Perhaps 900MHz isn't a complete write-off
Some of you may know I did a survey of 900MHz recently, along with the real-world modem tests. The spectrum analyzer inside the modem showed a very dire picture of the band, with the noise floor averaging about -60dBm. Today, in preparation for 1.2GHz antenna installs, I ran some coax to the roof and was able to see the 900MHz vertical there directly on a proper spectrum analyzer. The spectrum story is quite different! Here's a view of a typical spectrum from 902-928MHz: floor The reference line at the top is -20dBm and each vertical graticule is 10dB. The noise floor looks to be about 7 graticules below -20dBm, or -90dBm. There is about 2dB loss in the 45ft feedline, so let's call the floor -88dBm. There are however some sparse transmissions in this band. I wish I could find a way to measure their duty cycle or plot their average power. Sadly the best I can do is to record their maximum power using the peak-hold mode of the spectrum analyzer. I captured about a 10 minute sample of air time, and here are the results: peaks The bright dot is the peak marker, and it reads -42dBm, which is really -40dBm at the antenna after you account for the coax loss. The peaks are all suspiciously uniform in power, so this may be a single transmitter just jumping around the spectrum with each burst. I can't explain why the Mikrotik 9HPn reports such a vastly different spectrum. It may be mixing the 860-900MHz cell band into the 900MHz band? I need to perform some further tests to figure this out. There are definitely strong signals in the 860-900MHz range (not shown in these photos). --Bart
FYI A few years back (~6) we hooked a spectrum analyser up to a tower mounted yagi pointed at Federal Way from the Gold Mountain DNR site and it was surprisingly quiet. We were trying to establish a 22 mile digital link between the site (WD7STR -- now off air) and a residence in Federal Way on 900 Mhz but it was not reliable with the equipment in place. -- ------------------------------ John D. Hays K7VE PO Box 1223, Edmonds, WA 98020-1223 <http://k7ve.org/blog> <http://twitter.com/#!/john_hays> <http://www.facebook.com/john.d.hays>
I did a spectrum analysts about 6 years ago on top of SMT and found it in usable in downtown for anything wideband. Wanted to use the Motorola Canopy device at the time. N0FPF On Thursday, October 29, 2015, John D. Hays <john@hays.org> wrote:
FYI
A few years back (~6) we hooked a spectrum analyser up to a tower mounted yagi pointed at Federal Way from the Gold Mountain DNR site and it was surprisingly quiet. We were trying to establish a 22 mile digital link between the site (WD7STR -- now off air) and a residence in Federal Way on 900 Mhz but it was not reliable with the equipment in place.
--
------------------------------ John D. Hays K7VE
PO Box 1223, Edmonds, WA 98020-1223 <http://k7ve.org/blog> <http://twitter.com/#!/john_hays> <http://www.facebook.com/john.d.hays>
Steve did you get my email? On Oct 29, 2015 6:56 PM, "Steve" <stevewa206@gmail.com> wrote:
I did a spectrum analysts about 6 years ago on top of SMT and found it in usable in downtown for anything wideband. Wanted to use the Motorola Canopy device at the time.
N0FPF
On Thursday, October 29, 2015, John D. Hays <john@hays.org> wrote:
FYI
A few years back (~6) we hooked a spectrum analyser up to a tower mounted yagi pointed at Federal Way from the Gold Mountain DNR site and it was surprisingly quiet. We were trying to establish a 22 mile digital link between the site (WD7STR -- now off air) and a residence in Federal Way on 900 Mhz but it was not reliable with the equipment in place.
--
------------------------------ John D. Hays K7VE
PO Box 1223, Edmonds, WA 98020-1223 <http://k7ve.org/blog> <http://twitter.com/#!/john_hays> <http://www.facebook.com/john.d.hays>
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Steve