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Helium 101: Cable Loss and EIRP.

· 54 min read
Nik
Site Owner

Got questions about what kind of cable you should use to connect your Helium hotspot to your antenna? Want a Helium-specific cable loss table?

You're not alone! Lots of folks want to know if they should use LMR 240 or 400 or 900, or how long it can be, or if they should use the cable that came with their cheap-o eBay antenna.

In order to answer that, I'm going to walk you through how the whole thing works. That way, instead of asking me if your XX antenna with YY feet of ZZ cable will work, you'll know how to calculate the answer.

First, let's talk about the precise but confusing terminology in the land of RF (Radio Frequency). Well, if you want to just skip to the cable loss tables, go here.

You'll commonly see dB (decibel), dBm (decibel milliWatt), and dBi (decibel isotropic) thrown around, as well as dBm, EIRP, ERP, FSL, and others. Sheesh, that's a lot!

We'll start with dB, which stands for "Decibel". A decibel is the difference between two signal levels. RF engineers (and the rest of us) use it to add or subtract the effect of cables (or other "system devices") on signal strength.

dB are logarithmic: Every time you add 3 dB of gain, you double to the signal level. Every time you halve power, you subtract 3 dB. That means a 3 dBi antenna is doubling your emitted power over a zero gain antenna! But wait...that can't be right, can it? Antennas don't "add" energy.

As I've covered in other blog posts, antennas focus and shape energy. They don't add energy. It's kind of like a garden hose sprayer with multiple spray patterns. The water pressure going into the nozzle doesn't change, but as you switch from "mist" to "shower" to "stream", your emitted pattern changes.

That pattern change, and the resulting focus and range, is measured in dBi (decibel isotropic).

Ok, it's about to get a little more confusing, but I promise you can understand this.

"Isotropic" refers to having the same energy value in all directions. It's the idea that an antenna could emit a perfectly shaped "globe" of energy. For various reasons, it's impossible to build an isotropic antenna. Every antenna in the real world emits energy in slightly uneven patterns.

Still, RF engineers use a perfect 0 dBi as a reference point. As you go up in gain (the dBi goes from 0 to 1 to 3 to...13), the pattern becomes less and less globe-like and more focused in a single direction & plane.

That brings us to EIRP, or Effective Isotropic Radiated Power. This is a measure of the radiated power coming out of an antenna in the direction of its largest lobe. What's a lobe? Let me show you:

Why is that max lobe energy measure of EIRP important? Because that's what regulatory agencies (like the FCC) use to measure the power coming out of an antenna.

In the US on the 915 MHz frequency we use, the FCC limit for EIRP is 36. You get the EIRP by adding the transmitted power in dBm (what gets fed into the antenna) to the antenna gain in dBi.

Transmitted power is measured in dBm, or decibel milliwatts. The max transmit power we can use in US Helium Hotspots is 30 dBm, or 1 watt. For Euros, the max transmit power for uplinks is 14 dBm. You can read more on this here, in the LoRa docs. I'm US based, so we'll stick with the US numbers for this article.

The transmitter used in a US Helium Hotspot pushes out 27 dBm. The stock antenna shipped with the original Helium Hotspot was a 3 dBi Antenna gain.

That gives us a total EIRP of 27 dBm + 3 dBi = 30 dBm

If you're US based and do the math, you're now realizing why a 9 dBi antenna is the limit for your Helium Hotspot deployments. 27 dBm + 9 dBi = 36 dBm, or the max allowable EIRP.

But wait, wait, wait, Nik. I thought this post was about cable loss? Why are we talking about antennas and gain? Well, when you pass energy through a cable, you lose some of it. Different cables lose energy at different rates, usually measured as dB per distance. In general, thicker cables lose less, and thinner cables lose more.

Cable loss effects EIRP, because remember, EIRP is a measure of what is "fed into the antenna". So:

EIRP = Transmitter power (dBm) - Cable loss (dB) + Antenna Gain (dBi)

This is why you can have a 9 dBi antenna with lots of valid witnesses if you have cable loss that brings your EIRP down to what Helium considers "normal" limits.

Before we get to the cable loss table, let's cover one more term that gets thrown about, which is FSPL, or Free-Space Path Loss. This is the decrease ("attenuation" for the RF nerds) in radio signal power over distance. FSPL is important in Helium because it's one of the factors the blockchain uses to determine if the signal strength of any beacon is "out of bounds".

FSPL is used to combat gaming. If you've got 10 hotspots in your closet (remember Modesto?), you can "say" they're deployed in a perfect grid pattern, but using FSPL to calculate the signal strength that should be reported is one way to make sure they're actually, say, 800 meters apart and not all stacked on top of each other.

You can calculate FSPL here. Here's what that might look like for 2 hotspots 50 km apart with clear line of sight, both using 3 dBi antennas:

How would you know if that's within limits?

Let's do this! Remember that your hotspot pushed out 27 dBm. Let's imagine you're not using any cables, so cable loss is 0.

We've already accounted for the gain using the calculator, so we just subtract the FSPL from the transmitted power (27 dBm - 119.4 dB) to get -92.4 dB.

That's a signal strength within normal limits. For Helium hotspots in the US, most common signal strengths are (generally) between -90 and -122, though it can go higher or lower, down to -130 in some instances. Now, there are some other measures, both public and private, that Helium uses to combat gaming when assessing a tx/rx receipt, but these are the basics.

So, with all that as background, here's your cable loss table. Use your transmitter power minus the cable loss plus your antenna gain to get your EIRP, and make sure that number is 36 dBm or below.

You can get as detailed as you want, but I'd recommend not getting too wrapped up about your EIRP to the thousandth dBm.


[ninja_tables id="1782"]

Finally, one thing to think about is this: Having more power come out of your antenna isn't always a good thing. An effective way to plan your EIRP is to go after the LOWEST number you think you can get away with, say, 30 or lower. LoRa is already pretty darn capable, so "extending the range" with antenna gain can be pointless. I mean, I've seen a 3 dBi antenna be witnessed 200 km away. That antenna does a way better job of hitting lots of local hotspots than a higher gain would, in large part because of the effective pattern it has. Higher dBi doesn't always mean "useful longer range" (or greater HNT earnings). Just something to think about.

Rock on!

References & Resources

Archived Comments

Kerry Prudhomme - 6/15/2021

O K I'm a little confused. My first hotspot will be at my home. I live in a relatively flat area. I have tall trees about 50 - 100 feet from my house. I plan to use an 8 DBI antenna. I could place the hotspot within 20' of the antenna. Should I purchase an outdoor enclosure for the bobcat miner to reduce the amount of cable between the miner and the antenna. Is the 8 DBI antenna Ok in my situation?


Nik - 6/15/2021

Hi Kerry, I always aim to reduce the cable length between miner & antenna. You don't *have* to, it's just a good idea. Your 8 dBi antenna will probably be fine. Does that help clear it up?


Kerry Prudhomme - 6/16/2021

Thank you. I think I will purchase the enclosures. I will also need to purchase a short length of cable for each.


Dan Carare - 6/17/2021

Hi! So the best thing to do is to buy the most short cable with highest LMR 600, considering will be short distance between hit spot and antenna location ) Is this correct? Shir cable, maximum LMR Right?


Nik - 6/17/2021

Technically, yes. Practically, you don't need anything beyond LMR400 for most instances, and the 600 & 900 are thick and more difficult to work with.


scott dieken - 6/19/2021

Hey, could you please add the LMR900 cable to your chart. I do not understand why people would cheap out on their cables. I was making 2 grand a month on a rak miner with the factory provided rak antenna on an 8ft lmr-400 ft cable. I tried moving it up 25 feet with a 50 ft lmr-400 cable and was making zero dollars a day. If you can make one or two grand a month why buy anything but the very best cable? Then you don't even need these high dbi antennas. Please let me know if you have any good suppliers for lmr-900 cables. It wouldn't matter to me if the cable was $500 or $1000.


Nik - 6/20/2021

Hi Scott, sure, we can add LMR900.


Johnny - 6/26/2021

First, awesome stuff Nik. Thank you for sharing. Second, any links to pre-made cables you’d recommend and/or to tool and connectors that most easily make for reliable connections. Again, thank you.


Nik - 6/26/2021

Thanks Johnny. I'd use USACoax for cables. You definitely can make your own, but it's more expensive unless you're making a bunch, and even then you're probably still breaking even.


Evangelos Foutris - 7/1/2021

Hello Nik, thanks for the info! 1) You state one place that the max EIRP in US is 30 dBm but then elsewhere say 36 dBm. Can you clarify? 2) Is loss only from the antenna to the miner or also from the miner to the router (ethernet)?


Nik - 7/1/2021

Hmm, let me know where I screwed that up. For clarification: Max transmit power fed to the antenna is 30 dBm. Max EIRP (the focusing of that power) is 36 dBm. Does that make sense? More on that here.


scott dieken - 7/4/2021

if you wanted to make a longer cable run like 100ft using the lmr-600 could you offset some of the power loss using some kind of booster?


Nik - 7/4/2021

I haven’t seen that work well. Usually better off to figure out how to run long Ethernet and short antenna cable.


Natko Jankovi? - 7/9/2021

Please can you explain me is there any gain for those hotspots for Emrit which are all set to 1,2dBi and 0m vs. private which are adjusted to real values? No need to say that may hosts modify antenna and don't place hotspots on the ground level.. Are there any consequences for Emrit for this falsely setting gor thousends hotspots around the globe from Helium?


Devon - 7/9/2021

Hi Natko those settings (Antenna Height/Antenna Gain) are not currently active, and no there will never be penalizations for not having the proper parameters set. That will be utilized to advance the network specifications further. For now it is not active, and again even when it is active you will NOT need to have to settings match your system. It will only be in place to improve YOUR performance.


Nik - 7/9/2021

The current antenna & elevation settings in the app don't have any bearing on your RSSI/SNR values (as far as I know.). Shouldn't be an issue.


scott - 7/9/2021

hey nik your previous comment I haven’t seen that work well. Usually better off to figure out how to run Kong Ethernet and short antenna cable. I am not familiar with Kong Ethernet, and a google search really did not bring anything up. For those of us who have not bought outdoor units with POE could you please link to where I can find more info on Kong Internet. P.S. I did end up buying one of those HNTenna so we will see how much improvement I get next week when it arrives and I can get it installed.


Nik - 7/9/2021

Whoops, was typing so fast I put "Kong" instead of "long". Should be "long ethernet". :)


Helium Hotspots & EMF - One Man's Search - 7/12/2021

[…] those of you who’ve read the Cable Loss & EIRP post, you’ll remem­ber that the most pow­er­ful hotspots (Amer­i­can hotspots) blast out a […]


scott - 7/15/2021

what is the difference between kmr-400 and lmr-400


Nik - 7/15/2021

They look similar to me, the KMR claims to be more flexible. I haven't used it.


Michael Kozlowski - 7/17/2021

Hey there, I read that certain materials from placing an antenna indoors can cause dbi loss. I read that plywood can cause 4-6 dbi loss and that high efficiency windows could sometimes cause up to a 40dbi loss, ans paired with a bug screen, even worse! So my question being. If I were to mount say a 10dbi antenna inside my attic, would I be transmitting somewhere between 4-6 dbi, and retain the local vertical reach visibility benefits of having a 4-5.8 dbi antenna versus a 8-10dbi antenna which is more horizontal reaching? Thanks! I currently have a few miners setup with the stock 4dbi antenna next to windows but wondering if a 8-10dbi antenna in the attic would be better.


Nik - 7/17/2021

Hi Michael, good question. If it's in your attic it'll go through your roof just fine. I'd probably stick with a 6 dBi or lower, but the answer is always to test 'em out. :)


Valeri - 7/24/2021

Hi Nik, If I use 5.8dBi antenna and my cable length results in 2.8dBi loss would that mean that the performance (the radiation pattern and the ERP) of that antenna (5.8dBi - 2.8dBi in losses = 3dBi) and that of an 3dBi antenna without any cable extension would be the same (because they have the 3dBi gain)?


Nik - 7/24/2021

Nope. The radiation patterns are different for different antennas. A drop in power doesn't change the pattern of radiated power.


Richmond Mcfarland - 8/2/2021

How do I invest in the cryptocurrency, Helium?


