TwoHooter
Well-Known Member
I endorse Teltonika as a manufacturer. We fitted a RUT950 in the boat almost exactly 3 years ago and it seems to be a very well-built piece of kit. Now that I have got used to the interface (the browser page that gets you in to manage the router's settings) I find I am very comfortable with it. I have not yet installed the masthead shelter+antenna but that will be done this year.
I have a friend who is having to diversify his business because of Covid. He is an expert in this sort of thing. If anyone would like a quote please PM me.
Does anyone think there would be a market for a self-installation kit whereby all the necessary hardware would come in a single box with all the cables prepared and labelled + illustrated instructions for installation by the boat owner?
When the router was new I had a problem and got through to Teltonika support, they were very helpful (the problem was unexpected congestion on the channel we had chosen).The support wiki is a bit "community" at best
I have consolidated everything to be SIM only on a single contract wit EE. The contract provides over 100Gb per month data allowance and I can swap ("gift") the data around between phones, tablets, and the boat as required. At the beginning of each accounting period I set everything up with the data allowance I think will be needed. If a particular device starts to run out of data it pings me a warning and I "gift" it some more data. I never need to swap SIM cards and there is only one bill to pay. The RUT950 has a dual SIM card slot so when we are in Europe I will buy a local card with EU-wide roaming and that's the only time I will need to change cards.I think that, for me, having a dedicated SIM on the boat that I cant easily get at is step too far.
You will only know when you try it. Sorry, that's how it is. But the Teltonika routers are a world away from a mobile phone.compared to a mobile phone at 2m above water to this antenna 5m above water (and no obstructions around) what sort of performance/throughput difference should I expect? Mobile was 1bar signal at most on lower helm when the boat looked the "right" way.
Yes, the loss of cellular signal over hard-wires is enormous. That is why the trend is towards putting the router up the mast and either broadcasting WiFi from there or using ethernet to bring the data down the mast to a WiFi hotspot.I guess there's a limitation on how long a 4G antenna can be, else you could just have the antenna way up and the h/w in the cabin.
Our router has a WAN connection to a WiFi bridge. This should do what you want.Also keen on connecting to office network which when moored in home port is at 300-400metres away but I get nothing from my mobile.
I have a friend who is having to diversify his business because of Covid. He is an expert in this sort of thing. If anyone would like a quote please PM me.
Does anyone think there would be a market for a self-installation kit whereby all the necessary hardware would come in a single box with all the cables prepared and labelled + illustrated instructions for installation by the boat owner?