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Re: [ts-7000] industrial wireless options

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Subject: Re: [ts-7000] industrial wireless options
From: Michael DeGroot <>
Date: Tue, 19 Apr 2011 09:45:42 -0700


I'm more interested in what your data requirements are than the connection.  There are other methods of collection that don't require a constant reliable connection.

On Tue, Apr 19, 2011 at 12:45 AM, Simon Leung <> wrote:
I need constant connection because the TS7800 acts as a web server.
We're currently using 3G but not entirely happy with the
stability/performance.


On 18/04/11 23:54, Michael DeGroot wrote:
>
>
> What are your data requirements?  Do you need a constant connection to
> the system, or do you just need periodic reports of values (once per
> hour, daily summary, other?)
>
> Do you have cellular coverage and access to power in the area?
>
> On Mon, Apr 18, 2011 at 6:48 AM, Simon Leung <
> <>> wrote:
>
>     On 18/04/11 14:35, Jason Stahls wrote:
>     > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>     > Hash: SHA1
>     >
>     > On 04/18/11 08:17, Simon Leung wrote:
>     >> Hi all,
>     >>
>     >> I came from a consumer background and am new to the industrial
>     world.
>     >> We're building a web enabled wireless control/monitoring unit
>     based on
>     >> ts7800. To me, GPRS/3G is the only viable way of doing this.
>     However,
>     >> it's a bit of challenge to keep the link stable.
>     >> I'd like to ask you if there re any other options at all in an
>     >> industrial environment?
>     > There's _tons_ of industrial RF products out there. What exactly are
>     > you doing?
>     >
>     > Unless you're in a remote area that you can't do a
>     point-to-point link
>     > with 3G is probably not the best idea. The cell network is basically
>     > like using UDP/IP for everything, there's no guarantee anything
>     will go
>     > anywhere, nor when it will get there if it does go.
>     >
>     Thanks for the reply. I'm building a box that'll allow the user to
>     remotely control a water quality analyser, through a web
>     interface. Most
>     of our application would have wired LAN access but there are cases
>     where
>     the machine is in a remote area. So basically the device will have to
>     have TCP/IP wirelessly ( or I'm on a completely wrong direction ).
>     Again
>     I'm not used to industrial standard, etc. So if there is a remote
>     wireless TCP/IP solution, I'm all ears.
>
>
>
>
>



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