Richmond Mcfarland - 8/2/2021

What do I need to do to invest in Helium, a cryptocurrency? I know its symbol is HNT, But I don't know to access it and buy some of it.


Richmond Mcfarland - 8/2/2021

Can I get an answer to how to invest in HNT


Nik - 8/2/2021

Look for cryptocurrency exchanges that list it. Binance.us and Bilaxy are two you can look at.


Nik - 8/2/2021

Sure. Just wait a bit, dawg. There's only one guy running this site. :) You'll probably get more information faster over on the Helium Trading Discord.


Brad - 8/3/2021

Hey Nik, I am looking at this chart and I think I need help with the math. I have a 5.8 Dbi antenna with 30' of LMR400. So, I am guestimating that is about a loss of 1 dB. But how do I calculate that out since dB and Dbi are different. 36 + 5.8 - ?(dB loss)? = ??? Also I pontificate the following: Is there math that makes an 8Dbi as effective as a 5.8, just by running longer cable? I guess the pattern doesn't change for the antenna, but it would kill the distance, effectively making the widest point of coverage, closer to you, correct or no?


Nik - 8/3/2021

Hi Brad, 30' of LMR400 will give you 1.17 dB of loss (3.9 dBi loss for 100', so 3.9 x 30%). dB = decibel (relative) and dBi = decibel isotropic (measured against an absolute). It's confusing, I get it. For the purposes of this equation you can add & subtract them without conversion. Re. making an antenna more "effective", I'm not sure I follow. You'll be putting less power through the same pattern as far as I know. I'd take the 5.8 over the 8 in pretty much every circumstance we'll have for Helium. :)


Brad - 8/4/2021

Thanks Nik, so basically, because of the cable length, I now have a 4.63 dBi antenna... For the "effective" question, I was thinking that upsizing the antenna to an 8 dBi instead of the 5.8 dBi would make up for the cable loss. Where it gets a little fuzzy for me is that an 8 dBi has a more laser-like pattern with less coverage close by. So, would the reduction in the dBI from the cable loss change the pattern to be more like the 5.8 or would it stay very narrow and just be a weaker signal?


Nik - 8/4/2021

Not really re. having an 4.63 dBi antenna. You have an antenna emitting at a certain pattern with a reduction in strength along that pattern equal to the cable/connection loss. Minor detail, but just to be clear. :) I'd keep it at a 5.8. LoRa has so much dang range anyway (4 dBi antennas ROUTINELY witness over 100 miles away) that this constant focus on whether or not an antenna is strong enough is misplaced.


Can I Get A Witness? - One Man's Search - 8/4/2021

[…] Every­one (in the US, and in most coun­tries) sell­ing a radio device has to have it cer­ti­fied by some nation­al body. In the US, that body is the FCC. One of the things they check dur­ing cer­ti­fi­ca­tion is that your device does­n’t break any emis­sion-strength rules (tech­ni­cal­ly EIRP, more on that here.) […]


Dave - 8/7/2021

For the case of a miner in an attic, any thoughts on 8 vs 5.8/6 dbi antenna? Rokland says that the 8 dbi antenna has a 25 vertical beam width. That still seems pretty wide, e.g. at 300m, the lower bound should be ~66m. So why would one go for the 6 dbi unless you live on a mountain?


Nik - 8/8/2021

Hi Dave, I aim for lower dBi unless there's a mitigating factor. From your situation (in the attic) the 8 dBi will probably work better, but as always with RF, you've got to test it. Please keep me posted on how it goes!


Michael - 8/13/2021

Hi Nik, I'm a bit confused. I generally understand what this post is saying but I'm confused with the different cable types. I see that my antenna has an RP-SMA Male connector and my Bobcat Miner 300 hotspot has an RP-SMA Female connector. I've seen "N-Male" thrown around on different websites, along with LMR-400. I assume I would need a cable with the RP-SMA Male + RP-SMA Female ends. However, when I do a search for LMR-400 with those connectors, the results don't look anything like what I'd need. I'm looking for a 2 or 3 foot cable and was wondering if you could send me a link of where to buy the cable I'd need?


scott dieken - 8/13/2021

could you compare these lmr cable types with the pulsar cable listed on rak for dbi loss? https://store.rakwireless.com/products/pulsar-cable-rak9731-rak9733?variant=39677580968134


Nik - 8/13/2021

Yep, head to USACoax. If they don't have what you want on their "Helium" offerings, look for their standard LMR400 or just call them. Their phone customer service is knowledgeable. Tell 'em Gristleking sent ya; they'll probably have no idea what you're talking about, but it'll be funny. :). Oh, and if you want to see what an N-male looks like, go here and scroll down.


Michael Johnson - 8/13/2021

Thanks Nik! I appreciate your sense of humor along with valuable information. I'll take a look at usacoax.com and reach back out on here if I still have questions. I might end up calling their customer service and tell 'em you sent me, for a good laugh too LOL


Nik - 8/13/2021

Hi Scott, use loss per distance to compare. For example on the page you linked, 16.4 feet has a loss of .9 dB on the Pulsar at 902-930 MHz. Check it against LMR over here (which is all 915 centered), where you'll see that LMR400 (for example) has a loss of .8 dB at 20 feet.


Brent - 8/13/2021

Hi Nik, If I needed 50ft of cable from the antenna to the miner is LMR 400 good enough or should I go with something higher like LMR 600 Thank you for all your awesome posts!


Nik - 8/14/2021

Hi Brent, it depends on the gain of the antenna. At 50' you'll probably want a 5-8 dBi gain antenna to offset cable loss.


Tom - 8/16/2021

Hi Nik, I got a RAK V1 and a Parkey Labs 5.8dbi antenna (link: https://shop.parleylabs.com/collections/antennas/products/5-8dbi-fiberglass-antenna-for-hnt-helium-hotspots-lorawan-us915-gray). I am on usacoax.com building a custom cable (link: https://usacoax.com/custom/custom-helium-lmr-400uf-ultraflex-cable-build-530.html) But I am not familiar with the terminologies of the cables. It is asking for which connection type should it be on CONNECTOR 1 (HOTSPOT SIDE) (options: no connector or RP-SMA male for $5 extra) and which one whould be on CONNECTOR 2 (options: no connector, N male, N female, N female-bulkhead or RP-SMA female (stock antenna extension)). Each one for extra $5. I need some 30" of cable from the top of my chminey until the basement, where the hotpost will stay. Can you please help me to determine which types of connections the cable should have? Thank you!


Charlie - 8/18/2021

Hi Nik, I got a 8dbi antenna on my roof 35ft high with 20ft of Lmr400. That is not much power loss. Anyway, on a few rare occasions at 7:30pm I reached 4x as many witness as normal in different directions 120km away in disco mode! I was ecstatic! However, I was never able to duplicate this again in discovery mode or real world. Any suggestions of what this might mean? Should I try turning my 8dbi antenna or changing to a 5.8dbi to widen the beam. Right now, my only witnesses are over 30km away. Thx


Chip05@me.com - 8/18/2021

Hey Nic, why does it seem like at night disco mode performs better! Is there a best time to run disco mode to get “Max effect” Thx Charlie


Nik - 8/18/2021

Hey Charlie, good question; the ham radio guys love this kind of stuff. I don't know about a "best time"; what you're aiming for with Disco is to get a rough approximation of how many witnesses your miner will have. Day or night obvi make a difference, but since your miner runs day & night it's probably worth it to check both, then see how that lines up with actual results.


Nik - 8/18/2021

Are your nearest hotspots 30 km away, or just your nearest witnesses?


Nik - 8/18/2021

Hi Tom, check out this page on cable connectors, that should help you sort it out. I usually write it down; that helps me clear it all up. "Bulkhead" connectors are extra long, to go through a (thin) wall, like a plastic enclosure; you probably don't need that.


SS Shah - 8/18/2021

Learning a lot from this site - I purchased the HNTenna 3 dbi outdoor antenna that you have recommended elsewhere, but will need to run approximately a 25 foot cable. It seems like this would be approximately 1 dbi loss per your table (if LMR 400). If I'm understanding correctly, this would bring the power from 30 dbi (27 + 3) down to 29 dbi (27 + 3 - 1) which seems like it would still be ok. Does this sound reasonable, or do I need a higher gain antenna to offset? I live in a suburb approximately 15 miles away from a very large city, which is why I was hoping to use the lower gain antenna. Thanks!


Nik - 8/18/2021

Totally reasonable, please let me know how it goes SS!


Scott Dieken - 8/19/2021

Nik Do you have any slightly higher gain antennas you recommend than the 3dbi. If I need to run a long cable like 50ft, a 3dbi just isn't enough to overcome the line loss. (I think) I have a 3dbi antenna doing very well right now on a short cable of 10ft but when it was higher on a 50ft cable it wasn't doing well at all.


Nik - 8/19/2021

Hi Scott, try the RAK 5.8, people seem to get good results with those.


alan pearson - 8/22/2021

Could you use a RF reflective metal, and place it next to your Omni-directional antenna to strengthen signal in a specific direction?


Nik - 8/23/2021

Hi Alan, sure, you're making a homemade sector antenna when you do that. It'd work, though maybe not very efficiently depending on design.


John Wilchynski - 8/27/2021

Hello Nic I live out in the boonies Florida. My nearest hotspot is 32km away. I have three Bobcat 300 units spread out in the area to form a network. We have many tall pine trees all over. What size towers should be used? I have access to 50 foot tv masts. Was thinking of 50 foot towers with 8dbi antennas. Is higher better? But then long cable runs. What do you suggest? Thank you.


Nik - 8/27/2021

Hi John, The higher the better in Florida; those pines are no joke! An 8 dBi at the end of a 50' cable should be fine if it's 50' up. Very tough environment for LoRa to go long distances.


Mike - 9/8/2021

I have a question about this statement: "That’s a signal strength within normal limits. For Helium hotspots in the US, that valid signal strength is (generally) between ?90 and ?122, though it can go down to ?130 in some instances." I'm not sure what this means but if this range is something to strive for, it means you actually want more cable loss. I ran thru the calculators and if my hotspot puts out 27dbm and my free space path loss is fairly low - for instance 3dbi antennas at both ends and the distance is only between 1 and 3 kilometers, the loss is 95db (at 3km). 27 -95 is -68 so if you want to be between -90 and -122, wouldn't you want to introduce more loss with a thinner cable? (LMR195 at 100 feet) Even with 10 more db of loss from the cable I'm still only at -78 which is not within the range. Or maybe I don't understand the comment about the range. Can you explain that?


Nik - 9/8/2021

Hey Mike, calcs look good. I'll pull the word "valid" from the post, as it's not quite accurate. Good catch! I should have said "most common". If you're running 2 x 3 dBi antennas, you are very unlikely to run afoul of any anti-gaming rules. While signal strengths are generally between -90 and -130, I've seen 'em be valid at stronger levels, although with current rules the SNR can be too high and invalidate the whole thing. In fact, SNR (at least for PoCv10) is the real problem, and a part of what I believe they're pulling out in PoCv11.


Mike - 9/9/2021

Nik, thanks for answering so quickly. So is all the hype about needing really low-loss cables overstated? In my case, I will need a 75 foot run. I don't need to hit hotspots 50 km away. However, there are a few at between 10km and 15km that I'd like to hit but I have plenty that are fairly close to me (1 to 5km). Also Vision shows that I have good line of sight for many of these including the 10km and 15km distant hotspots. So if I have the 75ft run of let's say LMR195 and have roughly 8db of loss and the free space path loss at 15km is 109, then 27 - 8 - 109 = -90 which is somewhat ideal based on your numbers but if it happens to be a little stronger that won't be a problem. For instance, right now, my little 3dbi antenna (direct connected indoors next to a sliding glass door) is solidly hitting a hotspot 8km away with an 8dbi antenna (on a 30 meter mast). The calculated signal strength is -71 and I'm getting plenty more rewards since he got started up. So again, is all the hype about needing the least cable just hype? When I mentioned a 75foot run on one of the Discord channels, I got a lot of people saying I was out of luck unless I got LMR900. Not sure I believe that. Thoughts?


Nik - 9/9/2021

Probably a lot more hype than anything else. "Needing" LMR900 is way overkill. 75' of LMR195 is on the low side for a 3 dBi antenna, but if your calcs are putting you well within acceptable levels you're probably fine. Please keep me posted on how it turns out!


