Beating Starlink internet with a £10 4G simcard - Off Grid day 47

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  • Опубликовано: 20 май 2024
  • Part 2 • Learning the Hard Way:...
    Part 3 • Rural Internet Setup R...
    Starlink satelite internet vs 4G LTE
    We are experiencing low upload speeds with starlink satellite internet so we are going to assemble our own 4g mast to see if we can beat the speeds of starlink for 1/7th the cost (spoiler we do) We find somewhere to build the mast and explain why we are suited to installing our own 4g mast. The ariels and point to point wifi transmitters we use and why and a speed test showing the comparable internet download and upload speeds of starlink and our 4G simcard router.
    3G internet-www.three.co.uk/broadband/hom...
    Starlink- www.starlink.com/residential?...
    Directional antenna-www.netxl.com/directional-ant...
    Point to point wifi-www.broadbandbuyer.com/produc...
    Socket set-www.wickes.co.uk/Wickes-25-Pi...
    Website-www.offgridscotland.co.uk/
    Facebook- / offgridscotland
    Instagram- / offgridscotland123
    00:00 Intro
    01:02 Making the anchors
    04:31 Why leaving Starlink
    10:41 Why 3G is better for us
    13:58 The equipment
    19:14 Starlink speed test
    20:43 Erecting the mast
    24:52 The power problem
    27:50 3G internet speed test
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 806

  • @dj_paultuk7052
    @dj_paultuk7052 Месяц назад +158

    I deploy 4G connected construction sites in the UK. Done over 600 now. I use the Proroute H685 which you can get from the "3G Router store" in the UK. They are industrial routers and run off 12v, so you could run it off a old car battery. A Directional Yagi antenna was definitely the best way to go in your case.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +15

      Good to hear from an expert. I am going to give the router by 'outdoorrouter' a go and see what its like

    • @dotslashsatan
      @dotslashsatan Месяц назад +6

      We use Teltonica RUT250 4G and they’re fine! And I agree use a point to point yagi and make sure you point to the correct cell mast!

    • @kennethausten
      @kennethausten Месяц назад

      P​@@dotslashsatan

    • @dj_paultuk7052
      @dj_paultuk7052 Месяц назад +2

      @@dotslashsatan The RUT units are good and small. I have one in my car and it works great as 12v DC based with quick boot time.

    • @ricksanchez3628
      @ricksanchez3628 Месяц назад +3

      I bought a box of 9 broken Teltonika Rut950s for £50..They all had broken power jacks, easy fix then sold them on for £150 a piece.

  • @t3chno0007
    @t3chno0007 Месяц назад +131

    We fit these setups weekly all over the place with no physical broadband connections. A MikroTik LHGGM&EG18-EA Dish with a class 18 LTE modem a pair of Ubiquiti LOCO5AC NanoStation's and a Ubiquiti Flex USW 5 Less weight, less kit to be hit by windage plus your router is in the end of the dish with no loss in antenna cables. Bit of armoured cat 5 all the way back to the house and you can power it all via PD POE. Power the Flex 5 port switch via the house then it can provide its own poe for the Nanostation and dish. All runs on 24v.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +8

      Great sounds like you know your stuff. I am going to run power up there as its just over 200m and I would need boosters for the POE and when its armoured its not cheap

    • @gordslater
      @gordslater Месяц назад +1

      I love my Litebeam 5ACgen2's - they act as a transparent bridge, but have a bit of windage compared to Nanobeams, depends on the link budget what I fit. if it's very short path but has fresnel obscuration I use the Nano more and rely on scattering around the obstacle. For longer links I use 5ACg2's and aim off a little to get around the fresnel problem. I have very few clear paths due to trees and buildings and almost every one of the clear LOS has nearly half the fresnel obscured. Knife edge cases I use 5ACs for max gain and aim directly at the ridge/edge.
      You can have the best most expensive kit but it's no good if it wobbles off in the wind and blows away. Metal fatigue is the eventual killer if it wobbles.

    • @Luke-san
      @Luke-san Месяц назад +5

      @@offgridscotland Channel just showed up as suggested. Being in the HF field since the 80's the above suggestion is a good one. Coax = loss, but also antenna's are very complex. Those 2 directional antenna's are very close to each other if the image does it justice. The way the antenna makes it's gain is by making the beam smaller, so if aimed wrong then the antenna is worse than a small antenna with no (extra) gain at all. The more gain the more precise it should be.
      But you mention 200m. I thought cat5e would only go 100m. POE is at 48V so yes loss is kind of big.
      Need to watch the other vids so my text is only related to things I saw here. What if you install the equipment down where you need it? A phone is absolutely no match signal wise than those other devices with a good antenna.

    • @Kopf02
      @Kopf02 Месяц назад +12

      @@offgridscotlandif your going through the effort of running power up there, just run a fiber in addition instead of cat cable. Fibre isn’t really expensive anymore and 200 meters is like nothing when it comes to fiber connections. You couldn’t have any more stable connection then that. Even with 5G in the future.

    • @dazealex
      @dazealex Месяц назад +1

      @@Luke-san At 100M, he may need something in between to regenerate that signal. Though, not sure what Ethernet 100 or 1G will do in terms of packet loss etc at > 100M.

  • @ShadeSpeed
    @ShadeSpeed Месяц назад +40

    Small note: download and upload speeds are normally measured in mega/giga bits per second (lowercase 'b'). Bits are one eighth of a byte, so with a 50Mbps upload speed, it'd take roughly 8 seconds to upload a 50MB file.
    This looks excellent. My parents live in rural Wales, and have struggled with BT broadband speeds for some time. I'm hoping we'll be able to set something like this up for them!

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +3

      Thanks, I am fairly new to this internet stuff (used to just plug the router in and use it)

    • @miff227
      @miff227 28 дней назад +2

      @@offgridscotland generally, storage is bytes, networking is bits

    • @Elliott-ET
      @Elliott-ET 24 дня назад

      perhaps take a look into the Acess Broadband Cymru grant scheme. The government can cover the cost of equipment if eligible.

  • @michaelmason5459
    @michaelmason5459 Месяц назад +10

    Brilliant this is what we should be doing, building and working around keeps the grey cells active. Hope you'll call it Bargin Link. Cheers Mick

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks Mick! It was really satisfying to see it was faster than the starlink

    • @michaelmason5459
      @michaelmason5459 Месяц назад

      @@offgridscotland it's a punching the air above your head moment. Well done that man.

  • @callumbrowne2081
    @callumbrowne2081 28 дней назад +4

    Just checked the masts around my area and see that I have LOS. After testing a few spots, it’s up to 4x faster than my current spot.
    Thanks for inspiring me to research, I might make a wall mounted receiver with just a direct line into my house!

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  26 дней назад

      Great! I am so glad you had a look, it wasnt until I decided to have a go that I realised it was faster

  • @bozallen
    @bozallen Месяц назад +36

    I'd suggest given the size that those LTE antennas have far more gain than is necessary. Especially given the tower is LOS, relatively close and you saw better results with a standalone mobile phone. Try using the antennas built into the 4G router - you may see better results. I'd also recommend running your speed test with an ethernet cable between your laptop and router rather than over WiFi. Best of luck!

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +2

      Thanks, I had considered that but the Mac doesn't have an ethernet port and I had already run back down to get the usb adapter. I will try the Ethernet next time I am up there

    • @Stevoherve
      @Stevoherve Месяц назад +10

      I was about to say have you enabled the external antenna. On the few I've had you had to tell it to use the external or some can do one external and one internal.

    • @dh2032
      @dh2032 Месяц назад

      cables the way to go, but the location look like the middle nowhere, so channel congestion should be problem, moving as much as posable up the hill, basicly setup repeater, make the final connection?

    •  Месяц назад

      Looks more like the router is on band 28 (results are similar to the 10 MHz of B20 that I have here) and not aggregating B1/3.

