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133 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
133 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2041
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Title: HPR2041: Router Antennas More = better ?
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2041/hpr2041.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 13:36:54
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---
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This is HPR episode 2041 entitled Router and Tennis More Equals Better.
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It is posted by first-time post-ile dustinger and in about 8 minutes long, the summer is
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a ham operator's new on Router and Tennis.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15 that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hi everybody, this is Ken.
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We've got some excellent news for you before today's show.
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We've been nominated for the People's Choice Podcast Award and that's an ongoing thing
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by the community to recognize shows doing good podcasts and we have been shortlisted
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in the technology section.
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Some other people, congratulations to the Budcast as well, who've also been nominated.
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If you want to vote for us and any other shows that you enjoy, go over to podcastaward.com.
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That's P-O-D-C-A-S-T-A-W-A-R-D-S dot com.
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Scroll down to the end and you'll find us in the technology section where listed there
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as first.
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And one interesting thing is you can vote every single day for the next two weeks so you
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will have me reminding you of this.
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Please do so because it's really, really good exposure for HPR and hopefully we'll get
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more listeners.
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We'll be able to spread the word and with more listeners we'll get more contributors
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and more contributors.
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The schedule will fill up and you'll have to listen to me a lot less.
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So, please go ahead and do that and the reason for the daily voting is, and then reading
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from the website, daily voting for a two week period is designed to show show engagement
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and to allow shows of all sides to compete for a podcast award.
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To list their engagement, the true power of a podcast audience ultimately determines
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the annual winners.
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So, folks, even if you have never contributed a show to HPR, this is something that we really
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appreciate that you could do, and if you're over there, it'll take about two minutes
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of your time.
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Do it every single day, no scripts please, though.
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Do it every day, and thank you very much for doing that.
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Tune in for today's show, goodbye.
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Tune in for today's show, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye.
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Okay, you guys shame me into submitting a podcast, listen, and I've been with Linux about
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a year now, and having a lot of fun, learning a lot of stuff.
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I wanted to put something, but I kind of wanted to, something maybe, people would get something
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out of it.
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I thought, well, I don't really know a whole lot about Linux, listen to a lot of podcasts,
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had a problem with my router here at my house, about probably 30 devices, tablets, everything,
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everything.
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And the router just, it was, it was a little netgare, it was still bad, but it just wasn't quite
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cutting it.
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I sent a question in to another show, the mini PC show, Dordidord Geek, and when he was
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answering, he said, more antennas is better, and I said, really, I've been a hammering
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over operator for 40 years, and nori antennas doesn't necessarily make it better, pencil
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holly work.
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I said, well, I'll just, I'm going to research a little bit on podcasts and kind of let
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people know that, you know, more antennas really are better.
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Well, I found out something, more antennas could be better, turns out that if it's configured
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right and it can adjust the antennas electrically inside, it can actually enhance the signal
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and get rid of unwanted ones and kind of being the signal, I'll explain it further here,
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with the rest of this podcast, trying to piece it together, this is my first one, hope
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somebody gets a little bit out of it, but bottom line is, yes, I think it could work.
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Just as a hammering operator, I can tell you the more open and clear you can put your router
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in, if you stuff it in a bootcase or in the corner somewhere, you know, it's not going
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to perform as well.
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One is open and clear as you can get it and preferably, you know, this sounds kind
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of stupid, but somebody won't get it.
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You want to kind of center it in a geographically, because it's going to cover so many feet.
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Well, here it goes, thanks.
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Listening to a podcast or a particular podcast or say, this router has got to be better,
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it has more antennas.
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Well, more antennas isn't necessarily better.
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The way I believe it works, we've all seen semi-trucks on the road where they'll have
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two antennas on the cab, one whip on one mirror and one whip on the other mirror.
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What those antennas do is kind of being the signal forward and backwards, the spacing
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and the feed line, all placed together to give signal more in one direction than another.
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If you think of a light bulb as an antenna, a regular incandescent light bulb will just
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shine light all over everywhere, 360 degrees around.
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If you could put a mirror behind it, then it shines light and reflects in one direction.
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So you essentially double the intensity of the light by putting no light behind it.
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Seven more antennas gets the signal to be shaped instead of, as a sphere, more like
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a football-type pattern.
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Staying with our semi-truck analogy, I said the spacing and the feed line work together
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to make the signal for the CBR go backwards and forwards, because instead of right and
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left, because he's usually a young interstate, and he wants to talk to the trucks in front
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of him and behind him, so he wants to send all the signal forward and backwards.
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The electrical distance, the speed that the radio waves travel through the coax from
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one antenna to the other, and that distance is what determines the pattern that the signals
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will go.
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You can't really, the truck driver can't, he's not going to change the, he can't, the mirrors
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on the truck are so far apart, so all he can really change is the feed line coax.
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So if our truck driver is just up and down as all he wants, north and south on the interstate
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side, but if you're a Henry operator and say you wanted to talk east and west instead
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of north and south, by putting in different feed lines with different lengths of coax,
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you could change the signal to go instead of north and south, east and west, just by changing
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the coax.
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The router's sort of working like this.
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The interesting thing about this is it starts out listening maybe on all the antennas and
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it kind of figures out which where this particular device has the, is coming from.
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So it turns the antennas on and off, changes the pattern.
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So it really can directionally go, we're going to enhance the signal by turning these
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on, these off, or changing how it switches the, the transmit and the receive.
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It's called beam form and it's pretty interesting.
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Well this really increased the range of your router.
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Maybe marginally, I don't know, everything would have to be tested, you know, and it's
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kind of hard to test things because everything is influenced by something else.
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The thing where it really could shine is not necessarily to increase, but it could decrease
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the unwanted signals.
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It could help to separate signals on the same frequencies.
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It seemed like to me that it would help to have a lot of devices, smart TVs, whatever tablets,
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all trying to talk to the router at one time.
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Of course, this is assuming they're coming from different directions, it wouldn't help
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if the TV and the laptop were right next to each other in relation to the router.
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So in theory, if all those antennas receive slightly different signals and the computer
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inside the router could decide which direction the signal was coming from, it could reconfigure
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how it sends signals and receive signals from all the different antennas to beam the signal
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in one direction.
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So it could work.
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I hope people got something from this.
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If anybody wants to be, I know a little more details I gave here for sure.
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You can email me at loudlestinger at gmail.com, it'll hopefully be on the webpage.
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You've been listening to heckaPublicRadio at heckaPublicRadio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out
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how easy it really is.
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HeckaPublicRadio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicum computer club
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and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the creative commons, attribution,
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share a light 3.0 license.
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