Thing - 9/21/2021

Hello, i would lile to ask you about buying rak's 3 dbi antenna with 30 ft long lmr 400 cable for my bobcat. Will it cause too much loss or is 1.65 db loss is too much? And some resources says that bobcat's stock antenna is for indoor/outdoor use but i couldnt find any official answer. Can i use stock antenna with some insulation tape instead of rak? My last question is can i use 3 dbi antenna for bobcat? Because it's stock one is 4 dbi. So will it decrease my antenna gain or anything else? Thank you very much.


Thing - 9/21/2021

Hello, i would lile to ask you about buying rak's 3 dbi antenna with 30 ft long lmr 400 cable for my bobcat. Will it cause too much loss or is 1.65 db loss is too much? And some resources says that bobcat's stock antenna is for indoor/outdoor use but i couldnt find any official answer. Can i use stock one instead of rak's 3 dbi? (The reason that i want 3 dbi is the poc11). My last question is can i use 3 dbi antenna for bobcat? Because it's stock one is 4 dbi. So will it decrease my antenna gain or anything else? Thank you very much.


Nik - 9/21/2021

Check the connection loss chart on this page , 30’ of LMR400 isn’t a ton of loss. Bobcat data sheet here. You can use any antenna you want on a Bobcat (or any hotspot), 3 dBi is fine.


scott dieken - 9/23/2021

Can you make a blog post that explains what changes are in PoCv11?


Important Helium Update! How to update Antenna Dbi + location for POCV11 | ($HNT) | Chia (XCH)/Helium (HNT) Explained - 10/1/2021

[…] Helium 101: Cable Loss and EIRP. - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium gristleking.com Helium (HNT) ???????? ???????? ????? Twitter Facebook ??? Pinterest ???????? iost Chia (XCH)/Helium (HNT) Explained […]


Eric - 10/10/2021

Hello. Beginner here. I was wondering if cable loss affects the signal pattern of the antenna? Example: A 5.8 dpi antenna (outside) with a cable running 30 feet to a miner placed inside. Would the loss make the signal behave in more a "bubble" pattern like a 3dbi. Or remain more flat like the original 5.8 rating? Maybe a better example would be with a 8 dpi antenna. - Thank you.


Nik - 10/10/2021

Nope. The antenna will radiate at the same general pattern, just with less energy.


Elias - 10/15/2021

Hi nik What is the best dbi antenna to use on Cyprus (EU) on the city center of Nicosia Could you enlight me please ? Thank you


Richard Ogden - 10/15/2021

Thanks for all your excellent content Nik. Very much appreciated. From a British cousin !


Nik - 10/15/2021

I'd use a lower gain, 3-6 dBi. Whatever you get should be fine. Location & line of sight is far more important.


Mike - 10/23/2021

Nik, thanks for answering my questions above from September 8th and 9th. I ended up using 80 feet of LMR400. Got the antenna on a really nice tripod on top of my roof about 6 feet above my old TV antenna (which aIso got raised up a bit with the bigger tripod). Overall, the antenna is about 35 feet above the ground. When I had an HNTenna indoors behind a curtain, I was getting around $1 to $1.50 a day. When I moved it right next to the glass, that went up to $5 a day. When I moved the HNTenna 3dbi up to 35 feet with the 80 foot LMR400 ,that went up to around $500 to $550 a month (around $16 to $17.50 a day). A few weeks later, I switched to 6 dbi McGill tuned to see if that would do better. It does and I consider it worth it. The 6dbi really reaches out though to other hotspots that are between 10 and 30 km away. That's really nice. The rewards are up to between $20 and $23 a day. Perhaps the length of cable was worth going up to LMR400 flex but overall, this is a very nice setup for what I was expecting. Thanks again.


Nik - 10/23/2021

Right on, glad that worked out well for ya! Yeah, with those longer cable runs a higher gain antenna can make a difference.


Matty - 10/27/2021

Hi Nik, So many of of are amending our setups. I'm in the UK currently running s 5.8dBi antenna with a 10m run of LMR-400, for arguments sake let's say all my losses are 1dBi. You are asked to enter a dBi value into the Helium app, deducting the 1dBi loss from the 5.8dBi antenna and entering this value in doesn't seem correct to me. My understanding is that the antenna dBi value will never change? Am I missing something here? As I would still enter the dBi value in as 5.8dBi because cable loss will not change this? Cheers


James - 10/27/2021

Hi Nik, The helium app as asked for a dBi input for our antenna, I'm in the UK and run a 5.8dbi antenna with a 10m LMR-400 cable, for arguments sake let's say the cable loss/connector loss is 1dB, can you explain to my how this makes 4.8dBi? To me this doesn't make sense as my antenna is a fixed value, no amount of loss is going to change this. Is the value in the app 'dBi' incorrect for what we are now being advised to workout? (Cable and connector loss? Many Thanks,


Nik - 10/27/2021

Well, they're trying to calculate the output of your system, so I'd claim the loss and enter 4.8 in your case.


James - 10/28/2021

Hi Nik, Thanks for the response, whilst I get that it's a simple deduction. The cable loss doesn't change the end dBi, that is a static number surely, as that is set by your antenna? A 5.8dBi antenna will always be a 5.8dbi antenna? Is dBi the correct value being used?


Nik - 10/28/2021

The cable loss does change the dBi. In simple terms, dBi is a measure of the maximum power in a given direction from an antenna. With cable loss, that power will be reduced, since there's less energy going INTO the antenna in the first place. The antenna radiation pattern won't change, it'll just be outputting less power in all directions. Does that make sense?


R Ogden - 10/29/2021

Presumably there is no value in reporting cable loss if your antenna is at or below the maximum allowed before the miner reduces power to the antenna to get within the legal limit... iirc EU 4dbi and USA 9 dbi ?


Nik - 10/29/2021

Not right now, but come PoCv11 you'll need to accurately report gain or risk going over the RSSI limits.


Kevin s - 11/3/2021

First off I want to thank you for making such a comprehensive explanation!! I’m sure it was time consuming and I appreciate all the info as well as you taking the time to answer all our questions!! I’m here jn Denver Colorado which by the time my unit has arrived is quite saturated! Was able to find a location with 1.0 reward scale and plan to run a 50ft cable to the roof. I have numerous hotspots within 2 miles (maybe 20) and probably 100 within ten miles. And 750 I believe in within 50 miles... (as I said becoming a bit saturated!!!) Would you recommend sticking with the 3dbi (as I feel I’m going to hit my Max witness ammt with that) or should I try snd target as many as possible with 5.8 or 8? Also 400 on the cable since it’s 50ft? Or is the loss going to be somewhat irrelevant since I don’t need to reach out say 50km, if that’s the case do you think I’m ok with say a 195 to a 240 or would you recommend higher? And while I got you (sorry!) since denver is becoming so saturated going to be placing one in the mountains as a bit of an experiment. And some more rural areas as my reward scales being knocked down due to too many units jn the “larger hex” I’ve seen some witness all the way down here to denver from roughly 50-60 miles away (if I were to guess) on that I would assume higher dbi, what would you recommend an 8? And that I want to lose as little as possible so go with a 400 for cable correct or even higher? Last part tk that question that one IDEALLY I’d like to kind of point the direction back towards denver as the other way wouldn’t get line if aight over the continental divide, recommendations there? Sorry for the 10 part question! Been a 6 month long wait so I would love to get it right the first time!! Willing to spend the money to do it correctly the first time around but obviously don’t see the need to spend the extra money for say a 400 cord when I can get away with the 195 here in denver. But the main goal is to maximize the gains as with us all I’m sure ;) Again thank you so much for taking the time this will be the first out of ten I deploy so ANY information is GREATLY appreciate!! BY FAR the most informative post I’ve seen!! Can’t thank you enough! Keep up the great work it’s greatly appreciated!! Some of this is a bit over my head so thanks for holding my hand lol Thanks again! Best of luck.


Nik - 11/4/2021

Hi Kevin, stick with low gain antennas and short runs of antenna cable. A 3 dBi HNTenna is fine, and 20' or less of LMR400 for that is also fine. As you start to go beyond that you probably want a 5.8 antenna, but it really won't make much of a difference compared to *where* you put the the antenna & the lines of sight it has. 3 dBi antennas have been routinely hitting 30 km with clear Line of Sight over the hills/mesas in San Diego, and 200+km over water.


JV - 11/4/2021

Hi Nik, thank you so much for all the useful info you share that helps us to be be better Helium miners. I just have 1 question: I see a lot of reference to the cable loss and not as much to the connectors. I'm just wondering, when you add up the cable loss to the connector to the miner, the one to the lightning arrestor and the arrestor to the antenna, shouldn't you be factoring those in as well or are they so minute as to not make an appreciable difference? Thank you


Nik - 11/4/2021

Hi JV, cable connectors do add to the loss and you can include them. Any good connector should come with how much loss it induces, and you can add that into your calcs.


JV - 11/4/2021

What if it doesn't include that information, Nik? Is there a general rule that applies or a place with info we can consult? Thank you


Nik - 11/4/2021

Oh, on the safe side .5/connector. If they're high quality it's probably more like .1.


Jack Armas - 11/4/2021

NIK, thank you for the excellent article. I must admit a lot of the technical terminology went above my head. My hotspot is a RAK miner with a 60 foot LMR400 cable that runs all the way to the top of my house. It is attached to a 10 dbi antenna. With all that, I am not even witnessing. BTW, my miner is 'Acrobatic Wooden Beetle'. Feel free to look at it. Do I have the wrong antenna. How much loss do I have on this cable? Should a find a way to run an electrical line and ethernet cable to the roof and attach my miner up there inside a weather proof box? Sorry for all the questions and feel free to make fun of my ignorance. I just want to get this right. Thanks again.


Nik - 11/4/2021

Check lines of sight to local hotspots. Are you not witnessing *at all* or just not as much as you'd like? The antenna is too hot, for sure, though the cable length will offset that a little. I'd run much shorter antenna cable and a much lower dBi antenna.


Jack Armas - 11/5/2021

Hey NIK. I can confirm that I am not witnessing at on this 7th day into the HNT mining world. My antenna is 3 feet long and is sitting above any obstacles at the top of my chimney. So It should be true omnidirectional and have a 360 degree line of sight. What dBi would you recommend for a suburban house where 90% of homes are 1 story sub division homes? Again, I cannot thank you ENOUGH for your insight and expertise. TY TY TY!


Jack Armas - 11/5/2021

Hello NIK. I can confirm that 7 days into HNT mining, I am not witnessing at all. My 10 dBi is sitting at the top of my chimney with nothing blocking it. It should be a true omnidirectional 360 degree line of sight install. For a suburban house with nothing but 1 story subdivision homes, what dBi should I be using? What would be the max length cable I could get away with? Again, I cannot thank you ENOUGH for your expertise and guidance.


Nik - 11/5/2021

5.8 dBi will be fine for what you're doing; 10 dBi is way overkill. Florida is a tough environment for RF; flat, with LOTS of trees.


Peter Armenis - 11/10/2021

Hey Nik, first off great info and love your YouTube videos. I’m using a 5.8 antenna with a 25 foot lmr 400 cable. Cable loss calculator shows a 1.1 dbi loss. Should I be updating my antenna info to 4.7?


Nik - 11/10/2021

Right on, thanks Peter. Yep, that's what I'd update to.


Bob Jones - 11/13/2021

Nik, what do you think about ground planes. I have read somewhere they can helo focus signal. Thanks.


Nik - 11/13/2021

Yep, they can help shape the signal to go where you want it. The Bobcat stock antenna benefits greatly from a ground plane.


Shakir - 11/15/2021

Nik, I read about deducting the cable loss and entering the value in the miner. What happens if we do the opposite? Say 8dbi antenna with 20 ft of 400 cable, instead of deducting 0.8dbi, can we add 0.8dbi in the miner (8.8dbi) so the antenna will get 8dbi of power and not 7.2dbi? Thanks


Nik - 11/15/2021

Hi Shakir, your miner will output more power which will translate at the far end into a signal that looks suspiciously strong, and may invalidate your witnesses.