    • @phillipsmiley5930
      @phillipsmiley5930 Месяц назад

      @@offgridscotland you can use any old router at the house end of the ethernet cable to put out wifi to your Mac

  • @stewartstewartstewart
    @stewartstewartstewart Месяц назад +3

    Another great video… we appreciate your efforts. Quality entertainment and great info

  • @samgraham4168
    @samgraham4168 Месяц назад +83

    17:30 - as a radio amateur, and seeing that you have LOS to the tower, I can already foresee problems with signal overloading (we call it desense) try again, but point the antennae in the OPPOSITE direction to the mast. A Yagi antenna like you have there has the active element at the back, and the passive directors in front simply 'concentrate the signal in one direction. Facing it in the opposite direction exposes the active elements only to the transmitter mast and will lower the input signal to the router telling you if it's actually an overload problem. You can liken it to someone standing on the opposite side of a room talking quietly and you can't hear them. If they shout, you can hear them. But if they stand next to you and shout, it's too loud. You may well find that you have a good setup, but just too much input. The only other thing to say is the mast is totally inadequate for the load. The guy lines are good, but the final section with the Yagis on have no support other than the sleeved section and will quickly fail. Honestly, if you get good reception with the back lobe of the antennas, then just swap to a smaller patch style antenna (the box you describe: Poynting make good kit for this) - I'm sorry to say I'm a proper nerd for this kinda thing :)

    • @bevmarks9921
      @bevmarks9921 Месяц назад +10

      The multi element antennas look like log period antennas. How are they connected. The cable lengths are critical for max received signal. As you explained one is vertical and one is horizontal polarised. You may find just one antenna slant polarised (i.e. 45 degrees) works quite OK - might be worth a try? If so it would reduce the wind loading of the pole, which by the looks for Line of Sight in both directions only needs at that location to be just above grass height! 😊

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +12

      Wow that's a lot of excellent information. Yea I was expecting a better pole as the website said they were 2.4m long not 3 shorter lengths slotting together to make 2.4m. I will try your idea on reversing them and see what it does. Thank you very much!

    • @brianmatthews232
      @brianmatthews232 Месяц назад +3

      @@bevmarks9921 Agree, one antenna likely best, joining the antennas directly will cause losses. Getting an amatueur radio licence would be an exellent idea for basic tech knowlege and also for comms, and its fun 🙂

    • @brianmatthews232
      @brianmatthews232 Месяц назад +3

      Have a look at HRCC ham radio crash course www.youtube.com/@HamRadioCrashCourse,
      and Calum in the UK (DX commander) www.youtube.com/@DXCommanderHQ

    • @RobCanada
      @RobCanada Месяц назад

      @@offgridscotland I couldn't find tech spec for the outdoorrouter but this will be a MiMo router meaning multi in Multi Out. In simple terms the when you make a data connection the mast will tell the router where to receive data.Your router will be capable of receiving and transmitting on multiple frequencies simultaneously (hence more than one aerial) and it combines these to make one big internet pipe, this is why when the mast has lots of user traffic your data speed will drop as it can't offer you multiple frequencies (for the geeks out there search "carrier aggregation" then search again and add the word "categories" this will explain how it works) . If you can access the menu of the router look for signal strength and signal quality these should / would be shown as RSRQ & RSRP and you can see what quality your signal is if you compare the reading to a chart like this. Search "Outdoor-4G-Router-Mobile-Signal-Quality-Chart-1400x421.png" You can then work out if your are looking at the best mast and turn the antenna to obtain the best signal quality. If you find your signal is low you could cut the antenna cables down in length as they will have a huge loss as mobile phone frequencies.

  • @kumbah2006
    @kumbah2006 Месяц назад +4

    Enjoying all the views of your countryside - thanks for sharing !
    Off-grid is challenging, but it can be done. Best of luck to you folks. :)
    I was watching mostly for the scenery, and listening to you talk about the 3G and 4G stuff.
    Watching you build in high speed is quite a trip - and It's all good! :)

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks! I speed some of it up otherwise the videos would be so long! Glad to have you here

  • @De5tr0yer
    @De5tr0yer Месяц назад

    Love the improvised hammer. Great video.

  • @johnheraty3554
    @johnheraty3554 Месяц назад +10

    Given the forward (direction you're pointing in) gain of the receive aerials you may be able to do the whole thing passively, without power. Use one of your receive aerials to point to the distant mast. Use the other to point to your property. Connect the two together with a single co-ax. You will have to get the lead length correct. At your property you should then find your phones work with a much higher signal level, and therefore faster speeds. As for the dual polarisation, using a H and V polarised aerial, try rotating the receive Ariel through 45 deg relative to the horizon. Its at least worth a try as it is free and power free. Passive re-radiators are used throughout Wales & Scotland for TV and radio services to fill in reception holes caused by hills and valleys.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +4

      Thats such a good idea! I will give it a try in the next video to see how it works

    • @nicktecky55
      @nicktecky55 Месяц назад

      Of course the authorities may have something to say about that. The offence is "stealing electricity", believe it or not. Although the only case I heard of was a guy with a bedstead antennae in his Norwood attic charging batteries off Crystal Palace. That was so bad viewers in the hollow ground behind lost their TV!.

    • @brettogden6104
      @brettogden6104 28 дней назад

      ​@@LouiseBrooksBobnot quite. You are basically making an unregulated interference device that doesn't have any RF filters in it so it's picking up and redirecting any and all signals from all channels in its line of sight. An active 4G repeater will have selective filtering I would guess but I'm not an expert in active 4G repeaters.

  • @photomg316
    @photomg316 Месяц назад

    Really really interesting video looking forward to the next update on this .

  • @livingoffgridinscotland
    @livingoffgridinscotland Месяц назад +2

    What engine is in your defender?
    On the 200tdi and 300tdi you can get an upgraded turbo

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      its the 300tdi, I did consider the hybrid turbo but at the moment I just want it running. It was from Fox turbo though and it was all new rather than refurbished.

    • @livingoffgridinscotland
      @livingoffgridinscotland Месяц назад +1

      @@offgridscotland 300tdi is one of the most reliable engines, mine is the 200tdi
      A garrett turbo off a Bmw m57 engine fits and gives lots more power….

  • @RobbiesAntics-ds3mu
    @RobbiesAntics-ds3mu Месяц назад +5

    You might try a passive repeater.
    Three of your beam aerials, one pointing at the cell tower, connected directly to one pointed at the house, then at the house one pointed too your field mast. No power required. I have a friend on Mull that used this technique technique to get TV to his house and it worked well. Worth trying before you spend money money on cables etc. I don't think your small hydro will work, the system will need a good mass flow with the low pressure of a stream. Your water generation system will be more complex than you think.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thats a great idea and I would like to have a go with a passive system as it sounds like the best way. I agree on the power I already have the cable arriving because I am not sure remote renewables will be reliable enough and I dont want the internet to go down too often

  • @andrewstones2921
    @andrewstones2921 Месяц назад +6

    If you were getting 50 up and 200 down from a phone, which has a tiny omnidirectional antenna, I’d be tempted to just use a decent omnidirectional antenna. Good video, very informative, thank you.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +2

      Thanks! I have a slightly different set up for the next video after reading all the great suggestions here so we will see how that goes

    • @wjnr1
      @wjnr1 26 дней назад

      Would recommend the router you mentioned for use in a touring caravan with an omni directional aerial ?

