[asterisk-users] long distance ethernet & Asterisk

Porier, Jeremy M. jporier at ccu.edu
Fri Jul 28 07:21:41 MST 2006


Brian,

While I can't say we've used this specific product, I can say that anything
we have used from RAD has been outstanding and highly reliable.
http://www.rad-direct.com/App-Ethernet-extender-copper.htm?menuId2=Applicati
onMenu&menuId=Extenders2

For a season pass or two I'll come help you light it up ;-)

Jeremy Porier
Senior Director of Information Systems and Technology
Colorado Christian University
jporier at ccu.edu

 

-----Original Message-----
From: asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com
[mailto:asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Manrique Feoli
Sent: Thursday, July 27, 2006 5:02 PM
To: Brian Vincent (C); Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial
Discussion
Subject: Re: [asterisk-users] long distance ethernet & Asterisk

another thought, if you are in a bowl, all you need to find is line of sight
to one common place from both ends, and place a repeater there. 
(you could also set two or three steps repeating the signal within points
which have line of sight). I'm not sure but I think one repeater would be
much cheaper than 20.000ft of copper + extenders + poles+ maintenance,
lighning... (even thought you are in Copper Mountain !!, BTW nice spot ).

if in the end you decide to go with ethernet, just beware of lighning!!!

Brian Vincent (C) escribió:
>
> I know.. I know
 fiber would be ideal. We have single-mode all over 
> the place. We even have some dark, unterminated strands within 2000ft 
> of this location – it makes me want to cry. Unfortunately lighting it 
> up isn’t an option – we wouldn’t gain anything because we couldn’t 
> connect to anything else to get us the last stretch. Trenching 2000ft 
> isn’t an option – this is National Forest land and we’re not allowed 
> to do that.
>
> As far as wireless – no line of sight. This location sits in a little 
> bowl at 11,200’.
>
> So what I’m left with is a 400pr, 22awg out to 3000’. Then we jump on 
> 200pr, 24awg aerial cable strung on the 3^rd longest high-speed quad 
> chairlift (10,800’ run). The last leg involves a short underground to 
> another high-speed quad and down 6000’. We can stick a powered 
> repeater in the motor room of the first lift (so I guess a bit further 
> than the original 12,000’ I was thinking.)
>
> Yes, we do strange things.
>
> If you’re really curious, here’s a map of the campus environment we
> maintain:
>
> http://www.skireport.com/colorado/copper/trailmap/
>
> -------------------
> Brian Vincent
> Copper Mountain Telecom
> vincentb at coppercolorado.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> *From:* asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com
> [mailto:asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com] *On Behalf Of *Bruce 
> Reeves
> *Sent:* Thursday, July 27, 2006 4:03 PM
> *To:* manrique.feoli at kinetos.com; Asterisk Users Mailing List - 
> Non-Commercial Discussion
> *Subject:* Re: [asterisk-users] long distance ethernet & Asterisk
>
> I would really look towards fiber, the bandwidth and distance can 
> easily be handled.
>
> On 7/27/06, *Manrique Feoli* < manrique.feoli at kinetos.com 
> <mailto:manrique.feoli at kinetos.com>> wrote:
>
> If you have line of sight between the points, maybe you could setup a 
> wireless link point to point, I know some people who have done it over
> 3 to 5 miles range, they get 10 Mbps, (but don´t know if you could get 
> more).
> just a thought
>
>
> Joe Pukepail escribió:
>
> Fiber? Otherwise maybe look at cisco LRE (Long reach ethernet), but I 
> think the limit for LRE is 5000ft (beats the heck out of regular 
> ethernets 300ft). Last I looked LRE was very expensive.
>
> On 7/27/06, *Brian Vincent (C)* < VincentB at coppercolorado.com 
> <mailto:VincentB at coppercolorado.com>> wrote:
>
> Two questions:
>
> 1. We need to run Ethernet out to a really long distance – 20,000ft. 
> We have the ability to put a powered repeater in at about 12,000'. We 
> can run it using up to 4 pairs. Any recommendations on products that 
> will reach that far? We're looking for 5 – 10Mbps.
>
> 2. The products we're likely looking at might be something like 
> g.SHDSL, although I'm fine with a completely proprietary solution. Any 
> idea if it would add too much latency to run a SIP phone?
>
> TIA
>
> -------------------
> Brian Vincent
> Copper Mountain Telecom
> vincentb at coppercolorado.com <mailto:vincentb at coppercolorado.com>
>
>
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> -- 
> Bruce
> Nortex Networks
>
>
>
>
>
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