings are fed from the same electrical utility source (same electrical transformer): just run an ethernet cable. Or if you eant to get fancy, buy a 50-60m fiber cable and stitch it in. 👌

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      I am not sure I understand. What does the electrical source have to do with it?
      Also, it isn't "just" to run an ethernet cable. It would take several days to do, cost about 10 times as much, and not have a ton of benefits for my current setup. If I need more than 1Gb connection internally, then I might consider it, but not in this case.

    • @jamess1787
      @jamess1787 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech the distance doesn't seem like days to trench, was just thinking about all of the problems you were having (and ubiquiti has these annoying 100Mbps issues even with their toughcable brand ethernet)
      The electrical source is because of electrical faults, if there is GPR or something fails (like a neutral that feeds the property): then the Ethernet could become a source back which can fry your equipment.
      (Which is more reason to use either wireless or fiber).
      Lots of people blindly run Ethernet then something happens and they wonder why the equipment unexpectedly died. 🤣 (It has happened to me on commercial sites where this was a problem. Generators not properly bonded, lightning strikes, transformers catching fire). Solution was kevlar fiber between the buildings. If they have the same power transformer: then nothing from the provider will affect the buildings.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@jamess1787 Ah, I see! I had no idea that would be a problem, but we are indeed on the same electrical network everywhere on the farm.
      Yeah, I figured out the issues, which were all my fault anyway. The trench is through established flower beds, up a steep incline, and under two old buildings. It would be days to both trench it and install everything. I'd love to do it, because I prefer cabled connections, but can't justify it in this case.

  • @ridoyislamjebon6355
    @ridoyislamjebon6355 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    why you do not run a cat 6 or fiber cable home to office

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      While I prefer cabled connections where feasible, this isn't the case here. The trenching alone is complicated through established flower beds, up very steep inclines, through water pipes and existing electricity cabling, and into two separate old established buildings on stumps. There is currently no access in either from underneath, so you would have to install a path through the floor and up into the ceiling where the cabling is. The cost of it all instead of the GigaBeams is then already a cost equalizer. You then add the hours to dig the trench, the cable, the conduit, and the mess. I prefer my solution in this case, which achieves the same speed I can support internally. In the future, if I need more than 1Gb, I might consider a trench solution, but it isn't as simple as you want it to be.

  • @restuadityalink
    @restuadityalink ปีที่แล้ว +1

    why not use fiber optic? i think it's the best choice. you can use HTB media converter for that. but what makes you most comfortable? warm greetings from Indonesia

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks for watching 😊
      Although it is a short distance, it is quite complicated to actually dig the trench, go under two buildings, run the cable, and attach it all. The wireless link is magnitudes cheaper and more simple. If I do need more than 1.5Gbit, fiber might be the next step up.

  • @BestSpatula
    @BestSpatula ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It has a 1Gb/s wired interface but they claim 1.5Gb/s link. Are they scamming us or am I missing something?

  • @theusuario-pb5xk
    @theusuario-pb5xk ปีที่แล้ว +1

    For that price and distance, wouldn't be actually cheaper to use plastic fiber?
    you will get a lot more stable connection and faster speeds

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      While I prefer cabled connections where feasible, this isn't the case here. The trenching alone is complicated through established flower beds, up very steep inclines, and into two separate old established buildings on stumps. There is currently no access in either from underneath, so you would have to install a path through the floor and up into the ceiling where the cabling is. That is then already at least a cost equalizer. You then add the hours to dig the trench, the cable, the conduit, and the mess. I prefer my solution in this case, which achieves the same speed I can support internally. I haven't had any issues with connection stabilities at all, neither from the GigaBeams nor NanoStations. To utilise the faster speeds (> 1Gb) I would have to also upgrade significant portions of the switches and infrastructure. If that becomes relevant in the future I will definitely look into a cabled connection, but for now it isn't a good ROI in my scenario.

  • @mrmotofy
    @mrmotofy ปีที่แล้ว

    At this stage I'd run a fiber cable. Just seen a parts list and 164' LC cable is $17, 2 SFP transceivers for $16. That's dirt cheap for a 1Gb link that's fully upgradeable in future. Yes it's regular patch cable but can work. Should be an outdoor rated technically. It should be in conduit also which can be easy. Fiber isn't affected by static charges or weather and is upgradeable to faster speeds nearly indefinitely. A 10Gb link is easy too.
    A trencher is cheap to rent and easy to use. A serious contender for runs

    • @mrmotofy
      @mrmotofy ปีที่แล้ว

      If you don't have a switch with SFP ports you need 2 media converters for like $20/ea

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mrmotofy While I prefer cabled connections where feasible, this isn't the case here. The trenching alone is complicated through established flower beds, up very steep inclines, and into two separate old established buildings on stumps. There is currently no access in either from underneath, so you would have to install a path through the floor and up into the ceiling where the cabling is. The cost of it all instead of the GigaBeams is then already a cost equalizer. You then add the hours to dig the trench, the cable, the conduit, and the mess. I prefer my solution in this case, which achieves the same speed I can support internally. In the future, if I need more than 1Gb, I might consider a trench solution, but it isn't as simple as you want it to be.