  • @RICH78UK
    @RICH78UK Месяц назад +5

    I think You should get a proper mast where your house will be and point the directional antenna to the BTS mast, no power issues and signal straight from 4G router without sending it to house.
    Regards Richard from Southampton UK 🇬🇧

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks, I may well end up arriving at that conclusion. We are going to do a bit more testing in the next video so we will see if its worth the effort up the hill

  • @gavinnorthants
    @gavinnorthants Месяц назад +7

    Personally, I would not bother with Antanas as the mast is so close you will probably get good speeds without it. As well the internal aerial inside the Three 4G plus router supports different polarization while the external antenna ports do not. Polarization is the angle the radio signal is travelling, think of 3D glasses. I've also checked the mains adaptor for the Three Plus rougher which is 12v DC, so could be wired to an old car battery.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +2

      Thanks! We are going to do a bit more testing in the next video including with and without the antennas and see what diffferences we get

  • @tuscan63
    @tuscan63 Месяц назад +8

    I know you said you didn't want cables but could you look at power over ethernet (PoE) would remove the latency between beaming signal between the mast and caravan and then also send power back up to router on hill. PoE+ gives 30w and can go bigger with other standards

    • @elminster8149
      @elminster8149 Месяц назад +3

      That's way too far for a POE run.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      I had considered that but I will need armoured or ducted cable as there are so many field mice and voles here that they will chew through it in days if its just normal ethernet

  • @DavidShorthouse
    @DavidShorthouse Месяц назад +1

    Did you get a better pole? I think the flex will really interfere with your connection on your network.?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      I have a scaffold pole for the next one as you said that one moves around

  • @Zeamus634
    @Zeamus634 Месяц назад +2

    Did you change the router settings to 'use external antennas' ?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +2

      No I diddnt, imagine if that wasnt set! I will check it for the next video thanks for pointing it out

    • @Zeamus634
      @Zeamus634 Месяц назад

      👍

  • @AndyJHiscock
    @AndyJHiscock Месяц назад +3

    Great video Mobile broadband varies wildly depends on how many other connections there are to the cell as your finding in the video consecutive tests produce different results. Sometimes I get a burst of 70 megabits but after a few seconds settles to about 20-30 megabits/sec. ps. A megabit is speed, a megabyte is size

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks I always get my words muddled. Cant promise I will remember on the next video though. Its going to be really interesting actually living with it as its all ok when you are filming a video but when it doesnt work at the worst possible time it shows how good the system really is

    • @TobotronPrime
      @TobotronPrime 28 дней назад +1

      Hey this isn’t true a megabit and a megabyte are both units of data the only difference is a megabyte is bigger (more data) than a megabit
      Megabit is just often used to show transfer speed because “bigger number looks better”

    • @mariospanna8389
      @mariospanna8389 14 дней назад +1

      You clearly don't know anything about the internet or tech, try not to spread misinformation...

    • @OurSpaceshipEarth
      @OurSpaceshipEarth 2 дня назад

      Be careful what you state as fact because not many of us ever took puter schooling so can get confusing :D I think 8 bits makes 1 Byte, so to convert backwards get bits (Bytes/8=bits). Ok right about here is when we start realizing that I haven't read anything about computer science and bad maths very much, I'm just a power amatuer netnerd, I went mega nerd and started dating a girl in the SMALL like

  • @waylonhartwell
    @waylonhartwell Месяц назад +7

    I don't really know the layout of your property close to where your current house is, but with those high gain antennas even a few hundred ft away from your current house and pointing towards the tower, you should be able to get a an almost as equal signal as you would get up on the hill. As long as the other Hill that is up beside your house is not in the way too much cell phone frequencies are pretty good at penetrating a little bit of dirt, so even if you are skimming the edge of the hill. If the antennas are down by your house, you'll still get a pretty good signal with those big antennas

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      I had hoped I would but there are two rows of very high spruce trees blocking the way to the main pylon and I wasnt too sure if they would mess the signal up. I am planning on doing some tests in the next video to see what affect everything has on the signal.

    • @brettogden6104
      @brettogden6104 28 дней назад

      ​@@offgridscotlandyou might even find the tops of the trees enhance the signal by refraction if you are very very lucky lol, but the trouble is trees move in the wind and also grow which might make the signal unreliable.
      At work in the olden days we used to use passive reflectors , basically two back to back microwave dishes . One picked up the signal at the top of the hill and the other rebroadcast it down the hil. No power used, just a cable connecting the two , just passive.
      They are frowned upon now commercially as they also redirect any signal ( i.e interference) in the same band in both directions, making radio planning complicated.

  • @MegaKrustyman
    @MegaKrustyman Месяц назад +2

    For a more stable mast you could use aluminium truss, normally used for rigging lighting or speakers for concert halls. There's a plethora of mounting accessories and it won't rust.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thats a great idea, I have got a scaffold pole that I will be using in the next video so hopefully that will be a bit better

  • @rkeantube
    @rkeantube Месяц назад +2

    Do you get a connection to the 4g without the poll etc at the house?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      A very weak one I tried and its surrounded by trees, so the good signal is up the hill

  • @fergal33
    @fergal33 Месяц назад

    Maybe this has been asked before, but are the electricity lines passing through the property suitable to take a grid connection off? Or maybe you've done the math and micro hydro is a better long term investment? Thanks!

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +3

      Yea they are available and probably way cheaper to connect to than what we have done. We chose to go off grid rather than on gird. Funny thing here is that the main grid goes down all the time and we are the only ones in the glen with power. The technicians come out at least once a month to check the lines and are very surprised to see we have power.

  • @dabig_guy2204
    @dabig_guy2204 Месяц назад +3

    I would consider renting an RF Signal meter or a Spectrum analyzer for maximum signal gain/best reception on your two antennae.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      I haddnt heard of one of those so I will have a look and see if I can get hold of one

  • @TheStuntmanSlim
    @TheStuntmanSlim Месяц назад +2

    What website did you use to find your radio tower?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      I used www.broadbandbuyer.com/store/wifi-antennas/wifi-outdoor-antennas/?msclkid=081968ab73dd1afb802b0e88a034f27b
      although I dont know if i would reccomend what I have put together after reading all the comments. I will be releasing video 2 that might be better

    • @orribleorange303
      @orribleorange303 Месяц назад +1

      @@offgridscotlandI’m also looking for website link (on screen at 11:25?) not having much luck on the broadbandbuyer site….

  • @BVLVI
    @BVLVI 20 дней назад

    My family and I lived on a solar sailboat I made for 2 years. your going to hit the limit in just a few days. star link is amasing

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  20 дней назад

      Wow thats incredible that you lived on a sailboat and made it work for 2 years nice job!

  • @markrainford1219
    @markrainford1219 22 дня назад

    Watching this video takes me back to the eighties, early nineties. I was in the Signals Territorials. Our specific task (after a nuclear war) was to do basically what you are doing. That is, go to the highest peaks in every county, from Scotland to London and set up VHF voice/data relay stations. One antenna pointed to the previous antenna and one pointed to the next in the chain, and so on.
    If you were thinking of taking power up there. A 6A circuit, over that distance, would require a 10mm two core armoured cable to comply with volt drop. So about £800+ for the cable alone.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  21 день назад

      Wow that sounds like quite a task to be preparing to do! Thanks I have run a small armoured cable uo there and it seems ok for now. I dont think I will quite need 6A

  • @Koopris
    @Koopris Месяц назад +4

    Run the power cable! For the distance is a no brainer. Every other option is far more complex and you will regret it every time you are up that hill fixing it!
    Buy 2 core 1.5mm armoured. Put a DC power supply at the house end which suits the voltage required by the kit (prob 24v). Use a decent AC-DC PSU like Meanwell, you can adjust these to account for voltage drop.
    Done the above myself on a run over 300m. Ran fibre alongside to eliminate the wireless link.

    • @Koopris
      @Koopris Месяц назад

      You could also do this over a network cable using PoE repeaters. See "Mikrotik GPeR" devices

    • @barrycorney3665
      @barrycorney3665 Месяц назад +2

      Spot on.... Argyll isn't as cold as where I'm at in the Cairngorms but freezing will happen and the hydro or solar/battery system may suffer badly....cable power for sure and fibre if you can afford to go to that also. I'd also be concreting in a scaffold pole for the mast and tethering it as you did, you'll get howling wind up there and if it's just sunk into soft peat it'll move/rotate. Belt'n'braces every time in rural Scotland!! Damn impressed with those 4G speeds- our "copper wire" only gives 17mbps d/l and 1.5mbps u/l We have just the "band 20" antenna over the valley might see what the phone picks up and whether a sim router would be worthwhile- faster speeds with a trade off of maybe a capped monthly usage....

