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Cable antenna » History » Revision 12

Revision 11 (dexter, 02/19/2016 10:48 PM) → Revision 12/15 (dexter, 02/19/2016 10:48 PM)

 
 == The Cable Antenna: == 

 The antenna that has been shipped with the BS11 is a so called sector-antenna. That means it is designed not to cover only a part of the area around the BTS. And it has a gain. The gain comes from the signal that is bundeled and sent into the sector. The advantage: You can use several BTSs to cover a cell (Each cell sector has its own BTS ==> More calls) and you can cover more distance with less power. 

 What is good if you want to run a mobile network is bad for experimental proposes. For us an antenna that covers the area around the BTS with a nondirected signal (like a donut) is perfect - so lets build one. 

 Note: I have Adaptors that adapt the BS11 N-Connectors to BNC. Because BNC is my favourite connector type so the most of my homebrew radio equipment / cables have BNC-Connectors. That is the reason why this howto relates to BNC-Connectors. Just use your favorite connector type or N-Connectors for the BS11 

 == Step by step: == 
 ==== Materials: ==== 
 [[Image(cableAntenna_materials.JPG,width=300px)]] 

 The antenna is made out of a pice of old coax-cable (about 15-20cm length) and a BNC connector. To make it all looking good we add a pice of shrink tubing at the end. 

 ==== Connector: ==== 
 [[Image(cableAntenna_bncplugconnected.JPG,width=300px)]] 

 The first task to do is to connect the connector to the cable. I used a solderable BNC-Connector. If you have an old network cable you can cut off the and. The result is the same. 

 ==== Isolation-removal: ==== 
 [[Image(cableAntenna_shieldcutoff.JPG,width=300px)]] 

 Now cut of the isolation and remove the metall shield. 

 ==== Lambda/4 cut: ==== 
 [[Image(cableAntenna_cutoff.JPG,width=300px)]] 

 Now the most important step has to be done. We need to part where the shield was removed to lambda/4 length. To calculate the length you can use the matlab/octave script listed below. It is very important that you know the scale factor for the cable that you use. I used H155 cable which has a scale factor of 0.79. 

 {{{ 
 %Parameters: 
 c = 299792458%m/s (Speed of light in vacuum) 
 v = 0.79 %Cable scale factor (The wave moves slower in the cable/metall)  
 f = 900000000 %Hz (GSM900) 

 %Calculation 
 disp('Wavelength [m] is:'); 
 l=(c*v)/f 
 disp('Antenna length [m] (Lambda/4) is:'); 
 l4=l/4  
 }}} 

 In my case lambda/4 is about 6.57cm  

 ==== Shrink-tubing: ==== 
 [[Image(cableAntenna_shrinktubing.JPG,width=300px)]] 

 Now simply add some shrinktubing to the cable. That makes it save to handle and industry grade looking. I recommend to do a final test with a multimeter to ensure that your antenna has no short circuits. 


 == Closing words: == 

 [[Image(cableAntenna_hardatwork.JPG,width=300px)]] 

 I have tested the antenna with 2 BTS as RX-Antenna and TX-Antenna. It worked fine and we could not see any harmful effects to the BTS so far. fare. But i must warn. Use it on your own risk!  





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