--- id: aerials title: Aerial selection sidebar_label: Aerial selection slug: /hardware/aerials --- The stock aerials provided bundled with the t-Beam and other boards are, in general a 'mixed bag'. They may not have been selected for your given frequency range, tuned or of a quality design. Matching an aerial to the frequency of transmission is important, as is choosing an appropriate design. The aerial's design will affect: - proportion of the signal which leaves the aerial (efficiency), - directions in which it's transmitted, and whether it will be affected by horizontal / vertical polarization, - proportion of signal which is reflected back within the device itself. :::caution While the LoRa devices we are using for Meshtastic are relatively low power radios, care should be taken _not_ to operate any radio transmission device without an aerial or with a poorly matched aerial. Un-transmitted radio signal reflected back to the transmitter can damage the device. ::: ### Important considerations: - What transmission frequency are you using? - Devices on another frequency will not be able to interact with yours. - See this listing by [The Things Network](https://www.thethingsnetwork.org/docs/lorawan/frequencies-by-country.html) for frequencies licensed for specific countries. - How will you be carrying / transporting the radio? - A large directional aerial will transmit over significantly greater distance than an omni-directional aerial. However, it must be pointed at its target so isn't optimal for mobile use. - A tuned half-wave whip aerial may have more omni-directional range than the quarter wave stubby; but it will be conspicuous in your pocket. - Many antennas, especially quarter wave stubby antennas, require the use of ground planes to transmit at peak performance. - Do you want transmission in all directions? - While humans (mostly water) don't attenuate signal greatly (at LoRa frequencies), buildings & walls do. - If your aerial is permanently positioned against a building, signal transmitted towards the wall will be largely lost. - Does my Meshtastic device have the right power range, impedance & connector for the aerial? - For the LoRa devices it should be 50 Ohm impedance, with SMA connector. Many antennas will be recommended for LoRa use in their technical details. - By contrast, a close range, contact-less Personal Area Network antenna, or a huge aerial at the end of length of coax designed for a 100W transmitter are not going to be operable. - Cost, quality and supply service? - The perfect aerial on paper, sourced from the other side of the world with mixed reviews doesn't compare to a local supplier who has spent time carefully collating all of the aerial data-sheets for comparison _and_ holds stock immediately available - personally I prefer to pay significantly more for a time saving, quality service. - How close will the antenna be to my Meshtastic device? - Most cables will significantly degrade the signal strength over any significant distance. It is often more effective to place a node outside, than to have it indoors with the antenna outside. ## Terminology / references You could do a lot worse than reading the [Wikipedia entry for Antenna](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_(radio)), along with the [Wikipedia entry for LoRa](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LoRa). Instead of listing the terms, let us recommend this superb [tutorial](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3PBL9oLPX8) by Andreas Spiess (the 'guy with the Swiss accent').