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      I am beginning to consider this option more seriously now that I am having to actually do the job

  • @Timsele
    @Timsele Месяц назад +2

    Hey mate, have you enabled the external Antenna in the router settings? Normally, these Antenna ports will not be active if not activated. If that is true, your speeds will increase dramatically ;)
    These routers normally have an IP address on the Back to configure them.
    And if you run Power from your House across a 200-meter Cable, you should look up the proper Cable Size that you don't end up with too much power loss :)

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      Wow that would be amaxing if I had missed that and our speeds go up. I haddnt changed anything so we will try it in the next video

  • @adrianhart9409
    @adrianhart9409 8 дней назад

    I've lived off grid for 3 years on the west coast of Scotland, I stated with 4g but the reliability is just not good enough. If a tree comes down on phone wires or power line the 4g mast stops working. I work from home so good internet is essential
    I switched to starlink 2 years ago, I've had 1x15 minutes drop out. Occasional drop for a few seconds if the heavens has opened and the weather is torrential rain.
    Earlier this year the 2 local villages had a power cut for 2 days due to trees falling down (No power, no mobile signal and no internet).
    I was the only person in the area with power and internet.
    For me, the reliability is key and its my only utility bill.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  8 дней назад

      Good for you, I am really glad you have found a solution that works well where you are

  • @gavinnorthants
    @gavinnorthants Месяц назад +1

    I use a Three 4G Plus roughter unlocked off ebay for £35, paired with a promotional £10 Unlimated data Lebara Sim card. Even though I lives in a town with broadband, I find this setup cheaper and fast enough for my needs.

  • @jada1173
    @jada1173 Месяц назад +1

    Put the cable in the ground, looks mainly like gras land down to the house.
    If there is no stone's in the ground you can easily put the cable 5 cm deep with making a «cut» trench with a showel.
    I manage a 70m run in a couple of hours on farmland.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      Wow you are doing amazingly if you do that run by hand. I have conceded though and have the cable on order for the next video

    • @brettmat8868
      @brettmat8868 Месяц назад

      Can also borrow a tractor with mole plough, have pulled many cables and water pipes with that setup

  • @elminster8149
    @elminster8149 Месяц назад +1

    To power:
    Get a small travel inverter and a couple of small solar panels, and a small 12v lithium ion battery. Put the battery and inverter in a sealed plastic box and partially bury.
    Morten at Myplayhouse set up something similar in Portugal.
    Your point to point wifi should be fine if you use good kit.

    • @barrycorney3665
      @barrycorney3665 Месяц назад

      Portugal doesn't experience freezing Scottish winters, and Lithium Ion are destroyed below freezing (I have an E-MTB and live in the Cairngorms, never leave the battery on the bike in the shed!)

    • @bozallen
      @bozallen Месяц назад +1

      Inverters are very inefficient. Best to stay DC throughout and use boost / buck converters as required.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Excellent thank you. I will check their video out and see if I can pick anything up from what they have done

    • @MhzUHF
      @MhzUHF Месяц назад

      Hi your video came up as recommended today so late to the comments I was going to say the same, to look at the Myplayhouse Portugal. Video Morten has done several, including power. As for the Lithium Ion Battery Low-temperature problem I have seen this with a Power station going in to “Safe mode” at 0 C and refusing to charge Get a normal Lead Acid Battery for a cold location look for “Ultra Deep Cycle Leisure Marine Battery - 12V / 105Ah” it will have a shorter life but will work in the cold and set your charge controller to Lead Acid.

    • @higreentj
      @higreentj Месяц назад

      Sodium batteries are better in cold climates and will likely replace lead acid batteries.

  • @JDanielsOffGrid
    @JDanielsOffGrid Месяц назад

    I added a WeBoost kit to the house for telephone and as a back-up when the power is off. It's 5G once in a while. The point is WeBoost said to separate the in and out antenna as far as possible to limit interference. I use a 1000 W power hub (Jackery) for total blackout. Starlink draws 72 Watts. (110V AC) Toaster draws 690W. Then the sun comes up and power comes on. High desert helps as I get sun nearly every day. 24 Panels 16 batteries. Power only goes out when I get sloppy. A mate of mine used to run high voltage DC for sunlight challenged clients. Some were hundreds of feet. High voltage = smaller copper wire. He is no longer here to ask about it. Main point of this is antenna separation. Carry on sir.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thank you very much your system sounds amazing! I agree with what you said about the power only goes off if you get sloppy. As soon as I take my eye off the ball thats when something clogs or runns out.

  • @kennethraugstad9315
    @kennethraugstad9315 Месяц назад +1

    With those high-gain antennas, you don't necessarily need a line of sight to achieve a strong, stable signal. Mounting them directly on the house can save you both the cost and hassle of running power to your mast.
    I've installed hundreds of Yagis in rural areas where there was no signal at all using just a regular phone.
    Before investing a lot of time, effort, and money, try mounting the antennas down at the house. Additionally, if there are hills in the opposite direction of the tower, they can act as reflectors, as radio waves bounce off hills.
    You might also want to check if it's possible to lock the router to a specific band/frequency, as in areas like this, the 800MHz (band 20) or 900MHz (band 8) tend to perform better than 1800MHz (band 3) and 2100MHz (band 1). Some routers allow you to choose the band in the firmware, while others are set to auto. If the router is connected to a too high frequency, the upload speed is the first to suffer. If band selection isn't possible in the firmware, you can connect a band-pass filter between the antenna and the router.
    It seems like you have the version with a 7m coaxial cable. The signal loss for the cable is approximately -0.50dB/m. By shortening the cable length, you can gain around 3.5dB.
    If you decide to proceed with your mast, consider making it more sturdy, and think about spacing the Yagis a bit. There should ideally be a minimum of 1 meter between them. One should be mounted horizontally and the other vertically. If you have line of sight and the sector antennas on the tower are facing you, you might experience issues due to excessive RF signal. In that case, you can connect an attenuator between the router and the antenna.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      I haddnt considered the hill acting as a reflector. I have got a different router to try for the next video and it seems a bit more suited for our purpose. We will be doing a few more comparrisons of locations and antenna so hopefully we will discover a good combination. You certainly sound like you know your stuff so I will check back to re-read it before I make the changes thank you very much

  • @saintric7282
    @saintric7282 Месяц назад +2

    Same in the Philippines the Kit is very expensive compared in some countries like Germany or Italy and they say it was 30-40% the price and the Billing system is ----

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Wow its a shame its more expensive

    • @saintric7282
      @saintric7282 22 дня назад

      @@offgridscotland yes because local telcos here are pretty much business oriented rather than a public service. So starlink will definitely in line with them😥

  • @d.t.4523
    @d.t.4523 Месяц назад

    Thank you, keep working.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      👍

    • @d.t.4523
      @d.t.4523 Месяц назад

      @@offgridscotland My long reply seems to have been scrubbed for mentioning a site to get parts from.

  • @Building_Bluebird
    @Building_Bluebird Месяц назад +2

    I'm wondering if there is a passive unpowered antenna setup which could redirect and passively repeat the signal? If so, you could avoid having to setup a power station on the hill. Two high gain antennae joined by coaxial cable. One pointed at the tower, and the other one pointed at the house window. Might work.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      I was hoping this existed as well but so far havent found anything. Most of the people seem to say 'just run the power cable' and the more I look into it its feeling like the best option

    • @Building_Bluebird
      @Building_Bluebird Месяц назад

      @@offgridscotland I think this kind of thing would be a niche application and is probably just a diy project. Maybe find a book on antennae systems and RF applications. It's probably simple once you have the right kit, but I've never played with antennae. It should work though if the power level of the signal is adequate. If powered, I'd also run AC from a hardened location so the thing works in Cold temps. Anything with a battery on the hill would become problematic in winter.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      @@Building_Bluebird Yea I think I will be introducing many potential problems adding batteries up the hill.

    • @brettmat8868
      @brettmat8868 Месяц назад +3

      Old RF tech here. We used to do that back in the 70's for Band III TV and it worked well. Two high gain yagis joined with a fixed length of coax, length was a few wavelengths at the desired channel frequency. It was also very high grade coax like RG213

    • @BobHannent
      @BobHannent 7 дней назад

      There have been examples of radio mirrors used in the past, but they're not ideal, usually you need the mast to have a directional antenna pointed at the mirror.