Darren - 11/18/2021

Nik, I’m looking at putting an antenna on top of a tower that is about 100’ tall. Then another 20’ to enclosure. So around a total of 120’ of cable. I plan on using a 8 dBi antenna. Can I use LMR 400? By my math I would loose 6 dBi. Or should I go with the LMR 600? I don’t want to put miner and router on the tower because I want to be able to get to those items without paying a company to climb the tower every time I might have to reset, etc. Thanks!


Nik - 11/18/2021

I'd use a lower loss cable, which will be a pain in the ass to work with. LMR600 or 900. And probably a lower gain antenna.


Darren - 11/18/2021

Nik: So I would be better off using my 5.8 dbi with LMR600? Hate to think of the cost of using LMR900. Thanks for the help. Trying to get it correct the first time so I'm not having to pay someone to run up and down a tower to change out antennas. Thanks for the reply.


Nik - 11/18/2021

Hi Darren, I'd run the calcs to see what your end output will be, then make the call from there re. antenna gain & cable type/loss.


Donnie - 11/18/2021

Hi Nik, I recently set up a Bobcat Miner and my SNR seems quite high. I failed to witness another miner 3.3 km away but I am able to witness one 15 km away. Funnily enough, (not really though) as I was writing this I failed another witness to that same miner. From what I have read, the invalids would be the result of the “anti-gaming” put into effect on the Helium Network since it falls outside of the “acceptable range" for RSSI and SNR. I am completely new to RF and though I have been reading, I am uncertain of the next steps to take. My first thought was to increase the noise somehow so that it would lower my SNR to an acceptable range. Is this possible with an attenuator maybe? Second idea was to increase the signal strength but I already have the antenna mounted from my chimney running through LMR 400 (53 ft) to lightning arrestor to LMR 400 (10 ft) to miner and am not sure putting it higher would help considering the factor may be on the other miner’s end. Any input is greatly appreciated. Thank you. Invaild Distance3.3 km DatarateSF9BW125 RSSI-94dBm SNR11.5dB Frequency903.9 MHz Valid Distance15 km DatarateSF9BW125 RSSI-113dBm SNR-2.8dB Frequency904.7 MHz 2nd Invalid Distance~3.3 km DatarateSF9BW125 RSSI-96dBm SNR8.8dB Frequency904.9 MHz


Jim B. - 11/23/2021

Nik, I consistently have Invalid Witnesses with a few miners around me, when I witness them or they witness me. When this happens the SNR is usually a positive value but never larger than 9db, most of the time its SNR 2-7db range but other times they are valid. How can this be corrected? (Examples below) VALID (my Miner): High Midnight Bobcat Distance ~2.8 km Datarate SF9BW125 RSSI -101dBm SNR 5.8dB Frequency 904.9 MHz INVALID Colossal Fleece Dove Distance ~2.8 km Datarate SF9BW125 RSSI -97dBm SNR 9dB Frequency 904.9 MHz


Nik - 11/24/2021

Hi Jim, valid/invalid depends not only on your setup but the setup (and really, gain) of those miners around you. If they have a higher gain antenna (and you do as well), there's not much that'll help until PoCv11 comes out.


Orion - 11/24/2021

If I paid you $500 to consult for me, what could you do to improve my situation? 1. I have a Gold RAK V2 on a 20 Foot flag pole with a 5.8 dbi antenna. 2. I have .27 transmit scale with a total of 6 other miners in hex. 3. Currently 112 witnesses Do you think, looking at those parameters, that you could improve my situation. My miner: https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/11ouLbjduW7tdwzKr4SY7V2ekfHfGMPZdMbvyKh5ZALvDbe26G4


Nik - 11/24/2021

Probably not much left to do there; you'll need to find a better location.


Gary - 11/27/2021

In the "lobe" image its clear that even an omni directional antennae has a direction. How do to tell where that direction is? The reason I ask is I'm northeast of a large city. 99% of the miners are southwest or West of me. To the east there's nothing. So it would make sense to align the patter to face southwest. I have an 8dbi antenna with lighting arrestor (-.5 dbi) and 50' of rfc400 cable (-2.1 dbi) at about 35' feet high. Line of sight is good. I get valid witnesses out to 50km. I'm thinking the lobe direction is currently facing southeast based on my pattern of witness but I don't know how to officially tell.


Nik - 11/27/2021

Hi Gary, The lobes in that image are for a sector (directional) antenna. Every antenna you purchase *should* have a diagram showing you the radiation pattern from a vertical and horizontal perspective. Omnidirectional antennas do have dead spots, but they're basically not worth paying attention to for Helium deployments. An omni will "see" in all directions.


Helium Mining - Definitive Guide to Earning Optimum HNT - 11/29/2021

[…] you have a few options you can go for (the higher the cost, the lower the db loss). See here for a table of cable losses. I would typically go for LMR 400-600 cable as the best for price versus […]


Nodson - 11/30/2021

hi Nik. I have rac v2 miner with 6dbi antenaa, but cable neth is 90 feet (LMR400) is it normal confg? Thank you


Nik - 11/30/2021

That's a pretty long cable, but with a 6 dBi antenna shouldn't be an issue (depending on where you are. US no problem, Europe you'll want to upgrade/shorten the cable.) Make sure you enter the loss correctly there.


Marc - 12/4/2021

Thanks to this and all the rest of your article I think I have a pretty good grasp on which antenna and cable to use. Thanks! The one thing I'm wondering. I currently have a 10 ft. Lmr-200 cable connected to a 5.8dbi outdoor antenna. @5m height. My current further witness is 18km. If I change out for 10ft. Of lmr-400 there would be less db loss and assuming Los I should be able to get more range? I'm not quite sure what less loss is actually accomplishing


Aaron Olson - 12/9/2021

10 dbi antenna with 33 ft of cheap cable. What will this result in?


Mark S Werner - 12/10/2021

I think this question is answered... It want to be sure. I have an hntenna 3dbi outdoor connected with 20 ft of lmr240. Looks like loss is 1.5. Should I include the loss in the Helium app to account for the loss?


Nik - 12/10/2021

Yep, include the loss from the cable.


Jared Holm - 12/17/2021

Does cable loss change the focus of a higher dB antenna? i.e. Would a 9dB antenna that would have a flat focused plane be changed into a wider focused plane (as in your diagram on antenna gain) if it had a 4 dB loss form a 100' run of LMR400? Or is that not how it works? I am in FL with VERY flat topography (including buildings...it's essentially wide open space above the trees), but am under the tree canopy. I have the fun but difficult task of trying to position an antenna above the canopy where it should be able to "see" for miles. By my current understanding, I feel I need something like a 7 dB antenna up on 100' of LMR400 above the canopy, but am curious if I'll have a flat plane shooting over everyone. Thanks for all the awesome info!


Nik - 12/17/2021

Hi Jared, it won't change the pattern, it'll just weaken the output along that pattern.


Nate Martin - 12/19/2021

New Bobcat arriving in a few days. Located in between Phoenix & Tucson, just a few miners nearby, but have option to also place closer to City as needed; can you please email me with information regarding consultation for my setup & strategy?


Abner Silverio - 1/9/2022

HI buddy, how would you go about reducing the transmit gain? If you found u are running higher then you should and setup in the helium app to a 15dbi antenna and still was too high what can you put in the line to reduce the transmit gain?


Nik - 1/10/2022

What antenna are you running? That'd be where I'd start. :)


Attzaz Rashid - 1/12/2022

Hi, I've read through the article and embarrassed to say still stumped... I've got a 5.8dbi antenna on a 10m long LMR400 cable with a lightning arrestor between the aerial and cable. Is the figure I put into the helium app simply 5.8 less the loss in the cable which I think = 4.4dbi Any help would be really appreciated thank you! All the best Az


Nik - 1/12/2022

Yep, bang on. [Antenna gain] - [cable loss] - [insertion loss from lightning arrestor] = Asserted gain in app.


Ernest - 1/14/2022

I live in the suburbs on a hill and have an antenna on top of my roof about 40~ feet above ground. I am running 40ft of LMR400, which comes down to about 1.57db of loss. I used to run a 5.8db antenna when I had near 0 loss. Would it be more beneficial to swap to a 8dbi antenna due to the loss introduced with the new cable?


Nik - 1/14/2022

Probably not, I'd stick with the 5.8. Focus on keeping the antenna up high and you'll be getting the most benefit.


Alex - 1/18/2022

hi Nik, how are you - great post! I am trying to figure out my best setup. I have helium miner (bobcat 300) with the stock antenna on my roof. my house is prob 180m above sea level +10 meters for the antenna. most of the antennas i want to hear /see are below me or very far away (closest is 4km) . I actually think that I have to gain from a high gain antenna (8dbi is prob the sweet spot + 20 feet of cable + a lighting protector.) https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/115s2Kxkwc5QMnBS3qLW2Bz7CBmwGRt7nFB9YRqQAiQ7C8pKUBP/activity does a high gain 8 or 10 sound too much? or a 6.5 better?


tanner - 1/18/2022

my fav part of this article is how GK says ‘i’m showing you how to do the math yourself!’ and all the comments are like ‘what about my setup, it’s like this:’ Thanks for the info, way to always make it digestible


Nik - 1/18/2022

6.5 to 8 is probably fine.


Alex - 1/18/2022

@nik ty very much - appreciate all your "guardian angel like approach" - i went with 8 to try and reach the remote islands :) @tanner you are right :) but as to myself and in my defense there are components implied in the distance and height which make the decision a little more "experience" based vs math based. I liked this calculator also https://www.pasternack.com/t-calculator-antenna-downtilt.aspx - it helps understand how the height and distance play into it as well as the vertical lobe degrees Alex


Chris - 1/20/2022

I messed up and ordered a LMR600 cable with the wrong connector. Will using a female to female converter result in a big lose? Is it worth replacing the cable or would it not make much difference?


Nik - 1/20/2022

Depends on the connector quality; anything you use should list its "insertion loss". Probably not a huge deal, though if you're running LMR600 you probably have a reason to avoid loss. ;)


Had - 2/11/2022

Hey NIK, is it worth runing 25 metter cable in order to climb antenna to roof of my 45metter building and completly open the view in full 360 circle? Or should I rather have around 150 degree open view and stay much lower but run short cable. Also which cable would you suggest for such a long setup? Is LDF 7/8 okay or should I stick to LMR - 600 or something else? Thank you for the answer in advance.


Nik - 2/11/2022

I'd say getting it high offsets any cable loss issues. Calculate cable loss for your length & frequency and decide on your cable choice from there.


Had - 2/11/2022

I already did, but I am not sure how much loss is a red flag? Is 2 db loss acceptable for 8-9 dbi antenna? I am from Europe btw. I saw that everyone just talking about LMR-400 as a standard and LMR-600 for longer set ups. So not sure if LDF cables are okay for hnt mining usage because no one is mentioning them even with the fact they got lower db lost.


Nik - 2/11/2022

2 dB loss should be fine. I'm not familiar with LDF, sorry mate!


Jeff - 2/21/2022

Hey Nik - Thanks for this awesome post - When you change the gain in Helium, this will only affect the Tx, not the Rx, correct? Say you have a 15dB antenna, if you set it to 15 in Helium, the Tx will be brought down to 36 (USA) while the Rx will remain at 42. Am I understanding this right?


Nik - 2/22/2022

Yep, that's correct. Whew, that'll be a tight pattern!


Jeff - 2/23/2022

Haha thanks! I'm not actually using a 15dBi - I was just using it as an exaggerated example. I run a 10dBi antenna and I'm planning to install a 2-way amplifier with a SAW filter on it and I want to make sure I'm in the legal range for my Tx without losing any Rx. Thanks again for all of your work in teaching us everything you know! Actually while I have you on the line - do you know if the Bobcat puts out 25dBi or 27dBi? I know the max for the US is 27 but most of what I can find in forums says Bobcat puts out 25.


Ben - 4/9/2022

HI Nik, First what an amazing article, I’ve read hundreds and by far this is the most comprehensive. I’ve just setup my Bobcat Miner, live in Scotland in U.K. However, I messed up with initial setup, I got conned on some cable. So my setup is bobcat 300, McGill 6DBI tuned antenna, I’m 63M above sea level and my antenna is 13m high (top of house). However, I have 15 metres of RG58 cable (I know right). I calculated the loss it’s over 6dbi so I’m not sure why I am seeing witnesses 24km away. I’m generating around .4HNT per day but only 5 witnesses/2 becons a day….. In 3 days time I am replacing the cable to 10 Metres LMR 600 (£100 just for the cable), once I setup I’m going to update Helium app with a .4dbi loss is that correct? So new antenna will be 5.6DBI. I’m more keen to see what impact it will have with the new cable? What’s your thoughts? Hopefully I’ll have more witnesses. I’ll update you on the results hopefully the upgrade of the new cable will pay for itself and show the results.


