That is AMAZING. I did NOT expect the ping to be ANYWHERE near that good at that range over wireless. I figured it'd be 100-200ms or more due to range and possible interference and signal strength. WOWWW! My mind is blown away. I have dreamed of making a LAN from my house to my mom's house .3 miles away for decades. And now I finally can. PLUS only one of us would need internet haha. We have fiber internet on our road, now. It pings like 2-3 ms on speed tests. So, I'd be getting less than 10ms ping times easily AND around 300Mbps down/up speeds. I'm looking at the AdaLov CPE361 model which has 2x 1Gbps Ethernet ports instead of 1x 1Gbps and 1x 100Mbps, plus the range is rated at 5km. I mean, for $200, we'd make our money back by sharing internet in 4 months and then it'd be paying for itself after that. Awesome video, thank you for posting this!
I was quite impressed as well, was not expecting it to work as good as it did. Good luck on your project! Definitely worth the money for an application like yours. Thanks for watching for for your comment.
between speed download and upload measured in the antennas (when you enter the antennas' IP addresses) and the speed test LAN you have equal values? for example 300mbit from the antennas and 300mbit from the LAN test ? Today i will try with a higher cat cable for see if I have the same values
I am going to use one of these where the slave will be at a remote site with battery/solar power. I note the poe is 24 volt. But I can not find out if the dc input, which I intend to use, is 12 or 24 volts? Can you tell me this?
Just curious, does this device have a "24V" spec for POE? A device may have, for example, a 12V power input and a POE ethernet port. However, if it supports POE, that doesn't mean that the POE voltage supported is 12V (though I'm assuming you probably know that). To be absolutely sure what the device can use for POE voltage, check the POE standard that the device supports, such as 802.3af, 802.3at, etc, then look that the POE injector/switch supports that standard. Most POE devices will accept a range of POE voltage all the way up to 48V-56V, unless it specifically states a POE voltage max of I.E., 24V. If you're using power at a remote location and you have a POE injector/switch already that's 30-60V POE output, you can use a Linovision "POE Splitter-1224". It takes POE input, then splits to a standard RJ45 1gbit data port, with both 12V or 24V DC output selectable by a dip switch, allowing you to power a device like this bridge directly through it's 12V power port. Of course there's various routes depending on what you want to accomplish, such as 24V POE to 12V DC splitters. Or just use a cheap buck/step-down DC driver if you simply want to drop non-POE 24V DC from batteries down to 12V DC, and those are like $5 on Amazon.
@@matthewmarshall3808 Thank for sharing your knowledge, interesting stuff. Here's what I have on this equipment. The manual states the Power requirement is ">/= 3W" which is only 0.125 @ 24V, I did not measure it's power consumption to confirm this. The POE input requirement says "POE 24V-1A" and the POE power adapter they include is only rated at 24V @ 0.5A. The DC jack requirement "12V 1A" and I did run one of the modules during testing with the DC jack @ 12V. Never noticed any power related issues but didn't measure current draw in either mode.
There's usually some overhead booth ways, power output of a transformer and power input rating of a device. Can usually get away with some difference when it's a low power device. Looks like it's working well. This video surprised me. When I watched I had no idea they were doing this good at a mile in this price range. How did you end up choosing this one, do a lot of research or did you just try one and get good results? I have a 3/4 mile long driveway and this has me thinking of all kinds of new uses on the property!
@@matthewmarshall3808 The company contacted me to test and review it. First and only one of its type I've tried. I was also impressed and surprised. I was honestly ready to call BS on the range claims but it clearly worked!
That is AMAZING. I did NOT expect the ping to be ANYWHERE near that good at that range over wireless. I figured it'd be 100-200ms or more due to range and possible interference and signal strength.
WOWWW! My mind is blown away. I have dreamed of making a LAN from my house to my mom's house .3 miles away for decades. And now I finally can. PLUS only one of us would need internet haha. We have fiber internet on our road, now. It pings like 2-3 ms on speed tests. So, I'd be getting less than 10ms ping times easily AND around 300Mbps down/up speeds.
I'm looking at the AdaLov CPE361 model which has 2x 1Gbps Ethernet ports instead of 1x 1Gbps and 1x 100Mbps, plus the range is rated at 5km. I mean, for $200, we'd make our money back by sharing internet in 4 months and then it'd be paying for itself after that.
Awesome video, thank you for posting this!
I was quite impressed as well, was not expecting it to work as good as it did. Good luck on your project! Definitely worth the money for an application like yours. Thanks for watching for for your comment.
@@shanesdiy Thank YOU for sharing! So excited for this project.
between speed download and upload measured in the antennas (when you enter the antennas' IP addresses) and the speed test LAN you have equal values?
for example 300mbit from the antennas and 300mbit from the LAN test ?
Today i will try with a higher cat cable for see if I have the same values
I am going to use one of these where the slave will be at a remote site with battery/solar power. I note the poe is 24 volt. But I can not find out if the dc input, which I intend to use, is 12 or 24 volts? Can you tell me this?
12V @ 1A for the DC jack.
Just curious, does this device have a "24V" spec for POE? A device may have, for example, a 12V power input and a POE ethernet port. However, if it supports POE, that doesn't mean that the POE voltage supported is 12V (though I'm assuming you probably know that). To be absolutely sure what the device can use for POE voltage, check the POE standard that the device supports, such as 802.3af, 802.3at, etc, then look that the POE injector/switch supports that standard. Most POE devices will accept a range of POE voltage all the way up to 48V-56V, unless it specifically states a POE voltage max of I.E., 24V. If you're using power at a remote location and you have a POE injector/switch already that's 30-60V POE output, you can use a Linovision "POE Splitter-1224". It takes POE input, then splits to a standard RJ45 1gbit data port, with both 12V or 24V DC output selectable by a dip switch, allowing you to power a device like this bridge directly through it's 12V power port. Of course there's various routes depending on what you want to accomplish, such as 24V POE to 12V DC splitters. Or just use a cheap buck/step-down DC driver if you simply want to drop non-POE 24V DC from batteries down to 12V DC, and those are like $5 on Amazon.
@@matthewmarshall3808 Thank for sharing your knowledge, interesting stuff. Here's what I have on this equipment. The manual states the Power requirement is ">/= 3W" which is only 0.125 @ 24V, I did not measure it's power consumption to confirm this. The POE input requirement says "POE 24V-1A" and the POE power adapter they include is only rated at 24V @ 0.5A. The DC jack requirement "12V 1A" and I did run one of the modules during testing with the DC jack @ 12V. Never noticed any power related issues but didn't measure current draw in either mode.
There's usually some overhead booth ways, power output of a transformer and power input rating of a device. Can usually get away with some difference when it's a low power device. Looks like it's working well. This video surprised me. When I watched I had no idea they were doing this good at a mile in this price range. How did you end up choosing this one, do a lot of research or did you just try one and get good results? I have a 3/4 mile long driveway and this has me thinking of all kinds of new uses on the property!
@@matthewmarshall3808 The company contacted me to test and review it. First and only one of its type I've tried. I was also impressed and surprised. I was honestly ready to call BS on the range claims but it clearly worked!
Hey Shane, I have a question but I don't want to post it here, is there a way to email you please?
Email is in my about section for the channel.