  • @patricklyons7683
    @patricklyons7683 13 дней назад

    Just brought a clark mast qt-15 meter jobbie, mint condition for 2006 build with tripod & middle & top guying gear. Got major boost in speed though using omni-directional antenna. Oh & a ZT-11mtr for a wind turbine at some stage too be mounted to a lorry project.

    • @patricklyons7683
      @patricklyons7683 13 дней назад

      Make sure to login into router advanced settings; activate external ariel ports!

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  12 дней назад

      The wind turbine sounds amazing! and that is a tall mast mine is barely above my head!

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  12 дней назад

      I hunted for the setting but couldnt find it on the router. I have got a different one for the next video

  • @joey_f4ke238
    @joey_f4ke238 28 дней назад

    Nice setup there, i have been using 4g from home for a few years and recently upgraded to 5g. One thing i have learned is that router specs are really important, using a 4g router cat18 gave me full 150/160 down and 50/60 up with direct line of sight to the tower while the one supplied by the company was only like cat6 so upload specially was pretty limited. Now 5g is a different beast with latency rivaling fiber and 300/400 mbps download, but uploads appear to use the 4g bands since max is still around 50mbps

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  26 дней назад

      thats so useful especially as I am working through those problems at the moment

  • @JaapJolman
    @JaapJolman Месяц назад +1

    The angles is for polarisation but you might need to check if its 45° offset or if its just horizontal and vertical

  • @TheRealHarrypm
    @TheRealHarrypm Месяц назад +1

    The big thing with LTE setups is having a Cat 18/20 level radio (an M.2 one) with your Yaggie array weather it be 2/4/6/8 antennas, LTE setups with a dedicated mini PC and radio with IPEX to SMA to BNC/TNC adapters are far better then the consumer router setups (can run add blocking on the network level too) also you can run it all off standard 12v etc so a small solar setup can work all year round for a affixed station.
    I am stuck on VDSL2 with a 2-3k cost to update to Fibre so I wasted a few weeks on this as a project just did not have the money or time to get scaffolding up to deploy antennas properly.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  29 дней назад +1

      Thanks for the tip. Wow thats a lot of money for the updated cable!

    • @TheRealHarrypm
      @TheRealHarrypm 29 дней назад +1

      ​@@offgridscotland No its not the Fibre I have trenched and got media coverters setup for my shed, thats like 20GBP for the two 1Gbps end points for Ethernet hardware running off 5v and £15 per 50m of LC fibre, in the real world its all all LABOR costs that makes BT wholesale flat priceing brackets insane there consumer site is only for people with fibre to the local pots, but as soon as you go look at the wholesale for "FTTC to FTTP" its pure pain in city and in most semi rural locations.

  • @justinpickering8370
    @justinpickering8370 Месяц назад

    Although you are probably over-modulating the signal, a pole option you should try is a scaffolding put lock pole, about 1m high, 2 x swivel couplers and a 4m pole, you post hammer the 1m into the ground leaving half protruding, fasten the 4m to a swivel coupler at the bottom of both poles and raise up right and couple the top, this way you have a none climb serviceable mast. no guides are required.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks! It was annoying the pole was so thin when it arrived.

  • @Alixstair
    @Alixstair Месяц назад

    What will you do with the redundant starlink equipment?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      I am going to sell it on eBay to recover some costs. I will need to wait until I have the 4G system running properly first though

  • @DonaldEastwood
    @DonaldEastwood Месяц назад +10

    Personally, I think you have way too much equipment to make this reliable. Just think that every piece of hardware you have is a 'step' or a 'hop' and is another point of failure, and also a degradation of the signal. I liked the idea stated earlier that your 4G router may just provide enough speed without all the gizmo's.

    • @elliot330
      @elliot330 Месяц назад +1

      I agree, can't help thinking that just that "3" router just sat up there with a long LAN cable ran down to the house would be just as good?

    • @DonaldEastwood
      @DonaldEastwood Месяц назад +2

      @@elliot330 I think the LAN cable 'may' work over that distance (is it 200m or something like that?) but it does seem like a long run to me. I think you can maintain speeds over a GOOD ethernet cable for 100m or maybe more, but after that, speeds may drop slightly, although I might agree with an argument that the user wouldn't even notice.
      But always best to use the best available cables, like at least a CAT 6A or even the newer 8A.

    • @gibo1971
      @gibo1971 Месяц назад +1

      Instead of cat6 you can use coax and MoCa adapter. But by time you’ve paid for how ever metres of coax the unifi nano bridges would not be that more expensive. Trenching coax or network cable pain in the but.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +2

      You may well be right, the signal down by the house wasn't good enough though so I would still need a way of getting the internet from the router back to the house

    • @gibo1971
      @gibo1971 Месяц назад

      @@offgridscotland Scottnogrid used the accessory/lighting power positive and negative of cheap Chinese pwm charge controller to power modem as it is 12 volts the same as router. Unify nano bridges seem to work well for moving signal around property. How sure are you the antenna you bought is the right wave length or made for your application? The reason I ask is I have a 4G router that sits on my 1st floor deck of shed in a cheap tool box I bought from hardware store to protect it and works well and the telecom tower is 8km away.

  • @elkneto4334
    @elkneto4334 Месяц назад

    interesting and nice video.. and the face slap was quite nice also ;)

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks, it made me laugh watching it back so I left it in

  • @charliecarpenter2840
    @charliecarpenter2840 Месяц назад

    I lived in a caravan in rural Galloway for two years about 2014 ish, I had a satellite setup I forget the name of the company. It was about 300ish for the dish and router. I mounted the dish on a paving slab, which was enough to keep it from moving about but still light enough to be portable. Dish was huge, the system worked very well for the most part, it could struggle with heavy cloud but was better than I expected. I still have the dish, I have no idea if the companies still exist but it might be an alternative to starlink. I suspect the 4g option is the better bet, especially with electronic sims now, you can have a collection of payg accounts and turn on the one with best reception in the area.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      I am looking forward to doing the next video because I will be trying out different configurations and locations to see what differences they make. Yours sounds like it worked well and we find heavy cloud can clog things up but it makes it far worse for Starlink than beraming to a ground based mast.

  • @jasonsomerville2504
    @jasonsomerville2504 28 дней назад

    Looking at your yagi antennas couldn't work out if you had done this, but, might be a good test if you orientated one 45deg to horizontal and other 135deg, to cater for wave polarisation? Mimic a mimo antenna?? Sorry if that was the case, couldn't see from the video

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  28 дней назад

      I have a slightly different setup planned for the next video to do some testing with

  • @jamiestewart5802
    @jamiestewart5802 Месяц назад

    We're did you get your trousers and shirt from ?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Trousers are Engelbert Strauss motion 10x and the shirt is military 1st

  • @ste8120
    @ste8120 4 дня назад

    Scaffolding poll would do nicely for that job mate

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  3 дня назад

      Thanks in the next video thats exactly what I do

  • @insAneTunA
    @insAneTunA Месяц назад +3

    I am not a radio amateur but I once built my own Yagi wifi antenna from scratch with the instructions from a radio amateur and I know from experience that they are very directional sensitive. So obviously you can get much better results with a mast that doesn't swing because those antenna's are that sensitive to direction. Higher of the ground is always better. The antenna itself probably needs a ground connection so the rubber is not helping with that. And I am not too sure if putting two of those antenna's that close together is beneficial. They actually might interfere with each other and make the signal worse.
    So I would recommend you to do a test where you remove one antenna completely from the mast just to see how strong the signal is with just one antenna, and/or to play with the distance that they are apart from each other if you do use them both. And once everything is roughly installed it is well worth to put some extra time in aiming the antenna. A slightly different direction can make a very big difference.
    So to me it is a no-brainer that you are switching to 4G especially considering the fact that you already have a much better result with a very rudimentary setup that can be improved by installing it correctly with a better mast. 840 or 120 a year is a big difference so you should have some wiggle room for materials. 👍

    • @stewartstewartstewart
      @stewartstewartstewart Месяц назад +1

      This. I was about to say

    • @fire_stick
      @fire_stick Месяц назад

      don’t run with just one antenna, you may damage the amplifiers on the router, if your getting a good signal from a mobile you likely don’t need a yagi directional antenna.

