Thursday 16 March, 2006, 13:44 - Radio Randomness
Wireless LAN's are fabulous things. You put a box next to your cable or ADSL modem with a little aerial on the back and your broadband internet connection miraculously becomes available all over your house to any device fitted with the appropriate wireless card. Or does it...?
The first, and easiest thing, is to put the wireless box in a more favourable position. Many can be wall mounted (though this still puts the device at one end of a building), but even raising the position from on the floor to head-height helps. If you have a phone socket or cable connection somewhere else in your house, i.e. in a lounge that might be more central, move the wireless box here and put it on a shelf so it's not at floor level. Putting the box centrally within a property helps even out the signal throughout the building.


Is it legal to do this? Good question! In the UK, Ofcom allows powers up to 100 mW erp . The simple answer is 'it depends'. Most wireless LAN access points have a transmitter power of 100 mW already, so installing a high-gain antenna means the erp will exceed the UK limits. What are the chances of getting caught? That's a different matter...
Matthew
Wednesday 19 March, 2008, 15:53
I've been searching for sometime to answer this question - but haven't yet been able to: perhaps you can help. What is are typical values of ERP for a wireless card? Specifically, an external USB "dongle". If a typical AP radiates at 100mW ERP, then my guess is your average USB wifi device is circa 10mW ERP. I have a USB device with external aerial point, and want to calculate what's the max gain of an antenna I can attach whilst staying legal. Despite some searching, no spec sheet for my USB device states anything to do with the power of the device; nor do other sites indicate typical power values of wireless cards.Matthew