<div style="white-space:pre-wrap">I already have a 20V(ish) "ghetto PoE" injector bus. It puts the DC power on the spare pairs of the Ethernet cable. In use at the shop for cameras and the 900MHz radio already. I would try to get online with just the WRT running off of this supply. There will be a little more of a challenge running the amp off of it, unless you run your antenna just inside the shop and put the amp there. <br><br>That is, of course, unless it is a small DC powered amp that will sit outside between the WRT and antenna.</div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr">On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 13:56 Jeff Cotten <<a href="mailto:omegix@gmail.com">omegix@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_msg"><div class="gmail_msg"><div class="gmail_msg"><div class="gmail_msg"><div class="gmail_msg"><br class="gmail_msg"></div>Does anyone know from looking at all the stuff on the ham station if any of that stuff is an amplifier?<br class="gmail_msg"><br class="gmail_msg"></div>We can go up to 10W for broadcasting a bbhn mesh signal ( 2.4ghz )<br class="gmail_msg"></div><br class="gmail_msg"></div>FYI, here's some advice we received on the setup:<br class="gmail_msg"><br class="gmail_msg">"<br class="gmail_msg"><div class="gmail_msg"><div dir="auto" class="gmail_msg"><span style="font-family:sans-serif" class="gmail_msg">You will want your
node in a watertight box up with two glands so cales can exit. Put it up
on the pole with a very short very good coax run like 9913 or LMR400.
Run power and ethernet up to the node box. You can put both on a single
run of Category 5 cable.</span></div><div dir="auto" class="gmail_msg"><span style="font-family:sans-serif" class="gmail_msg"><br class="gmail_msg"></span></div><div dir="auto" class="gmail_msg"><span style="font-family:sans-serif" class="gmail_msg">Don't
forget that hams are permitted amplifiers for spread spectrum, up to 10
watts (without automatic power control). An amp of the biamp type which
includes an LNA preamp on receive is better, and one that includes a
channel band pass filter is better still.</span></div>"<br class="gmail_msg"></div></div>
_______________________________________________<br class="gmail_msg">
This is the hams mailing list.<br class="gmail_msg">
This list is for amateur radio discussion.<br class="gmail_msg">
To stop receiving mail from this list, write to <a href="mailto:hams-leave@lists.makerslocal.org" class="gmail_msg" target="_blank">hams-leave@lists.makerslocal.org</a>.</blockquote></div>