    • @insAneTunA
      @insAneTunA Месяц назад

      @@fire_stick hahahahaha What a load of nonsense. Thanks for making me laugh. 🤣😂

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      wow thats a big task to tackle I diddnt even know it was possible to build your own antenna. I have already ordered the bits for video 2 as everyones suggestions are so good and i think we will be doing comparrasons to see what the adjustments do to the speeeds

    • @insAneTunA
      @insAneTunA Месяц назад

      @@offgridscotland Radio amateurs build their own antenna's very often. But it does require some knowledge or very good instructions and a high level of accuracy. I think that it in your situation it is not worth the hassle, but there are plenty examples on YT and at radio amateur forums. But youtube is a good starting point.

  • @excession1293
    @excession1293 Месяц назад +1

    Did you try the reception with the yagi antennas straight from the top of the barn?
    Otherwise, run the cables. Unless you want to spend the rest of your life messing around with this install. 😉

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      I haddnt but I will for the next video I have bit the bullet for the next video and purchased the cable so that we have the flexibility for the future in case we need to change anything. Plus it gives me a power point up the hill for other things if i need it.

  • @2e0txe
    @2e0txe Месяц назад +4

    A tall tower at the homebase with those two yagi's will work without creating any power problems in a field.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks, we are surrounded by very tall pine trees do you think it will work through those?

    • @kevinroberts781
      @kevinroberts781 29 дней назад

      ​@@offgridscotlandyup it should work just fine. I'd do a small test at the house

  • @winterburan
    @winterburan Месяц назад +2

    😃the antennas at +45° and -45° are correct but they should be at a greater distance from each other, no less than 20cm between the longest elements, coaxial cables as short as possible because being thin they lose a lot of signal, it's a matter of cm, yes Starlink it is the last choice due to costs if there are no alternatives, many people are fascinated and fall for it then perhaps they are covered by 5G or have to do as you did, you will need a photovoltaic system and DC-DC converters if necessary, to power everything without an inverter

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks, they are fixed on a bracket that came with them so there isnt much adjustments. Others have said they might be too much power so we have some different ones to test in the next video

  • @CompuWhizz
    @CompuWhizz Месяц назад +9

    All tests should be run over Ethernet as you need to isolate the WiFi element so that you are only testing the 4G element, now of course having drunk the apple coolaid you won't be able to do this without purchasing what should be standard spec, an Ethernet adapter.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +2

      Thanks, I will be trying this on the next video as it will likely be a test of most of the comparrisons to see where the weakesses are.

  • @james3418
    @james3418 Месяц назад

    Very interesting video thanks

  • @dnesdlrow
    @dnesdlrow 29 дней назад +2

    We live off grid in Scotland too. Can’t believe I’ve only just found your channel! Generate all our own electricity using wind/pv. We’ve gone the other way to you and ditched 4g for Starlink! Problem we had relying on a single mast was the frequent drop outs, sometimes for hours. Not sure if it was just this mast in particular or if they’re all like that and most people don’t notice because they have several masts their devices switch between?
    The dropouts played havoc with our WiFi heating controls and various other smart switches we have to harvest as much power as we can when batteries are full.
    Going to watch all your other vids now! Good luck, it’s a constant challenge but worth it 😊

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  29 дней назад

      Have you? You must be in a really good area for it, I think the trees and hillsides are really bad for starlink here. Thanks I hope you like the other videos

  • @ukvinersmart7571
    @ukvinersmart7571 Месяц назад +1

    I would try the setup down at the caravan, no messing about. Those yagi antennas will be fine down there, get hold of a vna so you can properly tune your antennas and cable. I think you will loose far more with the wifi than you will with those trees on the 4g, wifi drops fast at legal power levels even at line of sight

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks others have said the same. I think in the next video we will try some different locations to see how it all ends up comparing

  • @felixcomms
    @felixcomms 14 дней назад

    Ex Royal Signals. We used Pneumatic masts for Mobile Radio Relay. Masts were as solid as 👌

  • @deelianharris9954
    @deelianharris9954 27 дней назад

    Hi, i'm not sure about that particular model but you may you have to log into your 4g modem and manually enable your external aerials. Default would be just the internal aerials. Good luck!

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  26 дней назад +1

      I have been trying that today for the next video and having a right problem with it. There seems to be no clear option and others say the same on this router. I have another one that I will be trying out once the adapters arrive

  • @Offcut55
    @Offcut55 Месяц назад

    You have a better speed than i do on BT Fibre at the moment. They fixed for about an hour and down to sloooow again!

  • @bevmarks9921
    @bevmarks9921 Месяц назад +1

    Have you thought about a passive antennas solution? Wire the two log periodic antennas together, point one at source and one towards destination...

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      no I haven' but now that you have mentioned it to me I will look into it. Thanks!

    • @AndyFletcherX31
      @AndyFletcherX31 Месяц назад +1

      This is unlikely to give a good result unless you are seeing signals better than about -40dBm on the hilltop. The losses of a back to back antennas are too high. One slightly expensive option is to put the antennas about 20m apart pointing in the two directions and use a cell enhancer to boost the signal, you don't need much power and it would give full cellular coverage by the house :)

  • @tittytwister5251
    @tittytwister5251 Месяц назад +2

    Personally I have a similar setup for a remote cctv system. I'm using a solar panel with charge controller and also a car battery which seems to run it lovely! These routers are generally 12v which of course works well with those routers

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  29 дней назад +1

      I had thought about remote CCTV as a similar thing to power, I have since bit the bullet and bought the cable as I dont want there to be failures in the system all the time because I diddnt get enough solar up there for cloudy days etc

  • @craigboden9455
    @craigboden9455 Месяц назад +1

    I'm pretty sure starlink say themselves that it's not meant to be a normal WiFi strength. It's meant for places with no Internet at all or warzones or for when the grid goes down. It's an emergency WiFi system.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Yea and I am sure its going to get better over time but for now I want to save some money. Starlink has done us a service in the meantime though cant fault them on that

  • @seb_gibbs
    @seb_gibbs 28 дней назад

    All RF signals travel in straight lines (although very slightly pulled from gravity), they don't twist or change, but you may however also receive reflections of the original wave. The RF wave will come at you at the polisation it was transmitted at, so you don't need both a vertical and horizontal antenna; do recommend watching the signal gain and twisting for ultimate results.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  28 дней назад

      I was wondering about that after reading a lot of the comments. I thought I was barking up the wrong tree with directional antennas as I thought maybe I have got it wrong that the signals were being emitted in a straight line and maybe I should be trying to capture them from any old place

  • @ChuckNorris-lf6vo
    @ChuckNorris-lf6vo Месяц назад

    Good job.

  • @andrewtaylor9704
    @andrewtaylor9704 Месяц назад

    If you have a high gain antenna do you also risk increasing your SNR ?

    • @48pluto
      @48pluto Месяц назад

      You mean Signal to Noise Ration.

    • @andrewtaylor9704
      @andrewtaylor9704 Месяц назад

      @@48pluto yes exactly, if you increase signal with this does it also increase noise?

    • @48pluto
      @48pluto Месяц назад

      @@andrewtaylor9704 No, you are not amplifying the noise.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      I would but I havent even heard of SNR

  • @jessemoore3512
    @jessemoore3512 27 дней назад

    How much of the land is yours between your house and the 4G Tower? I ask as it may just be faster, cheaper, and more reliable. To trench a fibre in reinforced hose and build a small housing for a fibre switch and 4G Outdoor Modem with a 12v battery and solar panel. Trench as far as you can towards the mast.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  26 дней назад

      its a couple of hundred meters to our boundary in that direction. Sounds like a great idea, once I get past the teething stages.