    • @mrmotofy
      @mrmotofy ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech Yea I read some of your replies. It can be slightly more complicated with some of your complications. A lot could be solved rather easily. It can seem like a huge project for some who've probably never done it but it's really not. As you're learning more about RF, there's a lot of technical issues involved like interference. We have tons of wireless devices now and will continue to increase cuz it's easy to install. FYI a trencher might take 1 hr to do. After a couple days it would hardly be noticeable. Yes I know it would take a little more work and time...but future reliability is important to...it would also give you video content so it's all an investment that can pay back over time

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mrmotofy Definitely more than an hour 😂 I totally get the radio interference, but currently being the middle of nowhere it is much less of a concern. And the GigaBeams are super reliable. I have used a trencher a number of times for various jobs that didn't go through a ton of stuff. Also, we aren't sure where power cables and water pipes run in that line we would have to dig, so that is another complication that can end in tears. As I said, definitely not off the table, but definitely not a "just an hour and a bit of inconvenience" either.
      I do appreciate your input, cause that is how I (and others) can form their own journey that is relevant to time and place 😊

  • @IraQNid
    @IraQNid 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So you're excited over getting IDE hard drive speeds?

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Compared to what I had, absolutely!!!

  • @dbcooper7326
    @dbcooper7326 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    For 40m could you not just ran a cable ?

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh, I absolutely could, but there is no "just" about it. It is an awful lot of digging, through established flower beds and up a steep incline as well. I would have to create infrastructure on both buildings to route the cable in as well. This solution is much much simpler and cheaper. Having said all that, I might still do it in the future if the infrastructure requires more than 1Gbit 🙂

  • @jack_out_the_back
    @jack_out_the_back ปีที่แล้ว

    If you need a new home got the NS I'm right here!!

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      I am not sure what you mean 🤔

    • @jack_out_the_back
      @jack_out_the_back ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech typo, *for*
      I use them a bit in my system, always looking out for second hand airmax gear.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@jack_out_the_back Ah right 😂 I have a plan for the two NanoStations I replaced. Hopefully that will be a future video 🤓

  • @ThomasDeman
    @ThomasDeman ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Why is ubnt still using passive PoE ?

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      I am obviously not Unifi, but it could have something to do with reliability. As passive PoE provides power at all times, whether the device requests it or not. This continuous power supply reduces the risk of damage due to unexpected power interruptions or power cycling, which could be a concern in certain scenarios. For example, the UISP devices are often deployed remotely and out of easy reach, so reliability is key. In my experience the NanoStations have never missed a beat and always just worked, which isn't the case with Unifi network equipment, as that is more feature rich and more things that can go wrong.
      I am just speculating, but that is my take on it.

  • @antok86
    @antok86 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Needs direct line of site? My Nanos workout direct line of sight

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      More or less, I would have thought. There can't be a mountain in the way at least 😂

    • @antok86
      @antok86 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech I tried the airmax Gigabeam non plus and it needed 100% direct sight or it wouldn’t work. Unlike nanostation they can work inside a building

  • @scotttrongkaew
    @scotttrongkaew ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Awesome I think two devices can get speed higher than gigabit wire speed It would be better If they have 2.5Gbps port!

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      I agree, it is a bit strange that the ports are only 1Gb 🤔

  • @andrewsauter8749
    @andrewsauter8749 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks!

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Wow! Thanks Andrew. Much appreciated ❤️

  • @open_source
    @open_source ปีที่แล้ว +1

    A 100m cat5e cable would cost you only a few dollars @ 1Gbps with no setup and no WiFi!! A Cable less than cat5e caused the initial limit of 11Mb/s in the initial setup...

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      While I prefer cabled connections where feasible, this isn't the case here. The trenching alone is complicated through established flower beds, up very steep inclines, and into two separate old established buildings on stumps. There is currently no access in either from underneath, so you would have to install a path through the floor and up into the ceiling where the cabling is. The cost of it all instead of the GigaBeams is then already a cost equalizer. You then add the hours to dig the trench, the cable, the conduit, and the mess. I prefer my solution in this case, which achieves the same speed I can support internally. In the future, if I need more than 1Gb, I might consider a trench solution, but it isn't as simple as you want it to be.
      The initial limit of 100Mbit was caused by a faulty RJ45 connector, which I fixed and now it's back to Gigabit 😊 All my cabling is CAT6 as well.

