I have a Wilson Electronics 75 Ohm Wide Band - 700-2500 MHz Directional Antenna with F-Female Connector That I purchased to boost my Cell reception. Since I believe this Antenna reaches the WIMAX range (2.5) I would like to test it with the Clear modem. The Clear modem (WIXFBR-117 ) does not have an external connector so I will need a pigtail to take it from the internal board to the F-Connector of the coax. Can you tell me what pigtail to order? Phil
Updated 01-18-2012 at 02:34 PM by thuor
The beauty of the spectrum between existing TV bands around 50MHz to 700MHz is indoor penetration possibility. The FCC in allowing the use of this spectrum for unlicensed devices also allocated two channels nationwide for wireless microphones who were major contenders against opening this up due to potential interference for them. They also removed a requirement to have in-build geolocation sensors in the devices which would have significantly added to equipment cost and hindered the ubiquity anticipated. ...
I bought at WirelessThermostat & Reciever Combo (SKU 30403). It is asking for house code to program the dip switch settings. Where do i find this house code? You set the "House Code" to whatever you want. If you have just one wireless thermostat and receiver then you don't have to change anything and can just use the default DIP settings which yields the default house code of 0. The only reason you would want to change the House code is if you ...
The Sprint/ Franklin Wireless U300 doesn't have an external antenna port so the only two methods to attach an external booster is either to use a passive antenna coupler (NOT recommended) or use a cellular repeater (the recommended method). Here is an example drawing of the recommended setup: http://www.rfwel.com/support/tech-dr...wwan-split.pdf. In actuality if you just want it for the U300 in a single room them you can simplify the ...
would a handheld digital FHSS radio with a transmitting output of one watt work with this amp (TSWL466625) or is that too much input power Yes that would be too much input power. Maximum input power is limited to 20dBm (100mW) so a 30dBm input would be outside the amplifiers dynamic range. You may use an attenuator which if you combined with port converters (to convert from SMA to N type) would bring your input power level to within the range of the amplifier. ...