I think your characterization is correct. Even with gain antennas, we're mostly line of sight. As for 2.4 GHz vs. 70 cm, we are 5 times shorter wavelength at 2.4, so we're a lot more line of sight. I think water also absorbs a lot more signal at 2.4 GHz, so attenuation of trees and other obstacles is higher.
We're still basically wifi with a few advantages: - Gain antennas are legal because we're hams.
- The mesh design lets us link multiple nodes automatically to fill gaps in RF coverage and daisy chain links.
Gain antennas help more than you might think because they not only give you a higher signal strength, they reduce the strength of interfering signals outside of the beam. They still don't let you "blast" through houses or trees. The attenuation is just too high. You mostly have to get over or around the trees and houses.
Mesh also allows you to put one mesh node right at the actual elevated outdoor antenna location and not have to have a long coax run. Coax loss per foot at 2.4 GHz are really high. Put one node on the antenna, make long links to other nodes, and then you can put another mesh node inside if that helps.
As hams, we CAN use amplifiers, but they don't help as much as you would think, and you should avoid amps except in special circumstances so you aren't unnecessarily interfering with other users.
You're not likely to blanket a city with enough mesh nodes that you can just set up a node with standard antennas and get a link. You're going to have a limited number of fixed nodes prelocations with long range links and good antenna locations that serve as "hotspots." You need to set up these locations ahead of time. When an emergency arises, you either need these nodes at the places where you need service, or you need some deployable nodes with gain antennas that can connect to the fixed mesh node locations. You'll also need people who can set these nodes up and places to put the antennas with a line of sight to the fixed nodes.
Even if you have no long range mesh connections, mesh is useful within an event site in several ways.
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