  • @DanFrederiksen
    @DanFrederiksen 29 дней назад

    Are you sure those antennae are suited for GSM?? those look fantastically wrong :) it would be a plate or dish more like the one you use to relay down to the house

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  29 дней назад

      No I am not sure and the more comments I read the more I realise they might not be the right ones. We have some others to test in the next video to see what changes it makes

  • @DOINKS-R-USS
    @DOINKS-R-USS Месяц назад

    Awesome defender 😊

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks Its growing on me a lot. Just have to get it back on the road

  • @GordonHudson
    @GordonHudson Месяц назад

    Just as an FYI, you might find that the wind loading on that system is pretty high for Scottish wind. I base that on 40 years experience installing amateur radio antenna systems in Scotland. It's the gusting that does the damage. Normally a bit of "give" can be helpful, but not with directional antennas. There would be nothing worse than a failure in deep winter when it's difficult to get up and fix it.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks I have already got a scaffold pole for it as it was way thinner than I expected it to be when I ordered it

  • @markphillips8019
    @markphillips8019 28 дней назад

    At just 10 quid per "line" perhaps you could get 2 SIMs and then bond the lines together using Multilink PPP or similar? You'd double the bandwidth while still coming in at less than Starlink. Not sure if your gear can do it but its worth a look?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  28 дней назад

      That's an incredible idea! Might be a bit above my skill level however maybe a few more months at this and I might be ready for a more complex set up

  • @HubbHubbs
    @HubbHubbs Месяц назад

    Have u tried just using a tall mast on one of your buildings?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      I will be testing that in the next video to see how it performs

  • @wilsondavenport6939
    @wilsondavenport6939 28 дней назад +1

    One thing to keep in mind is starlink will continue to get updates and more satellites, I agree this is a upgrade today but in 2-3 years might need to reevaluate

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  28 дней назад

      Yea I had considered that, starlink is likely to only get better with time

  • @Littlemosslad
    @Littlemosslad Месяц назад

    Those TP-Link dishes can work fine (I used one in my back garden to beam wifi into a cabin) but I have found them to be occasionally troublesome. The software (Pharos I think it’s called) is quite technical. Best of luck with it though!!

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      Ah ok, these came preconfigured so I hope they arent too much of a pain to get set up.

  • @Ligby
    @Ligby 17 дней назад

    I consistently get 11 up on starlink, although we may just have less clouds in the western US.
    For my use case star link wins out as I do not upload and need very responsive ping.
    Cool that you can have internet for 10 quid

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  14 дней назад +1

      Thanks! Its the hills on either side of us limiting the sky coverage that gives us the bad speeds I think

  • @irishguy200007
    @irishguy200007 Месяц назад

    What equipment is being installed here?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  29 дней назад

      Here are the links
      3G internet-www.three.co.uk/broadband/home-broadband
      Starlink- www.starlink.com/residential?gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjwwr6wBhBcEiwAfMEQs_ANxT9y_TbkhnEYwzLBuqRy3TVBCTC2D5iJimmIxmafpSmY9kXPUxoC-s4QAvD_BwE
      Directional antenna-www.netxl.com/directional-antennas/poynting-lpda-0092-lte-high-gain-directional-lte-antenna-bundle/?gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjwwr6wBhBcEiwAfMEQs7EMfeeRmwIuUauhwCes4cai5xbXCekINDvvOZaK1pPRJuro3qYmdhoCuH0QAvD_BwE
      Point to point wifi-www.broadbandbuyer.com/products/44154-tp-link-cpe710-pnp-mnt/
      Socket set-www.wickes.co.uk/Wickes-25-Piece-1-4in-Sqaure-Drive-Socket-Set/p/262032?gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjwwr6wBhBcEiwAfMEQs7hGwBDIXf9boREDiIL0hgeQg36QMHNjIxqEV-g8mH2YjseZnOjiHBoC4xkQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds

  • @brendon6589
    @brendon6589 Месяц назад +1

    What’s the website you used to check what that cell tower is putting out???

    • @jempro1674
      @jempro1674 Месяц назад

      Me too

    • @AdamMW
      @AdamMW 29 дней назад

      Cellmapper most likely

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  29 дней назад

      Yea it was cellmapper I removed the rest of the page because it had my exact location on it

    • @brendon6589
      @brendon6589 29 дней назад

      Thanks mate!

  • @battonfive
    @battonfive 28 дней назад

    Great job, well considered. An ebike hub motor is handy for a little water generator. I noticed you have worked on a solution there I will check the vid out, dont forget to keep you battery warm in winter as the cold sucks it empty fast and vented in summer as thermal throttling can be a pain to. I will have a ponder on your solution and give you a shout if anything comes to mind 🙂

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  28 дней назад +1

      Thank you very much, I have since decided to run the power cable as there are a few other potential failure points and I don't want to also have to deal with power outages as another one

    • @battonfive
      @battonfive 28 дней назад

      @@offgridscotland It happens, having the wired peace of mind sounds good, while at the same time you can still dabble with the hydro gen, that would be handy over time and once you nail the solution it could be handy for other bits to.

  • @SnowingNapalm
    @SnowingNapalm 24 дня назад

    18:25 a middle man mast is just called a signal repeater, in Alaska we have repeaters mtn to mtn and then directional signal throwers from there branched off to hit main city the repeaters connect to rack other mainly as a wireless data trunk cable with long thick cables cost and digging or infrastructure upkeep problems ocean trunk wires though do do very well sending alot of information securely to each other

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  24 дня назад

      Aha thats what I was looking for a signal repeater. Wow thats a good way of getting the network across difficult terrain

  • @bigmike3639
    @bigmike3639 16 дней назад

    My directional antenna(1) is about 1 foot long, and the same shape you are using. I don't have a direct line of sight and I pick up pretty far away. You might have a little over kill on your antennas

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  14 дней назад

      I have found that out on the video I am currently working on and we end up with a far simpler system

  • @hebe1792
    @hebe1792 Месяц назад

    To get more throughput or data rates, you will want to use MIMO. For this, you will need an LTE radio that supports it (most radios support at least 2x2 or even 4x4 MIMO). Most smartphones today support 4x4 MIMO, so most standalone LTE modems should also support it. In theory, a 4x4 MIMO configuration will use 4 transmit and 4 receive antennas, and it will multiplex the 4 streams to provide you a higher speed. Your maximum speed will also depend on the carrier bandwidth the network operator is using and the number of users using the same tower. Other mechanisms in LTE like carrier aggregation can help you get even faster throughput, but it depends on both the network provider and your equipment capabilities. 100 Mbps is not bad, but you could get 3x that speed.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      That sounds excellent, I just had to do a bit of googling to find out what MIMO is and it sounds perfect!

  • @TobotronPrime
    @TobotronPrime 28 дней назад

    Very interesting video although I do really want to say a few things;
    Clearly the solution is phenomenally over engineered!
    Proof of this is that your wife’s phone did a better job than all this equipment connected to a laptop.
    Mobile masts are such high frequency that trees have borderline no impact at the distance you are from the mast. You also don’t need true LOS. It would be MUCH easier and more efficient to get a omni directional antenna (you don’t need a yagi) and stick it on a pole on the house.
    Additionally with the double yagi, a signal is either horizontal OR vertical it can’t be both so you only need one, the other antenna is redundant. Also connecting multiple antennas usually causes problems in itself so that should be changed for best results.
    KISS as they say.
    Lastly obviously it’s fun for the video to best SL the fact it works well and costs a tenner - ild be happy waiting the extra few mins to upload a video even if it turns out to be slower. All things considered.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  26 дней назад

      Thanks, I have been working on video 2 and you are right with the keeping it simple as its getting really complicated with the different settings etc.

    • @TobotronPrime
      @TobotronPrime 25 дней назад

      @@offgridscotlandthere are quite a few people with custom camper vans that use the netgear nighthawk router, shove the sim in that, and then use an outdoor omni antenna with an sma connector and get fantastic speeds - whole setup about £250 most of the cost is in the router and there are much cheaper routers but I’ve heard the netgear bats it out the park;
      I did enjoy the mast solution though, it 100% looked the part!

