![]() Four 1/4"-20 threaded rods are secured to the bottom angles by plastic insert locknuts. The base has four 7/8" diameter 1/2" tall rubber feet purchased from SPKR PARTS-2007 off eBay on the bottom secured with #8-32 stainless hardware. I constructed the storage frame from aluminum from and stainless steel hardware from The Nutty Company. My hat's off to the BH Development Team for making things so easy, including the tutorials thaty have for installing additional services on your network. Instead, I'll show you some pictures and detail how I've set up my six routers. In an emergency incident, your station could extend the Mesh and make the difference by being the "last mile" to an affected area.Īlmost everything you want to know about Broadband Hamnet is at their website, so I won't be writing yet another tutorial on flashing the firmware. So if you're a "plug and pray" person, although you may not be cut out to be the Broadband Hamnet administrator for your area, it shouldn't keep you from setting up your own node for your laptop and joining the party. The Ham Radio portion is the antennas and amps, but what is going on within the Mesh itself is pretty much home and SMB networking. 2.402 to 2.417 GHz is domestically allocated to Amateur Radio on a primary basis, so 802.11b/g/n WiFi's 2.412 GHz "Channel 1" becomes our playground. Some ingenious folks in Texas came up with a firmware flash for the Linux-based WRT54G series routers that made them FCC Part 97 compliant on the 13cm band. ![]()
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