Chris Elmquist wrote:
> 
> On Friday (05/10/2002 at 10:29AM -0500), Carl Wilhelm Soderstrom wrote:
> > > Yup -- it assumes the built in rubber duckies, which generally have a gain
> > > of 0 dBi to 2 dBi. You can get antennas that do 24 dBi for < $100.
> > > Remember, dBi isn't a linear scale -- every 3dBi of gain effectivly
> > > doubles your power (iirc).
> > 
> > just as a matter of idle curiosity, what's the highest-gain 802.11b antenna
> > anyone has ever seen?
> 
> there are plenty of hams messing around with moon-bounce on S-band--
> using 3, 6 or even 10m dishes.  Of course these aren't particularly
> practical for terrestrial work I suppose.
> 
> I'd say you're most likely to see a practical, useable, directional
> antenna in the 20 to 25 dB range.

Yesterday I picked up an Andrew 26T which has 26db of gain.


-- 
Bryan Halvorson
bryan at edgar.sector14.net