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Cardboard WiFi Antenna Upgrade

An anonymous reader writes "A British company called Tritium is marketing a piece of cardboard with metal foil on one side. You order it for under US$25, shipping included, and you get a flat envelope with the cardboard. Cut it out, shape it into a parabola and snap it into the little stand. Then slip it over your current antenna. It is advertised to extend the range of your current antenna by 2 to 3 times. See their website for more information on the cleverly named Tritium Flatenna."

8 of 200 comments (clear)

  1. feedback by cmoressi · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is this at all dangerous? Any modification like this is bound to cause signal feedback. Seems like it might work for receiving but I would hesitate to use it to xmit.

  2. Great, but.. by noname3 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Does it work? Yes, this advertises a boost, but so do a bunch of products for cell phones that are purely decorative.

    I had to sell these for a small retail store, and to this day I feel guilty. A local newstation did an expose where they found there was zero conductive material at all in these stickers.

  3. Re:Tritium by Neil+Blender · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You just don't want to eat the stuff. With a half life of about 15 years, tritium will hang around in your body quite a while.

    True, tritium has a half life of about 15 years (closer to 12 though.) However, when it comes to ingesting radioactive material, you need to be more concerned with the biological half-life. That is how fast the material will be excreted from you body. For tritium, it is just over 9 days. For tritium to harm you, you have too ingest a pretty large quantity. I know all about the stuff, I injected it into rats for years.

  4. Re:Cheaper solutions exist by howlatthemoon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They won't let me buy it online. I don't trust people who won't let me just type my credit card number into a web form.

  5. Re:cardboard webserver by Omega1045 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Seriously, that is funny!

    The only thing they are lacking is "Made of recycle cardboard" to get in with the PC (Politically Correct not Personal Computer) crowd.

    --

    Great ideas often receive violent opposition from mediocre minds. - Albert Einstein

  6. Or you could... by Pedrito · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You're probably in the minority if you don't have a semi-parabolic pan or pot lid lying around your kitchen (though, this is Slashdot, maybe you're not in the minority here). That's what I used for to focus the signal at my last place. Just used a pack of CDs to prop it up behind the antenna. It was a fairly signficant boost. I was impressed. And it didn't cost me anything I hadn't already paid.

  7. Re:Make your own -> splayed beer can by anon+coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Remove top and bottom, cut down side to get rectangle with nice built-in curl. Then fashion cardboard braces ala www.freeantennas.com and tape to antenna. Soft drink cans work too; plastic coating doesn't seem to degrade performance.

  8. Been using it for a while by crapnutassneck · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I built one based on this http://www.freeantennas.com/projects/template2/ind ex.html and it increased coverage in the back of my house by %26 according to the Cisco Aironet Desktop Utility when connected to my Qwe(r)st issued all in one Actiontec DSL TA/802.11G AP/Router. Given, it is not "increasing gain" just making it directional, but for 20 minutes work and no cost it was worth it.

    --
    .-=Wit is educated insolence=-. -Aristotle