On Wed, 24 Jul 2013 01:09:29 -0400, Darr247 wrote:
that would result in an EIRP of almost 13W, or about 30 times the legal limit for licensed HAMs on channel 6 and below in the 2.4GHz band, or 60 times the legal limit unlicensed, unless you use a highly directional antenna. But that also assumes you're in FCC land
I'm in the USA.
The Ubiquiti Nanobridge M2 is a legally bought and sold radio in the US. I can't imagine that using it would be illegal from a power standpoint.
Maybe I got the numbers wrong? http://site.microcom.us/nbm2_datasheet
Shouldn't that Nanobridge m2 be powerful enough to reach the 300 feet or so to go from my BBQ to my home broadband router open "guest" access point?