  • @BestSpatula
    @BestSpatula ปีที่แล้ว

    You should look at what the cost involved in a preterminated piece of fiber that you could bury between your two points as well as a dumb SFP switch on both ends. It's probably cheaper than you think. You could do all of it yourself as long as you get preterminated. I bet you could do it all for well under two thousand bucks excluding labor

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      While I prefer cabled connections where feasible, this isn't the case here. The trenching alone is complicated through established flower beds, up very steep inclines, and into two separate old established buildings on stumps. There is currently no access in either from underneath, so you would have to install a path through the floor and up into the ceiling where the cabling is. Buying another two switches instead of the GigaBeams is then already almost a cost equalizer. You then add the hours to dig the trench, the cable, the conduit, and the mess. I prefer my solution in this case, which achieves the same speed I can support internally.

  • @MrXuiKoh
    @MrXuiKoh ปีที่แล้ว

    if not mistaken this need 48v

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You are mistaken. They run on 24V.

  • @hackerdev1L
    @hackerdev1L ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It could not have been that far. I could have run a premade fiber optic cable and run it at 10 gig

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Although it is a short distance, it is quite complicated to actually dig the trench through established flower beds up a steep incline, through an area of electricity and water pipes, go under two buildings that don't have any infrastructure for cabling underneath, run the cable, and attach it all for the same speed internally as the GigaBeams. The wireless link is magnitudes cheaper, performs about on par with the current setup and more simple. If I do need more than 1.5Gbit in the future, fiber might be the next step up. But it isn't that simple at all, unless you are offering to come and do it for me?
      Besides, the point of the video is to show the wireless link 🤷‍♂

  • @mjvanmierlo405
    @mjvanmierlo405 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Next time if you have a speed issue first check your cables / interface speeds before start ordering new hardware :-). Your lack of speed origins from the cable speed of 100fdx not the nano stations. Could have saved you a lot of time /frustration and money.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks for the tip 😀. I've been through it before and have fixed a few cables. In this case it was the cable that limited the NanoStation speed to 100M/bit but it would never have got 1.5Gbit anyway (max about 250M/bit), so the upgrade is still 100% valid. And now I have the start for +1Gbit too 😁

  • @Mark_The_Mayven
    @Mark_The_Mayven ปีที่แล้ว +1

    How about you get rid of that piece of conduit that you’re mounting all this equipment on, including a anemometer which is using friction from the wind and pulling the pole around. Dude, gigabit will barely be megabit, when the wind is blowing.
    Great video nonetheless
    By the way: station is the master as far as I know, and access point is at the end of the line.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Thanks Mark. Appreciate the feedback. While it does need to be upgraded, or at least secured better, it is a "hockey stick" which is meant for mounting antennas on. The anemometer is so low friction, that I doubt it, on its own, make any difference. The day I put all this up it was very windy, yet I had full Gigabit signal. So, yes, I need to secure it better, but it isn't as bad as you think 😊
      Also, the station is the secondary device according to UBNT docs.

  • @ubeaut
    @ubeaut ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Just watching Who the bloody hell are we on SBS and noticed that you look a lot like John Safran! and not only that you sound like him..or visa versa.

  • @a9503128
    @a9503128 ปีที่แล้ว

    Lars dig a trench, pipe it and run fibre optic 🤷
    And get some 80GHz Backhaul link E-Band with 10 Gbps

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Alex, it's really not that simple. The trenching alone is complicated through established flower beds, up very steep inclines, through an area with electricity and water pipes that aren't known where are, and into two separate old established buildings on stumps. There is currently no access in either from underneath, so you would have to install a path through the floor and up into the ceiling where the cabling is. The cost of it all instead of the GigaBeams is then already a cost equalizer. You then add the hours to dig the trench, the cable, the conduit, and the mess. I prefer my solution in this case, which achieves the same speed I can support internally. In the future, if I need more than 1Gb, I might consider a trench solution, but it isn't as simple as you want it to be.

