TwoHooter
Well-Known Member
Our new ship's computer is hard-wired by Ethernet to a Teltonika RUT950 router. The router is set up to connect as follows:-
1. Via external WiFi when that is available. The router is hard-wired to a Ubiquiti Bullet to bridge the WiFi signal so if the boat is within range it's usually going to be stable.
2. If WiFi is not available or drops out the router automatically tries to failover to a cellular connection on 3G, 4G, or 4G+LTE. It has two SIM card slots so if the regular cellular provider is flaky and someone else offers a better signal a "local" SIM card can be put in slot 2.
The router has its own pair of cellular antennas but it can't be mounted high enough to get the best possible signal. A suitable external antenna has been found, tuned to receive European 3G/4G/LTE frequencies, which can be mounted high on the mast. In this location it will stand a much better chance of picking up a good signal. But the cable run between the mast and the router is about 15m so there will be signal loss in the cable. Therefore a powered Repeater is needed which takes the signal from the antenna and gets it to the router with minimum loss. All totally hard-wired. No broadcasting involved. This isn't about "boosting" the mobile signal for phones. The aim is to give the ship's router (and therefore the ship's computer) the best possible chance of connecting to cellular data. Phones can connect to the router via the router's WiFi which gives us email and Whatsapp, and before long VoLTE (Voice over LTE).
The Repeater is proving difficult. Everyone I have spoken to so far is offering kit which is designed fundamentally to re-broadcast the cellular signal so that phones can pick it up more easily, and that's not what we want. When I ask about hard-wiring Repeaters to the router's SMA antenna connections all I get is waffle. Nobody seems to know whether the boxes they are selling will do that or what the cable specs might be. Some of them aren't even sure how near to the antenna their Repeater needs to be or how far it can send the signal to the router. Ideally we would have the repeater in an IP65 enclosure inside the equipment space at the foot of the mast, about half way between the antenna and the router measured by cable run. Another problem is that when I ask what cellular frequencies a product supports I don't get coherent answers and the published technical data for what I've been looking at leaves a lot to be desired. I've seen "5 band repeaters" where there is no data for what the bands are. I sometimes get the feeling that I know more about this than the vendors which would be funny if it wasn't so frustrating.
Has anyone solved this problem?
1. Via external WiFi when that is available. The router is hard-wired to a Ubiquiti Bullet to bridge the WiFi signal so if the boat is within range it's usually going to be stable.
2. If WiFi is not available or drops out the router automatically tries to failover to a cellular connection on 3G, 4G, or 4G+LTE. It has two SIM card slots so if the regular cellular provider is flaky and someone else offers a better signal a "local" SIM card can be put in slot 2.
The router has its own pair of cellular antennas but it can't be mounted high enough to get the best possible signal. A suitable external antenna has been found, tuned to receive European 3G/4G/LTE frequencies, which can be mounted high on the mast. In this location it will stand a much better chance of picking up a good signal. But the cable run between the mast and the router is about 15m so there will be signal loss in the cable. Therefore a powered Repeater is needed which takes the signal from the antenna and gets it to the router with minimum loss. All totally hard-wired. No broadcasting involved. This isn't about "boosting" the mobile signal for phones. The aim is to give the ship's router (and therefore the ship's computer) the best possible chance of connecting to cellular data. Phones can connect to the router via the router's WiFi which gives us email and Whatsapp, and before long VoLTE (Voice over LTE).
The Repeater is proving difficult. Everyone I have spoken to so far is offering kit which is designed fundamentally to re-broadcast the cellular signal so that phones can pick it up more easily, and that's not what we want. When I ask about hard-wiring Repeaters to the router's SMA antenna connections all I get is waffle. Nobody seems to know whether the boxes they are selling will do that or what the cable specs might be. Some of them aren't even sure how near to the antenna their Repeater needs to be or how far it can send the signal to the router. Ideally we would have the repeater in an IP65 enclosure inside the equipment space at the foot of the mast, about half way between the antenna and the router measured by cable run. Another problem is that when I ask what cellular frequencies a product supports I don't get coherent answers and the published technical data for what I've been looking at leaves a lot to be desired. I've seen "5 band repeaters" where there is no data for what the bands are. I sometimes get the feeling that I know more about this than the vendors which would be funny if it wasn't so frustrating.
Has anyone solved this problem?