Nik - 4/9/2022

Right on Ben. You may have more witnesses if the extra signal gets you through a few more walls/trees. Depends on how many Hotspots are around you. .4 HNT/day right now is about 4x global average. :)


M Dave - 5/5/2022

Hi nik, How to calculate db , dbi, Eire for miner using 860 to 870:mhz…pls advice which antenna should I use.


Nik - 5/5/2022

Hey mug, follow the links in this article and you can run the calcs. Also, check out this article on choosing antennas.


Had - 5/19/2022

Hey, I recently upgraded from a stock antena to 7.5 dbi McGill and I have some invalids (rssi too high) when I am witnessing. My first thought was to try putting a higher number of dbi into the app but if I am correct that would just weaken my tx and not rx. I am runing a 15m of lmr 600 + a lightning arestor. Do you have any idea beside attenuator or you think I have to buy attenuator? Thank you in advance


Nik - 5/19/2022

Hmm, how long has it been? I might give it a few more days and let this whole Light Hotspots thing settle before I made any changes.


Raghav - 5/31/2022

I've a 6 Dbi antenna at the height of 15 meter. My Antenna is Connected with 12meter long LMR 400 Cable going through a 0.5 meter long RG316 Jumper(connector). What antenna gain should I mention on Helium App


Nik - 5/31/2022

Hi Raghav, add up all the losses from your cables and subtract that from the antenna gain. I'd probably include .2 dB per connector, but that's splitting hairs for this.


Ryan - 8/16/2022

First off thanks for responding to people. So here is the question. 5.8 antenna > arrestor > 25ft LMR240 > Miner. I want to add a amp (RX Gain +12dB,TX Gain +3dB, 2 saw filters) would it be better to add it near the miner or antenna...maybe not at all?


Nik - 8/16/2022

Amp not needed. I'm not sure about best positioning on it re. where in the chain, a quick search suggests closest to the antenna, but again, I'm not sure.


Shield Your Helium Hotspot From Powerful Lightning Strikes

· 24 min read
Nik
Site Owner

How do you attach a lightning arrestor to your Helium hotspot antenna? What does one look like? Is it dangerous?

Let's start with a picture. This will answer 90% of your questions.

You can (and according to knowledgable ham radio operators) SHOULD connect the lightning arrestor at the other end of the cable, down by the miner. Another way of saying that is: Don't attach the lightning arrestor directly to the antenna like you see in the picture, attach it to a short piece of cable that connects to the miner, and a long run of cable that goes to the antenna. That didn't fit into my picture, so I did it this way.

Now, let's talk about what you can expect a lightning arrestor to do. Hint: Despite the blog post title, a lightning arrestor won't stop a bolt of lightning.

A lightning arrestor connects the antenna to the antenna cable. It passes the RF signal from one to the other through a medium that, when it gets too much power, it breaks, just like a fuse. RF engineers will probably lose their minds when they hear it explained that way; they'll start spouting about ionized gasses and fixed gas discharge tubes and input/output surge magnitudes. They're right, but you don't have to know all that to use a lightning arrestor.

A lightning arrestor will NOT stop a direct lightning strike. That would annihilate your house. While it would be awesome advertising to see a pristine hotspot miraculously protected in the middle of a charred and blackened house hit by lightning, it wouldn't be true.

All a lightning arrestor really does is protect your electronics against the static electricity that can build up during a storm. If the energy feeding into your antenna (don't kill me lightning scientists!) gets too high it zaps the gas in the middle of the arrestor, breaking the connection to the antenna cable, and all the energy is diverted to that ground wire (which is hopefully attached to your house ground.)

So, uh, how does it work? Just screw the thing in between your antenna and antenna cable, connect the attached grounding wire to a metal "path" that goes all the way to the ground and you're done.

Wait, you want more? What antenna is that? Where did I get that mount? What's the insertion loss on this lightning arrestor (make sure you get the right connectors!) vs the stuff the military uses when they don't want to fritz out a $40,000 piece of electronics? Psst, just get one from McGill that fits your cables.

I'll start with the antenna. I don't know what it is. A friend brought it over. He said he'd bought it on eBay and what did I think of it? I thought it would make a good demo for this lightning arrestor post, so I just gave him a Nearson 8 dBi I had laying around and kept his unknown antenna, which had the only thing that mattered: An N-connector on the bottom.

What about the mount? Made that out of aluminum bar, twisted, drilled, and ground to fit. Should've drilled first, but I made it work. The other super cool part of this project is the use of rivnuts. Stop here if you want to learn anything more about lightning arrestors, and refer to the above picture.

Just because I love building stuff and sharing knowledge, here's the journey. I started by clamping the aluminum bar in my vise, then twisting one end 90 degrees.

Twist complete. Nothing fancy, just simple and functional. I'll leave that pink paint on the end of the bar. Pink means you like to party.

Then I drilled out the holes I'd need for the antenna mounts and the pole mount.

I love that drill press. A random guy gave it to me. I saw it in his garage and commented on how old and rad and heavy duty it was. He said, "That thing's dangerous, I watched my grandfather lose the end of his finger in it. Do you want it?" Yep.

It weighs about as much as I do. I love heavy metal.

Next, I laid out what I'd need. Antenna, lightning arrestor, grounding wire, easy disconnect terminals, and a rivnut. Aw yeah, rivnuts!

Ok, what's a rivnut?

It's a cool little way to add a nut into a thin walled piece of metal. You drill out the hole, screw the nut onto a rivnut tool, insert the sleeve into the hole, then compress the sleeve of the nut, securing it to the wall of the pole.

Here's what it looks like. That's ready for a 10-24 bolt, which I happen to have a bunch of.

I used a u-bolt to clamp on my demonstration antenna mount.

Then I had to make the grounding wire. I used 12 gauge cable for this demo, most specs require 10 or 12 ga. You need to crimp on quick connect terminals to both sides, then seal the heat shrink around 'em. Here's what it looks like with the wire stripped, before I made the connection.

Here's what it looks like once you crimp it.

I crimped both sides, used a heat gun (Steinel HL2020E if you must know) to shrink it down all tight and pretty, and I had my grounding wire. You want these to be as short as possible.

All that was left was to connect everything up. Here's what it looks like without a bunch of words pasted in. Yes, I could've made the grounding cable shorter. I just didn't.

Pretty simple, right?

Oh, and the insertion loss? Let's be mean and call it .5 dB. If you're deploying for a critical application and want to drop $150 on a badass NexTek Surge Guard lightning arrestor with < .1 dB loss, you can do that because every tenth of a dB counts. But....you don't have to.

Ok, that wraps up lightning protectors. You don't need to do any of the building/light fab work I did, you can just screw it into your antenna and use the mount that comes with any decent antenna. It's simple. You got this!

Archived Comments

Larry - 6/8/2021

Hi Nik, would love to buy a couple of your home made brackets that mount to the pole. They look so different and obviously custom made. Nice to have someone in the HNT community explaining the correct way of doing things.


John Diprose - 6/8/2021

Great stuff as always Nik. Can I put the arrestor at the end of the cable near the ground where I will be putting a grounding spike? Or does it have to attach to the antenna. As my antenna will be on my roof and no place to ground up there.


Nik - 6/8/2021

Right on Larry. You can totally make 'em yourself with a vise and a few clamps. If you'd rather just have me make 'em for you, reach out via the Contact Form for a quote. Thanks again!


Dan Kiel - 6/8/2021

Can you ground it off anything that qualifies that is near by or do you have to ensure it is grounded all the way to your house ground or a newly pounded in ground rod? I've been prepared to run the ground wire all the way down the side of my house, but if I can ground it on something closer, that would be great.


Nik - 6/8/2021

John, shouldn't be a problem to put it lower down the chain.


Nik - 6/8/2021

Hi Dan, there has to be a solid connection all the way to the grounding rod/house ground. Can't just attach it to the nearest metal "thing". :)


John diprose - 6/8/2021

Thanks Nik


Stephen - 6/8/2021

Thanks for the great info Nik. I'm looking to put my antenna at the top of a wooden post (get's me another 4mtr above rooftop, in a very flat area), so how/what/where do I attach the grounding wire coming out of the arrestor? FYI I will be running power cable up the post as well, given the HS plug is only 2-pole (not earthed) could I potentially run a 3 wire cable and use the earthed wire to connect to the arrestor? Thanks in advance, S.


Nik - 6/9/2021

You'll need to run thick metal all the way to the building ground. The wire in a 3 wire isn't thick enough by a long shot.


Gary - 7/10/2021

Hey Nik. I have the lightning arrester and some solid copper 8 awg copper (I know it's probably overkill) this fits in the lightning arrester terminal perfectly! Is that ok that I use bare copper wire and no sheathing? I see you are using braided copper wire I think.l with terminal connectors. I want to run that from the arrester to the terminal clamp I bought to fit my mast. Then from there I was going to run a separate copper wire down to my copper rod and connect it to the grounding clamp there. I was going to go to house ground which is only a few feet away, I just wanted to make it tidier lol. Does this seem right?


Nik - 7/10/2021

You know, I'm not sure. I'd think the sheathing would be pretty important, but I'm not an electrician.


Bruce - 7/11/2021

Hi Nik, Do you know if the lightning arrestors on Amazon are of sufficient quality? Take this for example (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078NT5M37/ref=cm\_sw\_r\_wa\_apa\_glt\_fabc\_EHQBTXA5T5T5N6GMWNFE?psc=1) They list the same specifications and signal loss as other, more expensive options such as Times Microwave ones.


Nik - 7/11/2021

Hi Bruce, typically you get what you pay for, though that can be offset by paying more for a name brand. I usually go with name brand just to be safe.


Ndu - 8/13/2021

Nik, I have this https://www.timesmicrowave.com/DataSheets/FamilyProducts/LP-GTV.pdf. What do you think about the insertion loss? Is this a suitable arrestor? Thanks!


Nik - 8/13/2021

Just a caveat: I'm not an electrician. :). That looks fine to me.


Aaron Ursulak - 8/16/2021

Finally someone to answer my simple question ... I finally received my HNT miners and antennas . Can I screw my lighting arrestor (with a female end) directly onto my antenna (with a male end), and avoid breaking the run and order two separate cables. or dose the lightning arrestor have to be a certain distance from the antenna? It looks like that is exactly what you are doing and that way I dont have to order a second cable and break the cable run correct? Thanks .


Nik - 8/16/2021

Hi Aaron, yep, that's totally fine to attach the lightning arrestor directly to the antenna.


Aaron Ursulak - 8/16/2021

Your the best thanks! Its tough to find co ax in my area. Looks like ill have to order them all on line custom mae. hey do you know of good place, quick shipping to ALberta Canada that can make up som 440 with N type female end and RP SMR male end at lengths of, 5' 10', 15' 25' and 30'?


Aaron Ursulak - 8/16/2021

Sorry for the type .. looking for some 400 co ax. not "som 440"


Nik - 8/16/2021

Hi Aaron, hmm, not sure of Canadian sources. Might try calling USACoax.com and see if they have Canadian connections.


Aaron Ursulak - 8/16/2021

Thx. That is where Im looking.


Michael - 8/17/2021

Hey Nik, I have an HNTenna 3 dBi antenna (tall, skinny one) and am placing it outside my bedroom window on the 3rd floor of my apartment. I’ve read that a 3 dBi antenna won’t need a lightning arrestor since it’s 1) not strong enough to send too much power back to the hotspot to fry it, and 2) I’m not hoisting the antenna up a pole 20 feet higher than the apartment roof. If that info is inaccurate and a lightning arrestor is needed, is it possible to ground the copper wire to my balcony floor? I won’t have access to dropping a 30 ft wire down the side of the building.