    • @a9503128
      @a9503128 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech come on, hire a Coates Excavator (1.4t - $406 per 24 hr) and make the video :-)

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@a9503128 Hehe, I am not _opposed_ to that idea 😏

  • @RobertSandell
    @RobertSandell ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Most likely the nano station also had only a 100mbit wired connection in your first test since 11MB/s is the speed you get when you max out a 100mbit wired connection. So not a completely fair speed test between the two 🤓

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah, I did realise this after I fixed the Gigabit connection too. So I would have got maybe 20-ish MB/s on the NanoStation, so still a big improvement. You are absolutely right though Rob. Thanks for the observation 😊

    • @jack_out_the_back
      @jack_out_the_back ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Also frequency management changes a heap. 😊

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@daniel.s8126 Yeah, totally. I didn't pick up on it in time for the filming 😂

    • @RobertSandell
      @RobertSandell ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I see that number frequently because my M2 loco only has a 100mbit interface 🤓

  • @dandraeg3679
    @dandraeg3679 ปีที่แล้ว

    Lets see some home audio vids maybe some BLE stuff.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      What do you mean by "home audio"? Can you elaborate?

    • @dandraeg3679
      @dandraeg3679 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech Sure, like a PA system I mean you live on a farm after all! Would be cool to see esp32 intercom hacked together. also do you use any smart speakers like sonos?

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@dandraeg3679 Alright. I don't really need a PA system. I enjoy the peace and quiet 😁 I did do a video on text-to-speech using Google Hubs and Home Assistant, so that is audio- related at least: th-cam.com/video/Y7JN6YXtS2M/w-d-xo.html
      I am planning on doing a voice recognition video as well using Azure or Google too.

  • @nellermann
    @nellermann ปีที่แล้ว +1

    42 meters. run a cable. will always be better

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      While I prefer cabled connections where feasible, this isn't the case here. The trenching alone is complicated through established flower beds, up very steep inclines, and into two separate old established buildings on stumps. There is currently no access in either from underneath, so you would have to install a path through the floor and up into the ceiling where the cabling is. The cost of it all instead of the GigaBeams is then already almost a cost equalizer. You then add the hours to dig the trench, the cable, the conduit, and the mess. I prefer my solution in this case, which achieves the same speed I can support internally.

  • @ttss5726
    @ttss5726 ปีที่แล้ว

    You need to adjust those more the signal is crap

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      ?
      "Yeah, I didn't get it 100% dialled in in the video. What would be a good signal though? I have no outages, and I get full speed still.

  • @PeppeAnna81
    @PeppeAnna81 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    per me i prodotti ubiquiti non li passa nessuno, solo che per fare un point to point spendere la media di 600 dollari mi sembra abbondantemente esagerato.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The GigaBeam plus is USD179, and that is a LOT cheaper than having to dig down a cable across that distance, not to mention much faster and simpler. Not sure where you are getting your facts from.

  • @EmilePolka
    @EmilePolka ปีที่แล้ว

    I dont know man, If I were me, I would just pay someone to dig the soil to install a underground fiber. those stuff arent that expensive compared to what you already spend with this wireless crap hardware you have there.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      You do you for sure. In my case, the wireless link is about a tenth of the price of the wired install, takes a fraction of the time, and is a lot less messy. And, for my purposes, works just as well considering my current infrastructure.
      What makes the hardware crap? I have never had any outages of degradations with any of the wireless links I have used over the past three years.

  • @bentheguru4986
    @bentheguru4986 ปีที่แล้ว

    Your issues are your limits of understanding RF and the fallout of it. All the radios you have nested on the same, flimsy pole are making a boat-load of noise in all directions. The noise floor for you is crap and the radios (what you were using) were moving modulation. Clean up the installation and understand noise levels and the downside of clustering radios without RF planning or considerations. I see instalaltions like yours daily while driving around that are just slapped up and spewing RF all over the joint. UBNT and are very guilty of making their stuff too easy for untrained people to buy and chuck-up gear and spew RF all over the joint.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks Benny for your input. The pole really is flimsy, and I am going to stabilise it in the near future to get it not wobbly. With your extensive expertise in the field of RF, is it still a problem when one device is 2.4Ghz, second is 5.2Ghz and a third is 62Ghz? They are very different bandwidths.
      I never claimed to be an expert in this field, but everyone has to start somewhere, right? With that, could you clarify what you mean by "spewing RF all over the joint"? And what level of training do you recommend people should have before they are allowed to buy network equipment?
      Thanks again for watching. Cheers, Lars.

