[arm-allstar] Link to a repeater
Doug Crompton
wa3dsp at gmail.com
Wed Apr 17 15:38:55 EDT 2019
Ed,
The Ubiquity is just a wireless connection between a place where you have
good Internet and where you don't. It would be no different than running
the Pi on a wired Internet connection with the exception of setting up the
Ubiquity stations. At the Internet end it would be wire connected to a
router or however you get to the Internet. On the repeater or non-Internet
side it is just a wired connection to the Internet as if you were at the
other site. You could use a switch there connected to the Ubiquity and have
multiple Internet connections.
So you would setup a Pi at the repeater site and it would connect to the
Internet. There is no requirement for a Pi anywhere else except of course
if you want to connect to it. The ID would be no different than any
repeater site with direct Internet.
The Ubiquity stations come in 900mhz, 2.4, 3 and 5ghz models. Using mesh SW
loaded into the Ubiquity it would use channels below the standard
commercial 2.4G band and in the ham band away from 2.4G congestion. The 3G
band you can probably get if you show oyu are a ham. Otherwise it is a
licensed band.
*73 Doug*
*WA3DSP*
*http://www.crompton.com/hamradio <http://www.crompton.com/hamradio>*
On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 3:30 PM "Ed Harwood (w5cve--- via ARM-allstar" <
arm-allstar at hamvoip.org> wrote:
> Doug, I saw the email on using an Ubiquiti Nano Station to Link Allstar to
> a repeater. That has my interest and wondering if repeater ID would be a
> problem on the repeater site. Also, would a node number be needed on the Pi
> at the repeater site, and the node at the Internet site?
>
> Thank you
>
> Ed W5CVE
>
> Sent from my iPhone
> _______________________________________________
>
> ARM-allstar mailing list
> ARM-allstar at hamvoip.org
> http://lists.hamvoip.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/arm-allstar
>
> Visit the BBB and RPi2/3 web page - http://hamvoip.org
>
More information about the ARM-allstar
mailing list