| Subject: Re: New comm gear at the AT&T Warm Springs site |
| From: "miso@sushi.com" <miso@sushi.com> |
| Date: 18/03/2009, 19:15 |
| Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy.area51 |
On Mar 18, 12:59 am, "Lumpy" <lu...@digitalcartography.com> wrote:
m...@sushi.com wrote:
http://www.lazygranch.com/images/warmsprings/ws_att_4.jpg
http://www.lazygranch.com/images/warmsprings/ws_att_1.jpg
http://www.lazygranch.com/images/warmsprings/ws_att_2.jpg
http://www.lazygranch.com/images/warmsprings/ws_att_3.jpg
http://www.lazygranch.com/images/warmsprings/ws_att_6.jpg
http://www.lazygranch.com/images/warmsprings/ws_att_5.jpg
I haven't looked up any numbers yet. I assume the antennas are
450-470MHz. I logged a vector for the antennas which I will post
later.
The vertical appears obviously 450-470.
I'd guess at the other part number TB24-58,
to mean 2.4GHz and 5.8GHz.
TB=Trailblazer, Carlson's remote boxes
like they have in Grand Canyon and other
Natl Parks.
They typically have a UHF vertical plus some kind
of high gain directional (dish etc) on the same
pole, like the Maxrad mesh parabolics in your pics.
It's typically a voice phone + broadband data.
Essentially a wireless telephone pole.
Good pics. Can a 2wd make it up there to the towers?
Lumpy
You sang all those car commercials?
You got it, Toyota.www.LumpyMusic.com
You can do both AT&T sites (now American Tower) with 2wd. The telcos
favor accessibility, even if it requires more facilities.