Leon - 8/18/2021

Hi Nik, straight donw the line and to the point post, freakin awesome. Here are some thoughts from days when we used RS485 as communication over long distances in South Africa where lightening was always a challenge. - Arrestor as close as possible to equipent to minimize the exposed wire becoming the next lightening / statis antenna. Any exposed wire has the possibility of receiving and inducing static into the system. - Rather run a new ground wire to a propper Ground pole - if the ground is not good then not even the fancy gasses will stop a static / lightening strike. Its a good idea to have a Ground pole near a rain gutter to keep the ground as moist as possible. - Buy good well known arrestors, its worth it Leon


Nik - 8/18/2021

Hi Mike, well, technically *all* outdoor antennas should have a lightning arrestor. Many don't. I'll probably get sued out of existence for saying it, but I wouldn't worry too much about a small antenna outside your bedroom window.


Nik - 8/18/2021

Right on, thanks Leon!


Michael Johnson - 8/18/2021

Hi Nik, I appreciate the honesty. My biggest concern is making sure my hotspot doesn't get damaged but you seem like an extremely honest guy with a TON of experience so I'll take your word on it. Thanks!


Aaron - 8/18/2021

He’s better off to buy a 5.8 DBI antenna and mount it in his window indoors instead of a weak three outside No grounding required and better range


Octavio - 8/23/2021

Hi Nik, I plan on putting my antenna on the side of my roof (about 20 feet high but at the same height as the roof). Like Mike, do you suggest grounding it since it's not 20ft about the house? Additionally, I have a few power lines near my house that are about 30-50 feet away. Would these create static and possibly damage my miner? Thanks in advance!


Nik - 8/23/2021

Hi Octavio, I wouldn't worry about static from the power lines. Technically you should ground every outdoor antenna. Practically you'll see that many people don't.


Aaron Ursulak - 8/25/2021

Hey Nik I now have 2 or 6 miners installed. I wish I had. Clone to do the installs . Anyhow Ive been asked a couple time now are Bobcat devises safe. What do they emit. Ive heard RF waves are harmful … etc and I can’t really find anything that states they are safe other than they are FCC approved .do you have any links or info uiu can send me. Many thanks Aaron Ursulak


Nik - 8/25/2021

Hi Aaron, yep, check this post over here on RF exposure.


Teodora - 8/25/2021

Hi Nik, it may be a stupid question here but better ask... :) We'll mount our antenna on a 6-storey building and the antenna will be 5 ft above the roof. The grounding of the roof (which is flat) is done with a metal grid that covers the roof. We are thinking about connecting the lightning arrestor to the grid instead of running our own rod all the way to the ground, which obviously is not possible. Just worrying that charge already collected in the grid may go up to the arrestor and damage the equipment. I don't know if this is ? valid concern... What do you think?


Nik - 8/26/2021

Good question. I don't think so, but I'm not an electrician. There shouldn't be any charge collected in the grid; it's grounded, right?


Aaron Ursulak - 8/26/2021

Hey Nik. I need another 10 5.8DBI antennas> I can order them from RAK but delivery is way out ...! Do you know of US supplier? Thanks Aaron Ursulak


Nik - 8/26/2021

Check Parleylabs, it looks like they have 'em in stock.


Ndu - 8/28/2021

Hi Nik, Have you come across other strong research/opinions against connecting the lightning arrestor directly to the antenna like you did? Do you have the arrestors directly connected to the antenna in most of your setups? I ask because I would like to follow best practice once and for all. Thanks.


Nik - 8/28/2021

Hi Ndu, I've heard from a couple folks that you should connect the lightning arrestor closer to the equipment being protected. I have 'em connected directly to my antenna.


Eli - 9/22/2021

Hi Nik, which "Nex­Tek Surge Guard light­ning arrestor" would be recommended for an outdoor HNTenna?


Nik - 9/22/2021

Hi Eli, The outdoor HNTenna has an N-type female connector, so you'd want an N-type male on one side of the NexTek, then whatever matches your cable or hotspot on the other.


Brad - 10/4/2021

Nik, I've learned a lot from your site. I appreciate it! My original plan was the mount the lightning arrestors at the base of the antennas and then running the cables back in the house...10', 20', or 30' or whatever the length for the application. However, now I've heard people on the AV and Ham radio forums say that since cables can also build up a static charge (not just coming in from the antenna) then static charge won't necessarily be disappated out that arrestor as you'd want, and it could just as easily go down the cable to the miner and so this is why you should have the arrestor/ground as close as possible to where it enters the house and also as short of a cable as possible to the ground rod. I guess you don't think that is necessary? What I'm worried about is that we THINK and HOPE we're fine with the arrestor at the end of the antenna but we don't KNOW for sure until it's too late and we have damage! These were also recommended to me, which ground the outer sheath but I assume not the inner wire of the cable. I wonder if this could be a good belt and suspenders solution since I've already purchased the cable and arrestors to do it as you said, but these could also dissipate static in the line closer to the building entrance. (Not sure if links are allowed but here it is if so) https://www.solidsignal.com/installation/grounding-supplies?custitemsg\_brand=Times-Microwave-Systems&pricelevel5=0.31to31.97


Nik - 10/4/2021

Hi Brad, That all looks good, and you can definitely put the lightning arrestor closer to the gear side (away from the antenna). I've always used super short antenna cables so a short ground wire hasn't been an option, but it's a fine way to build it. Let me know how it goes with the Solid Signal stuff, looks neat.


Mohammad - 10/21/2021

Thanks! My question is that if doing all grounding process is going to discharge the static electrical energy enough to prevent sparks or still a lightning may hit the antenna. In case of a big hit all the antenna and grounding system will evaporate but I wonder if grounding really prevents such a hit. My house is a one story house and the highest point is 15 ft up. My antenna is 6 ft long. I appreciate if I you advise me on this case. Many thanks!


Nik - 10/21/2021

Hi Mohammed, a lightning arrestor won't actually stop a lightning strike, it'll just discharge static buildup. A direct hit will destroy everything, including the house. :)


Carl - 11/1/2021

If youre deploying an off-grid hotspot is there any need to ground...as in a roof top deployment? Thanks


Nik - 11/1/2021

Yep, still need to give that static charge an easy path to the ground.


Illia - 11/15/2021

Hi Nik, Interesting post. I want to hear your opinion about the setup I am about to create. I have a two-story house with a chimney on top. I plan to install a 20ft flag pole as my mast to raise my miner as high as possible. I will use the original bobcat antenna, but I will be using the lighting arrestor with that. As far as I understand, I will ground the arrestor to the pole, and then I should also ground the pole to my house grounding rod. I am not particularly sure how to connect the pole ground to the grounding rod. My idea was to just drill a couple of holes and feed the ground through. After I would drop the cord down and attach it to the grounding rod. Let me know if I should reconsider. Thanks


Nik - 11/15/2021

That sounds reasonable.


Brett - 11/17/2021

I'd really like one of those bad-ass unicorn shirts!


Nik - 11/17/2021

I think we got 'em for everyone at my other business; you can buy 'em on Amazon. I may have to start doing GK Merch...


James - 12/30/2021

Hey Nik, I see many using Lighting Arresters and suffering from the DB loss since the higher quality is more expensive and the more affordable route is usually the chosen. Can you explain to me why one just couldn't use a HomeDepo grounding clamp (Link Below) and wrap that end around the metal base bottom of your antenna and run your 10 gauge wire from there (No Arrester Needed)? Wouldn't it be more advantageous, there is no DB loss, and the path to less resistance (to ground) is increased due to the increased conduction properties of the clamp. In theory or my mind at least, this should dissipate even static electricity just the same. What do you think? https://www.homedepot.com/p/1-2-1-in-Type-JH-Bronze-Ground-Rod-Clamp-for-8-to-4-AWG-Wire-JH-B1-10/203339353


William - 1/2/2022

Hi Nik, Question about when you ground your outdoor builds. I believe in order to have proper ground it should be an 8-foot pole buried into the ground. Are you able to do this in remote locations or are you using an alternate method of grounding?


Nik - 1/2/2022

Hi William, I generally don't ground my outdoor builds.


Angel - 1/7/2022

I’m Going to be running a outdoor POE set up with a M1 sensecap and outdoor HNTenna, I’ve seen conflicting information about whether to ground. For ease I’d like to not have to ground my set up, I see you mentioned you generally don’t ground your outdoor set ups, so would I be good to run it that way? “Safely”?


Angel - 1/7/2022

Sorry, forgot to add this piece of information. The outdoor sensecap M1 and HNTenna will be a home setup if that makes a difference as far as whether or not I have to ground the set up


Nik - 1/7/2022

Hi Angel, that's not technically "safe" and you should always ground electronics. I generally don't ground my "off grid" setups, which aren't connected to any buildings. The risk depends on what you've got at stake and the likelihood of getting static build up/discharge.


tixorama - 1/15/2022

Hey Nik, I've seen setups where the lightning arrestor is not connected directly to the antenna but further down the cable closer to the miner. Is there a preferred way to do it? Thank you. Mark


Nik - 1/15/2022

Hi Mark, yes, that's the recommended way. I need to update the picture and diagram to reflect that. :)


A Complete Guide on How to Ground Helium Antennas - 7/12/2022

[…] overthinking it, is the best way. Also, some helium antennas come with a lightning arrestor. A lightning arrestor makes a connection between the antenna cable and the antenna. With this connection, it allows radio […]


John - 11/15/2024

Nice -- do you ever consider galvanic reactions when you build? I've been trying to factor this in with my builds... here in Japan they sell little separators (I think they are Nylon) that can be popped in between metals with different hardness... Aluminum can be a bad one for this. Nice of you to give your friend a nice Antenna in exchange, and thanks again for info.


Nik - 11/15/2024

Hey John, I remember wondering about it early on, but my hotspots that are still out in the wild haven't had any issues with it. Might be something way more important in other environments, but I haven't had issues with it yet.


The Top 5 Mistakes to Avoid with Your Helium Hotspot

· 38 min read
Nik
Site Owner

So you just found out about Helium and want to crush it with your hotspot deployment? First, remember WUPU. That stands for Wide-Unique-Proveable-Useful coverage. WUPU is what makes for a reliably high earning hotspot. Here are the top 5 things that go against WUPU. Let's start with the worst thing:

1 - Overcrowding

Putting your hotspot in the same res 8 hex as another hotspot WITHOUT providing significantly better coverage is a recipe for low earnings and wasted effort. I've gone into this in depth over in the Rough Guide.

I'm seeing a lot of folks who are just putting it in their house because they don't have any other place to put it, even if someone else is already in the same res 8 hex! This goes against the first U in WUPU, which is Unique. That is...non-optimal if you want higher rewards. If you want to crush it with your deployment, focus 95% of your efforts on the placement aspect.

https://vimeo.com/534602833

2 - Focusing on the Antenna

Most new hotspot owners go through some variation of "What's the best antenna, money is no object?" Please read the post on antennas to learn why that's not a high-earning question. You might think you're going for the W in WUPU, which is Wide, but many times you'll overbuy an antenna, getting a compressed signal that triggers anti-gaming witness invalidation measures OR goes far beyond the local hotspots you should be targeting.

3 - Not doing your research

You end up wasting a ton of your own time and that of others by asking a question in the forums that you could have answered far more thoroughly and profitably had you used a Search function. Trust me, you are not the first person with your question. Type it into Google exactly as you'd ask an expert and add "Helium Hotspot" at the end, or type the key words into the Helium Discord channel and scroll through the results.

4 - Not getting your antenna outside and up at elevation

This is a classic mistake. Look, Helium is a HUGE opportunity, but that opportunity will only exist as a tremendous one for hotspot owners who provide WUPU. If you put your antenna in a window down low, you are providing a very small area of useful coverage, it will be more difficult to verify it because your signal will be weak, and if there are any other hotspots around you you'll probably be duplicating their efforts.

Related but usually not common with people who want to crush is the lone wolf deployment, where someone puts in a hotspot that through topography or distance can't connect with any other hotspot. Even if they're providing Wide, Unique, and Useful coverage, it's not Proveable, so it doesn't really count. Hey, I don't make the rules (even though I think the Proveable rule is an excellent one.)

5 - Not connecting via a solid (usually ethernet cable) connection.

This is a smaller mistake but a source of frustration. The hotspots so far released don't have super strong WiFi reception, so they end up going offline, or missing a signal, or just disconnecting. Save yourself a TON of trouble and just hardline the thing in. If your connection is unreliable, you're not really providing Useful coverage.


All of these mistakes are as common as they are avoidable. If you just remember WUPU and apply it to every step of your deployment you can avoid them.