  • @richardcawthorpe
    @richardcawthorpe 26 дней назад

    i think you can supply seperate inverters to the same bat bank , the inverters should have reverse current diodes fitted

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  25 дней назад

      Yea I think so too, not at that stage just yet but I was planning on having one battery bank and other inverters if needed

  • @chrislee7817
    @chrislee7817 Месяц назад

    I have a similar problem with out Scottish self build. There is no line of sight to the mast which is over the hill. I'm hoping to find a passive repeater solution but don't know what im doing😅. Wish I knew more about these things.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      We are going to do a bit of a series on this as there have been so many comments with different suggestions and I am like you so hopefully we can learn together! I will be trying different configurations and non line of sight options so hopefully some of it will be useful to you

  • @misterbonzoid5623
    @misterbonzoid5623 29 дней назад +1

    19:50 'the uploads have always been pretty good...'. I think you meant downloads. And if the Starlink 'degrades quite quickly with cloud'... you are in Scotland. Subscribed, as my future will be off-grid.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  28 дней назад

      Thanks, I did mean downloads. Hope you like the rest of our videos

  • @wobbles8983
    @wobbles8983 Месяц назад +1

    If you are considering running a cable instead of your point to point . You could power your modem via POE ( Power Over Ethernet ) . That being said how is the modem ( ok router ) going to cope in the colder / harsher conditions? You may need to enclose a resistor to act as a heater . Which of course is more power burden although doable. The only other option is high grade coax which lets all the electronics be closer to the home. This puts the coax in the “ expensive “ bracket . Finally you could compromise and enclose the router near the hydro source and if necessary run two turbines . So many permutations but all good fun

    • @sstudholme
      @sstudholme Месяц назад +1

      this is more than 100m, an ethernet cable will not work well, especially with POE.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      I had priced this up but I am not sure if i coulf POE both the wifi dish and the router together. Also the price over the distance was too much given the boosters I would need. I have got some power cable though as that was cheaper than I thought

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks

  • @alexandern8hgeg5e9
    @alexandern8hgeg5e9 Месяц назад +1

    27:00 20W seems way more than should be needed. I think look out for more power efficient hardware and go with a small solar cell. For the meantime you can use it with a small solar cell while the sun is shining.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks, I have understood as much from the comments so far. I will be changing out those antennas to smaller ones that come with a different router and I plan on running a single power lead up to the location as I dont think I want any unreliability that might come from remote renewables. I will also be doing a speed test in the next video to see what difference the location makes

  • @BrownBabyJesus
    @BrownBabyJesus Месяц назад

    Internet and off grid in the same sentence is hurting my brain a little - to me the internet by definition is a collection of interconnected grids 😂

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      I have heard others say the same. I meant off the national grid

    • @BrownBabyJesus
      @BrownBabyJesus 29 дней назад

      @@offgridscotland aye it was a bit tongue in cheek, I knew the intention.
      I'm that sick of technology I think if I went off I'd be full caveman off, crapping in holes and rubbing my face on a tree instead of shaving, but I wouldn't live long 😂

  • @gordslater
    @gordslater Месяц назад +2

    To avoid future misery, take photos of all your mastwork and closups of the boltwork. Mark the nut/bolt sizes with a sharpie on the metal or plastic alongside.
    Tape or tie an old cheap spanner up there for the appropriate sizes and leave it in situ for problems.
    Thank me the day you lose your M10 socket in horizontal rain and you need your internet for a tax return/VAT deadline.

  • @BrucieNZ
    @BrucieNZ 15 дней назад

    The most common mistakes made with WIFI links like those TPlink radios are people have them at full power or just too high, turn the power output down bit by bit to find a happy link. Also people not being aware of legal requirements, as they are outdoor units it's important to make sure they don't cause interference which they can do up to 20 or even 30kms away.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  14 дней назад

      Thanks, I have actually ditched them for the next video as they were too temperamental

  • @Megabeans
    @Megabeans 28 дней назад

    If youre running power to it then consider PoE (power over ethernet), issue is that cat6 can only do 100m, so youll need a repeater, but hey, at least half of the way is done and you have a physical connection.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  26 дней назад

      I had considered it but when I priced it up the cable plus repeaters got really expensive so I have run armoured power and will have to transmit the internet over the antennas

  • @MattWells0
    @MattWells0 Месяц назад +1

    My Play House on YT that has done exactly this and powered the mast with solar and a lithium battery. Admittedly that is in Portugal.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      Thanks I will check out their video and see if there are any tips I can pick up

  • @tonib9261
    @tonib9261 28 дней назад

    I’ve only spent a couple of weeks in Scotland in my life, but I know it’s a tad cool up there, so here’s the question: do you get freezing rain? If so, ice is going to build up on those yagis, and the weight of the ice will bend and/or destroy them. First hand experience, though not in Scotland.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  28 дней назад +1

      I hadn't considered that! we have slightly different ones to test in the next video and they look like they might be a bit more resistant to that

  • @Wistowtbone
    @Wistowtbone 29 дней назад

    I did WiFi over 4 miles many years ago weather will be your fun. Get an old telegraph pole concreted in that will give you plenty of height and you can put ladder up it. Will also be more stable than thin poles. I have a 15 ft scaffold concreted in at my land for point to point WiFi but it waves in the wind.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  29 дней назад

      over 4 miles! wow thats amazing

    • @Wistowtbone
      @Wistowtbone 29 дней назад

      @@offgridscotland I use these on my land for wifi point to point. good for up to 15 miles.
      www.amazon.co.uk/TP-Link-300Mbps-dual-polarized-directional-CPE510/dp/B00N2RO63U/ref=asc_df_B00N2RO63U?tag=bingshoppinga-21&linkCode=df0&hvadid=80126967116315&hvnetw=o&hvqmt=e&hvbmt=be&hvdev=c&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=&hvtargid=pla-4583726542934584&psc=1

  • @iknowyoureright8564
    @iknowyoureright8564 Месяц назад +1

    You ever seen or had any experiences with…..strange things where you are? Forest “beings”? Balls of light? Strange sounds and feelings?
    Nature is more vast than we know….and in ways that we don’t know.

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад +1

      Yes I have although I am exploring it deeper the more time I spend here. There is so much to learn on the subject that it might take me years to tune in to them properly

  • @TheFaraonM
    @TheFaraonM 29 дней назад

    why not use black external ethernet cable instead od directional antena ?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  28 дней назад

      It was more than £350 for the run plus 4 power boosters for the POE because it was armoured and these were £130 ish

    • @TheFaraonM
      @TheFaraonM 28 дней назад

      @@offgridscotland why don't run power separate AC and ehernet over fiber (2 cheap fiber optic modules will do). What distance is it?

  • @Mr.Engineer.
    @Mr.Engineer. Месяц назад

    This was a bit longer one 🤠
    The speed you get is also a whole lot dependent on the hardware you are running. A slow router, access point etc will slow you down quite a bit even if you have high speed over satellite or 4G+
    I live remote, but not as remote as you, I am lucky enough to have fiber, but it is expensive. I pay 70£ a month for measly 150/150.
    Have been considering 5G as I am supposed to have good coverage with one provider here, only I am worried about is latency, up-time and data caps.
    My fiber is caped at 150/150, but latency is low and data is unlimited. Could also get 1000/1000 if I wanted to pay for it, but don't need that!
    Are you happy with your two hydro intake or are you considering redesigning them?
    The inverter you got, was it by default able to tweek the power points of the MPPT or did you have to reach out to the manufacturer and ask for that feature?

    • @offgridscotland
      @offgridscotland  Месяц назад

      That is an expensive internet but at least you are getting good speeds for it. I have heard that some 5G services are really 4G repackaged but if you have fibre where you are it's probably the real deal.
      I think I am going to add a swirl pot after the filters as they are doing fine but I need to get the silt out and people have told me if you create a cyclone it collects in the centre and the clean water comes out the side.
      Yes it was on by default and easily accessible so you don't even need to unlock it with the installer code.