Antennas – ProSoft Technology ILX34-AENWG User Manual

Page 161

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ILX34-AENWG ♦ Point I/O Platform

Reference

Wireless POINT I/O Adapter

User Manual

ProSoft Technology, Inc.

Page 161 of 177

August 16, 2013

Inst ID

Attribute

Description

Get Set Size

Default Value / Description

18

Encryption Key 2 X

X

Array of 16
Bytes

Key #2 – 128 bit Hex Keys storage.
Default:
0000000000000000000000000000 (26 ‘0’s)

19

Encryption Key 3 X

X

Array of 16
Bytes

Key #3 – 128 bit Hex Keys storage.
Default:
0000000000000000000000000000 (26 ‘0’s)

20

Encryption Key 4 X

X

Array of 16
Bytes

Key #4 – 128 bit Hex Keys storage.
Default:
0000000000000000000000000000 (26 ‘0’s)

6.5

Antennas

When you are ready to connect antennas to the radio, see Connecting antennas.

You must also consider three important electrical characteristics when selecting
antennas:
 Antenna Pattern (page 161)
 Antenna Gain (page 162)
 Antenna Polarity (page 162)
 Antenna location, spacing, and mounting (page 166)

6.5.1 Antenna Pattern

Information between two wireless devices is transferred via electromagnetic
energy radiated by one antenna and received by another. The radiated power of
most antennas is not uniform in all directions and has varying intensities. The
radiated power in various directions is called the pattern of the antenna. Each
antenna should be mounted so that its direction of strongest radiation intensity
points toward the other antenna or antennas with which it will exchange signals.

Complete antenna patterns are three-dimensional, although often only a two-
dimensional slice of the pattern is shown when all the antennas of interest are
located in roughly the same horizontal plane, along the ground rather than above
or below one another.

A slice taken in a horizontal plane through the center (or looking down on the
pattern) is called the azimuth pattern. A view from the side reveals a vertical
plane slice called the elevation pattern.

An antenna pattern with equal or nearly equal intensity in all directions is
omnidirectional. In two dimensions, an omnidirectional pattern appears as a
circle (in three dimensions, an omnidirectional antenna pattern would be a
sphere, but no antenna has true omnidirectional pattern in three dimensions). An
antenna is considered omnidirectional if one of its two dimensional patterns,
either azimuth or elevation pattern, is omnidirectional.

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