With about 10 hours of serious reading or study you'll be in the top 1% of knowledgeable hotspot owners in the entire ecosystem, and you won't make these. With that much study, not only can you avoid those mistakes, you'll easily sidestep all the other low-earning pitfalls that many hotspot owners stumble into.

Have a look through this blog, reading it will be a useful addition to your 10 hours. I've written about how to optimize your hotspot placement, which antenna is best, how much you can expect to earn, and more.

Archived Comments

Clove - 4/22/2021

Hi Nick - great articles, so helpful, have poured through every one of your Helium related post at least once :) Like most I have hotspots on the way, the first bunch arriving in June. I currently live overseas in Auckland, New Zealand where there is nothing (yet), but I know that will change in coming months. One thing is bugging me, regarding the density and the 300m zoning issue, I would think this could lead (and probably is/has) to some major conflict. I know if I was earning 100's of HNT a month and some cowboy put one 250m from a high earning rig and greatly reduced it's potential, I'd be fuming. This must be happening all over the world in super dense enclaves (as illustrated on Explorer in cities like LA, San Fran, London, Berlin etc). Why doesn't Helium step in and have a clear cut 'First Come First Serve' policy and nip this in the bud? I would think a clear, black and white policy here would alleviate so much stress and anxiety. I mean there are a lot of trolls out there, purely out of jealousy someone could greatly diminish your earning power. I know it would be illogical and counter intuitive, but so is being anti-vaccine and look how many of them there are. Anyway, haven't seen it really addressed anywhere and like to get your thoughts on it. Are people lobbying Helium to address this big issue? Thanks in advance. C


Nik - 4/22/2021

They may be lobbying Helium, but if you think of it from a network perspective there's not a huge downside to people providing additional coverage. What IS likely is that the rewards system will be adjusted through chain vars to significantly discourage overcrowding while simultaneously rewarding WUPU coverage. (Wide, Useable, Proveable, and Unique.)


Leonardo - 5/3/2021

Hello Nick, I wanted to know an efficient way to set up an indoor miner and have the antenna be outside in a high elevation. Any tips?


Nik - 5/3/2021

You can use a length of LMR400, depending on your antenna up to 60'. Just make sure you get the right connectors. :)


Bill - 5/8/2021

Nik, I’m about 150 feet up in a high rise and won’t be able to get on the roof. Balcony faces a dense population and I would get about a 180 degree “view” (facing north, 10 miles of east and infinite west).which is fine provided there are enough others to create the desired network. Any criticism of me accepting the limitation of non-360 degrees?


Nik - 5/8/2021

Hi Bill, use what you have, sounds like a great start!


Aldwin De Torres - 5/9/2021

Hi Nik, I live in an area that receives thunder and lightning storms. I’m somewhat ambitious and thought about placing HS on top of buildings on a pole. However, I am very worried that’ll just attract lightning and destroy the HS. Any thoughts on placing the HS high and outdoors, but not run that lightning strike risk?


Nik - 5/9/2021

Hi Aldwin, use a lightning arrestor and ground the antenna properly and you'll be as protected as you can be.


John - 5/10/2021

Hey Nick, Awesome cannel!! In an suburban setting, with mostly flat topography, 100 units within a 5 mile radius would a stock 3dbi antenna seem sufficient?


Nik - 5/10/2021

Yep, just get it as high as you can and outside. 5' above the roofline and you should do well.


Vincenzo - 5/14/2021

Hi Nick I am from Naples Italy and with my hotspot I cannot correct the "relayed" signal, even though I have activated port forwarding in the router. I contacted my telephone operator who replies that they cannot help me. What do you advise me to do? Thank you


Nik - 5/14/2021

Hi Vincenzo, take a look at this link.


Chris Tucker - 5/19/2021

Hi Nik, So glad i found your info as I try to decide if this is feasible for me. My house has just one hot spot inside of 300 meters from it. says it is earning .83 - - - does this mean i should NOT put a hotspot at my house and seek another location?


Nik - 5/19/2021

You'll def want to be more than 300 meters away from that other one. Sounds like it's a lone wolf, so adding in a hotspot (far enough away) could be a great idea!


Martin - 5/20/2021

good day, i have a specific question with hotspot placment. In HIP 17 it says for res8: Number of siblings: 2, density_tgt: 1, density_max: 4 . So if i get it right i should place 1 hotspot in 3 hexagons next to each other to get 100% earnings. My question now: Am i allowed now to place 4 hotspots in these 3 hexagons(so 12 hotspots alltogether) or is it like one hexagone can be filled with 4 and the neighbours have to stick with one hotspot than? Thanks greetz Martin


Nik - 5/20/2021

You could place 4 hs each in those 3 hexes without getting transit reward scaled, but a lot of them wouldn't witness each other because they'd be too close.


Martin - 5/20/2021

Tank you so much for sharing how it works! I will ofc take care that no one will be in the Red zone.


Dave - 6/9/2021

I am surprised that Coax cable is not on this list. From what I have read, the quality and length of your cable can dramatically impact your dbi. For those who want to place an antenna on their roof but don't want to put their HS in an outdoor enclosure, what is the longest length of a name brand (USACoax or Times Microwave) LMR400 cable you would recommend running?


Dave - 6/9/2021

Hi Nik, You recommended not going over 60' depending on antenna, can you provide more information on that? If I am running the ANT-NH900-OUT 3dbi antenna you recommend, what is the maximum cable length I can run of LMR 400?


Nik - 6/9/2021

Hi Dave, Depends on antenna gain. Check the bottom of the hotspot reference page for lengths to run.


Nik - 6/9/2021

It really depends on antenna gain, and there's not a hard and fast answer (even though it seems like there should be). Basically, the shorter the better. Out to 75' has been used on an 8 dBi antenna successfully. You can go further, it's just that the antenna won't perform as optimally.


Andre - 7/11/2021

Nik, crazy useful website, I’ve been learning a lot. Based on your advice I am going to approach a local brewery In an old industrial building with a 100 foot tall water tower. They have already run power up it for a big neon sign. The surrounding area is mostly three to five story buildings with clear views to two nearby downtown metros. I am already somewhat friendly with the brewery owner. If I get the greenlight, do you recommend I run ethernet/POE all the way up there? Or treat it like an off grid set up and put it on data? Also, the cage ladder runs all the way up to the pinnacle of the water towers roof, so I can get to the highest point easily. (Well, easily might not be the word normal folks would use, but you know.) Given the height advantage I will already have, is there any point to using a pole to go even higher, or can I just clamp the antenna onto the ladder cage at the top and call it good?


Nik - 7/11/2021

Right on Andre. Maximum effort = maximum results, so I'd run PoE (under 300') and be aiming at that pole. :)


Andre - 7/11/2021

Beautiful, thanks Nik. Hope the brewery owner okays it, otherwise on to the next tower!


Brad - 7/23/2021

I am having the mistake of not finding info on the basic understanding of the concept. It sounds bad, but that is where I am at. I am trying to see if I have this massive antenna, how is it that all of these little "toasters" and iot devices are able to talk back to me? It seems to me there has to be some limit of the range that they can throw? I have tried to connect to wifi hotspots from say a main house to a guest house and can't get that working because on of the antennas can get to one router, but the other cannot get back on the back-leg of the communication. So, it seems to me that there would be a limit on how far away you can talk to an iot device, regardless of anything else. I feel like I missed the remedial basics of the whole process!


Nik - 7/23/2021

No worries Brad, you've hit on an often overlooked aspect of this. Helium *Hotspots* can talk to each other over a 100 miles away with clear line of sight because they both have plenty of power and larger, more sensitive antennas than sensors. The sensors (and sensor nodes they're attached to) usually have a much lower range, say 1-5 km. LoRa can punch through a couple of walls, it's not like WiFi (different frequency and amount of information carried), so those aren't really comparable.


Brad - 7/23/2021

Thanks Nik, so just so I am making sure I am understanding this correctly: Any antenna, no matter how badass, that reaches over 5km is not going to be effective past the 5km distance (approximately). If I am talking to hotspots 30km away, I am wasting signal from 5-30km. The first 5km is making me money, the rest is just getting witnesses that don't really matter. So I want to have a really broad footprint the goes from my antenna to say (under 10km) out to be "optimized", is that in essence the gist? Thanks, I appreciate you ;)


Nik - 7/23/2021

Well, depends on what you want it to be effective *for*. For earning from other hotspots you've got a potential effective range of 100+ miles. For receiving data from sensors, it's a lot shorter. They're two different things. Earnings come mostly from interacting with other hotspots for right now, so the 5km - 30+ km zone isn't wasted, it's just not what the network will eventually use.


Deena - 7/27/2021

Hi... So we received an extended Verizon FiOS 2.0 router back on July 8th. Oh boy, who knew this would mess things up. My rewards etc. were great prior to this. Anyway, I was relayed after the upgrade, opened up port 44185, and connected via ethernet, however, it just isn't working up to par. Rewards have been far and few in between and no witnesses, as opposed to having a nice handful of witnesses prior to July 8th. We have wireless 5G. I took out the ethernet cable and tried just going back to my wifi and now there have been zero rewards for almost 24 hours. Do I just suffer from patience issues or am I doing something wrong? Thanks in advance for helping me troubleshoot. DM


Deena - 7/27/2021

In addition to the previous comment... P.S. Forgot to mention, we got a new router, an upgrade basically, and I opted for the extended router to make sure my wifi was strong on the second floor of my home. Turns out it is strong... The router and antenna have always been inside my home, 2nd floor, by a window with no screen. DM


Nik - 7/27/2021

Hi Deena, rewards have dropped significantly in the last month. As long as you're not relayed and synced up, it's probably best to just wait it out. I'd stick with ethernet cable vs wifi. The witness list routinely resets, so it'll build back up.


Deena - 7/27/2021

Thanks dear. Appreciate your time and advice!!! DM


Deena - 7/27/2021

Should I just plug it back into my router and miner (meaning ethernet) or do I have to shut the whole wifi down etc. Still a major rookie here.


Nik - 7/27/2021

Hmm, I'd expect if you just connect your ethernet cable that should do it. I'd probably unplug the hotspot, connect the ethernet cable, then power the hotspot back on. Then go do something else for 2 days. :)


Deena - 7/27/2021

@NIK... Appreciated! Great site btw. Good luck with it! Deena <3


Deena - 7/27/2021

@NIK... THX! Deena <3


Mario - 7/28/2021

Hi Nik, Is there any advantage to using a higher quality ethernet cable to connect your hotspot and router? I need to run about 50 feet of ethernet cable to get to my hotspot and I'm not sure if investing in some CAT8 could make any difference from using some old CAT6. Best, Mario


Nik - 7/29/2021

Doesn't appear to make a difference. Cat 5e works as well. ;)


Paul Greenhalgh - 7/30/2021

So it needs to be outdoor, high, not too close to any other miners but not too isolated AND it needs to be hard wired to a network. In practicality this is surely almost impossible.


Nik - 7/30/2021

Hi Paul, tell that to Trendy Ginger Starling, Shiny Shangria Mammoth, Flaky Coconut Marmot, Lone Daffodil Blackbird, and Rough Chili Bird. It ain't impossible, it's just unusual, and usually requires more work.


Brad - 7/31/2021

Hey Nik, I was looking at those beasts and I am curious what the key to the equation is there, they have minimal witnesses. I have 81, they have 13-15 and their reach is not that great, but they seem to be just killing it. They are obviously not posting the real setup as it show 1.2dbi and 0'. Do you speculate that they just have insane height and covering everyone close by, but then why would there not be more witnesses. Am I hung up on witnesses and should not be?


Nik - 7/31/2021

Hi Brad, Yes, you're hung up on witnesses. More is not better, as you can see from the top earners. Have a careful read through HIP 15. From a big picture perspective, this line from the Github sums it up: "...each hotspot is motivated to provide as much coverage as possible WITHOUT [emphasis mine] over-rewarding redundant coverage." It can get complex quickly, but the big picture looks like this: A top earning provides maximum proveable reliable coverage of other hotspots providing non-redundant coverage. It's not easy to get that top spot. You've got to get your location, elevation, lines of sight, and placement in relation to surrounding hotspots right. Oh, and I guess your antenna. People love antennas. :) One quick edit: I didn't check 'em at first, but a few of those in the top 10 hit some of the last CG, artificially inflating earnings. Still, the fundamentals remain the same.