    • @bentheguru4986
      @bentheguru4986 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech The simplest way is to watch others and listen to what they say and pick the good bits from the junk. I would suggest paying attention to the older, more mature installers who have radio backgrounds as many of the young pups filling YT simply don't have the decades of expirience, crikey, I only been doing radio for over 35 years..
      The weather station talks to the controller on eith 433 or 900MHz and the controller has only got a cheap 1x1 SISO 2.4GHz WiFi chipset which are crap at best, I know because I had one. The Outdoor AC-M is only 23dBm of grunt (they suck at times) and the antennas are ordinary at best. A good pair of dual-band Omini's will see it run better but if you just need range, then disable the 5GHz and run 2.4GHz only with a UBNT 10dBi MIMOP antenna, the 13 is big-boy country. I use them a lot in rural or large area sites and can provide 200-400M radius of coverage with ease. The 5GHz radio you did have was being swamped by the AC-M as your noise floor was ordinary. Simple band-planning and locking frequencies along with stable, vertical mount would have seen those radios lock and high modulation without an issue. 60GHz is a strickly short-range only solution. Don't believe the sales BS UBNT use as well have very different RF power limits here in AUS to the yanks. Move to a 40-50mm pipe with decent guy legs, put weather station on top and spread other radios apart as best you can. Cabling, outdoor grade only. Gen-1 UniFi switches (square blue halo on front) can do both AF PoE as well as 24V passive. Keep in mind, 24V passive is reversed polarity.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@bentheguru4986 That is a ton of awesome information. Thanks Benny :) That is exactly the kind of feedback I look for to learn from. 👌

    • @bentheguru4986
      @bentheguru4986 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech If you study up on radio a bit and understand the terms "Front-End" and "Desense", you will start to see why despite radios being on different channels or even different bands, seperation by physical distance or be mechanical means is a must.
      Cheers.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@bentheguru4986 Excellent. Will start there. Thanks Benny, and keep the knowledge coming please 😊

  • @schmutly
    @schmutly ปีที่แล้ว

    i wanted to watch this so much but I'll have to go elsewhere because your background music which is SO distracting, put me off. Why...why do it? Especially when showing screenshots and settings. So many today ruin these helpful videos with background music. Its NOT needed. You seem like you had a lot to share and you didnt need it but I just couldnt watch it. Please drop the backing 'noise' as you seem MORE than capable of holding your own in the video...that was clear. Hope you do. Thanks anyway.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks for the feedback and your confidence in my presentation skills 🙂 I do like the background music in some videos and places, but not everywhere. I use it when I think it adds some creative depth to the video. I hope to see you back in the future.

    • @schmutly
      @schmutly ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LarsKlintTech no worries, thanks for letting me know. The content was good...i did end up watching it in the end ;)

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@schmutly Awesome, glad you got some value out of it 😊

  • @MotFPS
    @MotFPS ปีที่แล้ว

    Looks like you aimed it up by accident.
    Not sure why I'm watching this guy. He doesn't even realize his original setup was at 100mbps. Super amature. He calls 100MB/s "100 mega bit" so yeah, this guy is a tech amature.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +10

      I am indeed an amateur. I've never professed to be anything but. Although, I'll take "super" amateur, thank you.
      I don't leave out faults, errors and things I don't understand because it helps an enormous amount of people to approach tech they otherwise would hesitate to, because they think they need to be a super tech expert like yourself. We can't all have the vast superior skills you possess, so it's far better to be honest and raw about your approach.
      Btw could you share a link to your content so we can all learn from it. I always look to improve so that would be super helpful. Thanks for watching 😊

    • @LBugnion
      @LBugnion ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Misspelling amateur twice doesn't really make you sound like an expert either 🙄

  • @christopherrenn8137
    @christopherrenn8137 ปีที่แล้ว

    btest.exe by mikrotik will show you bandwidth speed between 2 points internal networks. Will allow both in/out as/or tcp/udp for testing. Just run once and set it up as a server (so on a device you want to test too or close too). Then run the client version connecting to the ip of the server. Run test to check cable speeds down each switch and thru ptp's. As a In house tech I would run it monthly to do radio quality tests to verify I had the best radio signal/thruput. It transfer's junk data so nothing to worry or save there and gives standard testing package.

    • @christopherrenn8137
      @christopherrenn8137 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Edit* 2 or more points. The server can handle multiple connections coming into it from clients. Able to test saturation thruput on servers to prove they are able to handle X rated Gig. 10:1 the prior connection was hamstrung by a bad connection also. Limited to 100mpb but had 300 in the air available. You upgraded but your prior setup was only using about a 3rd of what you should of had.

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      All really good points Christopher. I did realise the faulty connection too, so you are right, the NanoStations should have been running 250-300 as well.
      Wifiman from Unifi can do a lot of what you mention as well, if you have two device with it installed on the same Unifi network. I'll check out btest though. Thanks again.

  • @wiLk1214
    @wiLk1214 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Horrible for 43m! Need to aim them better and use shielded CAT8!

    • @LarsKlintTech
      @LarsKlintTech  ปีที่แล้ว

      Can you elaborate? What values would you expect for that distance? Also, why CAT8?