For the constuction of a Bi-Quad, the following parts are needed: Acronis true image home 2013 serial key download.
# A small section of 3/4 (or smaller) copper pipe, about 8'.
# A piece of square, flat, copper, if using a parabolic dish the dimesions are 110x110mm, without 123x123mm is best. Copper clad PCB board works, I chose just a sheet of copper I found. You can use anything coductive, I use copper because the ease of workability, and low loss; however, you can use any metal for any part of the project.
#Coax, a LMR-195 if < 5' to the transceiver, LMR-400 if > 5', RG-58 will work if the section is short.
That's it.
If making a parabolic dish, one will need a dish :) Recycled one if possible. There is a lot of science about which size dish to use for 2.4GHz. Personally, this is about a cheap hack job, and I can get a lot more coverage with a old TV dish (direct tv style).
Skills & Tools needed:
# Soldering skills is a must, I used a propane torch for most of this project. A high watt soldering iron can, and has, worked.
# Hack saw, file, tin snips, wire strippers, a crescent wrench, flashlight.
# Ingenuity; each person that tries to match this will run into their own problems, wants, desires; we are here to help; yet, a level of McGyver like skills is a plus. I made this using no money, I could improve greatly on it If I choose. Abbyy finereader 12 crack kickass. Make it your own.
And last but not least, educate ourselves :) Sims 3 wii play with genetics. I put some great links through the steps. https://siteeditor241.weebly.com/from-the-choirgirl-hotel-rare.html. If you are expert or novice, it helps knowing a little.
http://www.trevormarshall.com/biquad.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parabolic_antenna
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_(radio)
# A small section of 3/4 (or smaller) copper pipe, about 8'.
# A piece of square, flat, copper, if using a parabolic dish the dimesions are 110x110mm, without 123x123mm is best. Copper clad PCB board works, I chose just a sheet of copper I found. You can use anything coductive, I use copper because the ease of workability, and low loss; however, you can use any metal for any part of the project.
#Coax, a LMR-195 if < 5' to the transceiver, LMR-400 if > 5', RG-58 will work if the section is short.
That's it.
If making a parabolic dish, one will need a dish :) Recycled one if possible. There is a lot of science about which size dish to use for 2.4GHz. Personally, this is about a cheap hack job, and I can get a lot more coverage with a old TV dish (direct tv style).
Skills & Tools needed:
# Soldering skills is a must, I used a propane torch for most of this project. A high watt soldering iron can, and has, worked.
# Hack saw, file, tin snips, wire strippers, a crescent wrench, flashlight.
# Ingenuity; each person that tries to match this will run into their own problems, wants, desires; we are here to help; yet, a level of McGyver like skills is a plus. I made this using no money, I could improve greatly on it If I choose. Abbyy finereader 12 crack kickass. Make it your own.
And last but not least, educate ourselves :) Sims 3 wii play with genetics. I put some great links through the steps. https://siteeditor241.weebly.com/from-the-choirgirl-hotel-rare.html. If you are expert or novice, it helps knowing a little.
http://www.trevormarshall.com/biquad.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parabolic_antenna
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_(radio)
![Antenna Antenna](/uploads/1/2/6/2/126296138/325798388.jpg)
![Hacer antenna wifi biquad antenna system Hacer antenna wifi biquad antenna system](/uploads/1/2/6/2/126296138/604274937.jpg)
Double BiQuad sector antenna for 2.4 GHz / WiFi / WLAN Introduction This is basic instructions on building a handmade Double BiQuad antenna for WiFi/WLAN 2.4 GHz with ~14 dBi Gain.
Biquad Antenna Construction
- Making your own Bi-Quad (Wi-Fi) antenna The Bi-Quad antenna is one of the handiest, cheapest and easiest to build WiFi antennas. This blog entry will explain how to easily build one like in the picture below using cheap materials and a TNC-RP (reverse polarity tiny-N) low cost Wi-Fi router connector.
- Hi, I have built a double biquad antenna following not only this tutorial, but others in the Net. I used a biscuit box cover as the reflector, and a hanger to build the element. I used an N connector in the center of the antenna, and bought a proper cable to connect the N endpoint in the antenna to an RP-TNC connector in my wrt54g router.
- I installed the Tomato firmware on the WRT54GL and configured it to use only the antenna A (the biquad) instead of both antennas. From there, it was easy to use the site survey to verify that I could pick other WiFi signals. I just needed to test the range.