Diary #38

Serial Radio Test at Oyster

Following the October 9 meeting with the VCR/LTER PI's (see Diary 37) we conducted our first radio tests. On Wednesday, October 10, when I arrived at the Oyster LTER a little before noon, the crew was well prepared. During the previous week they had purchased equipment, ladders, safety gear, tomato stakes, and everything else they could think of for work on an 80-foot tall unused fire Tower on Hog Island, where we hope to create a radio relay/hub. The crew had also quietly re-invented the gin pole, a temporary pulley-holder used by ham radio folks for decades.

Gin Pole (upper left) on Broadwater Tower

(The tomato stake idea was for plotting a line-of-sight path from the Tower to the rented farmhouse that currently serves as the LTER headquarters. If we were to set up a directional antenna on the tower we would need to find the compass bearing to point to the farmhouse. Unfortunately, you can't use a magnetic compass on an iron tower. So you take the tomato stake a few hundred feet away in the approximate direction where the farmhouse ought to be, get your compass bearing, and set up the stake in the "middle" as a line-of-sight pointer for the fellow in the tower.)

We gave a one-hour workshop for the staff, discussing radios, antennas, serial ports, and the like. We also bench-tested the radios one more time, so they could see FreeWave green lights (indicating that the radios consider themselves to have a good link) and a loopback test.

The Loopback Test

For serial radios like the FreeWave, a simple link quality test can be executed by plugging a laptop computer into one radio, running a serial port terminal program -- this writer prefers Kermit -- and a loopback plug on the other radio. The simple serial loopback plug is made by connecting pin 2 to pin 3 in a DB-9 plug, obtainable from Radio Shack for about $5.

DB-9 Loopback Adaptors

The trick here is to set the terminal emulator to use the PC's serial port (versus some network connection), in "no echo" mode. Then, to test the link you just start typing. If the characters you type appear on your screen immediately, you have a decent link. If there is a noticeable lag between pressing the keys and seeing the characters echo (or you don't see them at all) your link is probably faulty.

The link we attempted is some 14 miles, mostly over Hog Island Bay. At that distance there is no guarantee of success, especially with the unknowns of reflection and absorption presented by saltwater, sandbars, and a small stand of trees.

Diagram of Distances

 

Broadwater Tower, much taller than the trees

The LTER staff didn't like the idea of this writer climbing a rusty old fire tower, so I stayed at the farmhouse and operated a radio with laptop and a 9 dB Yagi antenna, pointed towards the tower. Due to the steep pitch of the roof we also decided to make the first test from the lower-but-flatter porch roof/balcony (some 20 feet shy of the farmhouse's pinnacle). We kept an extension ladder handy in case we could not get a connection at that height.

While we wanted to use a Yagi -- directional antenna -- at the farmhouse, the preference for Broadwater Tower was/is to use an omnidirectional antenna, make the tower accessible from anywhere on the island as needed to extend the link. Phil Smith thus took both a 9 dB Yagi and a 6 dB omni to the top of the tower, as well as a radio, battery, and loopback plug.

PI Hughes with 6 dBi Omni above 9 dBi Yagi

Around 5 PM,during final preparation to start the test, we noticed that the farmhouse radio already had its green light on, indicating more-or-less workable connection -- and that with the Yagi lying on the porch roof/balcony floor. It was intermittent, but it was green. A more deliberate aiming of the farmhouse Yagi yielded a solid connection to the omnidirectional antenna on Broadwater Tower. After we established a more accurate bearing, we repeated the loopback test, first a character or two at a time, and then by cutting-and-pasting several screens' worth of text. The link worked well whether we used the Yagi or the Omni at the tower.

We thus determined that we could easily establish a reliable fourteen mile link between the VCR/LTER headquarters and Broadwater Tower, using one watt, 900 MHz, 115,000 bit per second serial-port-only FreeWave radios and a 9 dBi Yagi antenna at the farmhouse and either another Yagi or a 6 dBi omni on Broadwater Tower.

The researchers at the VCR/LTER have a far-reaching vision both for research and for science education. Mr. Carlson reiterated the desire for live video as had previously been stated by the PI's. In addition to predation studies (mentioned in Diary 37) he mentioned a need for videoconferencing between the island and the local high school, where he operates an ongoing program. Due to logistical and insurance concerns, they simply cannot get high school kids over to the island for field study, and so he would like to use live video plus other real-time data to aid in teaching. As long as we are appropriately supporting the research efforts, we're glad to be able to help the education effort as well.

Tom Williams

Special Assistant

NSF Wireless Field Tests

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