Kevin H - 8/2/2021

Heya NIK, two part question for ya... 1.) I've been told I live in "dream zone." Close to Downtown with some elevation help living on a small mountain. Also a dozen or so high earners around me (611-1011 distance from my place.) and about 60 green dots in a 2-3 mile radius around me. Just found out I have a 5 ft pole sticking out of the roof (ive never been up there before.) I was thinking of running a POE to minimize the mess (cables) but the roof pole is about 200 ft from my Modem. Does length of POE cable(s) matter when using this setup? Other than the max POE length rule of 300 ft or less? My antenna's coax is only going to be 12 inches long or so (LMR400.) Overall thoughts on my setup ideas? Oh and would try a 5.0dBi Fiberglass Ant (via a pole mount; tapping onto the current pole up there now.) 2.) I live in the hot desert and it rains maybe 4-5 days a year where I'm at. Is there a certain malleable material you can think of that won't affect, conflict, or distort my outbound radio signal? So I can conjure up a homemade 'umbrella' of sorts? Or some type of cheap canopy/shield to keep my unit dry if needed? As it is designed for "indoor use only" for the time being... Thanks a lot for all that you're doing for us home-gamers! Cheers!


Nik - 8/3/2021

Hi Kevin, length of ethernet cable shouldn't matter at all, just stay within that 300' limit. For your outdoor question, I'd just use a vented enclosure to house your indoor unit.


Kam - 8/8/2021

Hey Nik, after doing tons of research, i'm getting stuck on decissions about the right antennas for my specific scenario. I have oportunity to put my HS (6 in total) on a 12th floor buldings (rooftop), 400m apart. The closest HS are far away from 20/170km away. I wonder, should I try to reach em, while testing 8/10/12 dbi antennas - or should I focus on my zone and 6 hotspots? If so, which antennas could You recommend in this scenario? Hope to see some concrets from You! Lot's of fake info and various, unreliable info out there... Have a great day and thanks for sharing Your experience with Us! Best, Kam.


Nik - 8/8/2021

Kam, 20 km to the nearest hotspot will be a crapshoot. You'll hit it, but not reliably enough to generate satisfying HNT. :). Focus on providing excellent coverage locally from high spots. Double check your res 7 density for your 6 hotspots 400m away. I'd stick with the HNTenna.


KP - 8/19/2021

Hey Nik, gotta say your website is such an awesome resource which I reference almost daily. Just received several rak miners and want to get these deployed to my hosts ASAP. Is it possible to sync them all at my home simultaneously first and then send to my hosts so they’re ready to mine right off the bat? Imagine I would have to re-assert locations on them but thought this would be more efficient than having each host sync/troubleshoot themselves. Any issues you see with this or any other better suggestions to deploying at scale? Thanks!!


Nik - 8/20/2021

Yep, that's fine. You can assert their final location when you first get 'em syncing at your place.


Deena - 8/20/2021

Hi Nik... This is Deena from back on July 27rh... So, things worked out great...got my witnesses back after 3 weeks and was back in business. Then, as of Aug. 20th, Verizon upgraded the software to our home router in my area. As a result, our miner has done zero today. Question: Have you noticed that when software upgrades take place with routers there is a stall or set back with the miner's performance? For example: miner sent out 3 challenges after upgrading - nothing, zero activity! Just curious if this is okay & that I just need to be patient again, and the miner will soon do it's thing. As always, thanks in advance re: any feedback! With appreciation & regards, Deena


Nik - 8/20/2021

Yo Deena! ;) I have at least one miner that's also done zero today, looks like there's an issue with the network. I may go down tomorrow and see if I can replace the SD card (about the only thing you can do on a RAK V2), but I'm more likely to just...wait. Waiting is almost always the right answer when trying to diagnose something with Helium.


Brad - 8/20/2021

RAK has an update issue from last push. Just reboot and I am guessing it fixes it.


Deena - 8/21/2021

Nik... 100% right my friend. I really need to drink one cup of patience, daily!! My RAK7248 miner started doing its thing a few hours after I posted earlier. Fingers crossed re: your RAK V2... Thanks!! D


Nik - 8/21/2021

Right on Deena, patience for the win!


christopher - 9/25/2021

Someone came into my hex . I have a great setup 5.8 rak antenna on my roof. My scale is 1.0 . Seems like he is relayed and just starting up. Will this effect my earnings if so is there anything I can do?


Nik - 9/25/2021

Hi Christopher, Depends on what size hex (res 8, 7, etc), how many are already in it, and how many are in the hexes around you. Take a look over here to understand how that works, then see if you can reach out via Hotspotty.


Albert - 10/5/2021

My hotspot wobbly glass perch is in a hex with someone who has 2 miners in my same hex which one is offline. How can I get a better res with this guy's miner in my hex and offline? Thanks!


Nik - 10/5/2021

You'll either have to move your miner, their miners, or provide much better coverage. Have you used the Hotspotty app to see if you can contact them?


Erika B - 10/14/2021

I waited from March to end of September for Calchip to ship my miner and in that time someone bought a bobcat (got it in 3 months) and what can U do? I can't tell my neighbors not to do something in their property because I bought mine first. What about people that live in highrise buildings?


Nik - 10/15/2021

Hi Erika, about the only thing you can do is outperform them; get your antenna better positioned for more line of sight to more other hotspots. Either that or find a new location. The Network benefits less and less from each additional miner that goes in to a location where there are already miners. Earning top rewards is all about providing WUPU coverage, no consideration is given for who was there first.


Charles Carrington - 10/17/2021

I really appreciate the time you put into this info. As I just started my research and just received and started the sync process. My question lies around the cons of rebooting of the miner. I just opened the port on my router, do I benefit by rebooting? Also do you suggest powering down when disconnecting antenna coax, for lengthening purpose?


Nik - 10/17/2021

Good question Charles, I'd keep an eye on the status of the Hotspot using BFGNeil's tool. It may take a day or so to show up. Technically you should always turn off any radio device when switching antennas. Practically, it doesn't seem to matter that much. I always turn 'em off, that's just me.


j - 11/5/2021

hi, one place I have a hotspot has his house wired with rj45 I think. basically, he brought internet upstairs in his rooms. We try to connect there but the hotspot goes offline, do we really have no choice to link the router with an ethernet cable directly or wifi or is there a way it works with his internet wall connection upstairs


Nik - 11/5/2021

I always recommend connecting directly via ethernet cable, even if that means you have to run new cable.


Randy W. - 11/7/2021

@ J If his wifi is getting approximately 100Mbps download speed consistently, it should work. Another option is powerline adapters to provide an ether connection using his powerline in the house to go from one area to the next. I have one set up that way out in a garage. There is one adapter plugged in directly to the router and then plugged into the wall. THe other adpater is in the garage and the Cat5 Ethernet cable is plugged into the Bobcat miner. It's working great. Good luck!


Jaime - 11/17/2021

Hi Nik, Have you ever seen a Rak Goldspot miner (from MNTD) cause a router to keep rebooting itself when connected via an Ethernet cable? I've been using my miner successfully with Wifi for about three weeks now, but as soon as I try hard-wiring it with a cable, my Nighthawk R6400v2 router just shuts itself down and reboots, repeatedly. I've tried two different Cat 6 Ethernet cables and I've tried two different jacks in the back of the router. All signs are pointing to the fact the my router is just junk, but I was just wondering if there is anything else you can think of that I could try first.


Nik - 11/17/2021

I haven't seen that yet. I had a Nighthawk for a while and it worked well most of the time. Might be time for a new router though. :)


Aimee - 11/26/2021

Thanks for the article! We just got our antenna up and I just was wondering if you know if there are any health concerns (increased WiFi) risks with having this? Thank you!


Nik - 11/26/2021

Nope, check over here for full deets.


Matthew Miller - 12/3/2021

Does have higher speed on your internet make a difference in witnessing beacons? I know the first 18 are recognized and I'm wondering if higher speeds will help. Thanks!!


Nik - 12/3/2021

Nope, it's a random 18, not the first. As long as you're not on dial up, you should be fine.


Tee - 12/9/2021

Nik, I have a Sensecap M1 and is 100% synced but, "helium offline" is evident. I have the 44158 port opened at the internet incoming into the house . Does the wireless router need to be checked as well for proper open ports and in this case 44158?


Nik - 12/9/2021

Tee, check this post & vid I did with Neil on sorting out your hotspot. Rock 'n roll!


Bob Bremner - 12/17/2021

I have a BobCat miner that is connected by Ethernet to my Comcast internet with 100+Mbps, but it is still showing that it is relayed. I had Comcast enable the 44158 ports in both directions but that did not help the situation. What else can I try?


Nik - 12/17/2021

Hi Bob, follow the Getting Off Relay Workflow over here.


Fookingood - 12/27/2021

How many hotspots should I put into a wallet? For example, I have 10 hotspots and I'm worried about putting them inside the same wallet. Can you tell me the relation of having them in the same wallet and how it affects earnings? Thanks for the info, keep up the great content.


Nik - 12/27/2021

You can have up to 300 the last time I checked. The issues of having all of 'em in the same wallet is that it's all public info, so easier to link your earnings together. Other than the security side of having public visibility into your fleet earnings, it doesn't affect earnings at all to have multiple hotspots in the same wallet.


Sonny B - 12/27/2021

Last Sync over 2 weeks ago. Explorer/Blockchain still shows as relayed but Hotspotty showing that signal isn't relayed. Wondering what I need to do to fix on blockchain and show as synced because it says it was last synced 2 weeks ago. I have already forwarded port and checked with port checker and it shows successful port. Any help would be massively appreciated.


Nik - 12/27/2021

Hi Sonny, use HeliumStatus.io for troubleshooting, and check out our Hotspot Deliverance videos.


Sonny Bowser - 12/28/2021

Hey Nik, Thanks for quick reply...looks like all is good to go on HeliumStatus.io. Appreciate you sending my way. Going to take a look at the Vids as well. If Explorer says relayed and not synced but according to HeliumStatus.io all seems to be good to go, do I need to do anything else or this is just a common issue with blockchain updates on Explorer site? Thank you.


Nik - 12/28/2021

Trust HeliumStatus.io for realtime diagnosing. Explorer can be days behind.


Teodor - 1/2/2022

Hey Nik :) So in one of the firsts sentences you said that is waste of time to put hotspot near other if you don’t have better coverage. So I’m asking Is it a good idea to put hotspot near my neighbors hotspot ~50m away (his hotspot is placed bad inside the house ) , when i want to put my hotspot outside and upgrade the antenna


Nik - 1/2/2022

Good question. If you know they have a poor placement and you'll have an excellent placement, I'd certainly try it.


Glenn - 1/30/2022

I have had my miner for 5 days and I’m the only one within a mile radius (based on the hex map) my question is about the port opening port…. I have been trying to open the port on 2 different routers with no success, so I’m am still being relayed. One router is a att u-verse and the other is a net gear model MR1100. The att videos that I have watched on YouTube is not the same as the one I have so the interface is different so I can’t get it to work. For the other router there is no videos to use for reference. At this point I’m kinda aggravated. Any help would be greatly appreciated.


Nik - 1/30/2022

Hi Glenn, see if this workflow helps you out.


Sen - 2/5/2022

Hey Nik, I'm planning to order hellium miner, but there is no other miner in our area and there aren't many smart devices either. Can I still mine them or will it work if I buy 3 or 4 miner and install them in a strategic place.?


Nik - 2/5/2022

Hi Sen, if you're the only one around you'll mine very little. 3-4 is a bare minimum, I'd be looking for at least 6, although if the 4 all have clear line of sight to each other that'll work well enough.


Urs Wirthmueller - 2/10/2022

Hello Nik - thank you for lightening up the somewhat obscure world of helium mining! I have two miners, one reasonably working well in my home in the city. The other one has been installed and added to the blockchain almost three weeks ago. It’s located in the holiday house in the mountains wir no other miners within a radius of about 15 miles. This miner keeps toggling between “synching” and “needs attention - offline”. The miner is connected via a LAN cable and can always been pinged from afar. My question is if this behavior is the consequence of being a lonely miner or if it’s a problem with the unit itself? Regards from Switzerland Urs


Nik - 2/10/2022

Hi Urs, hmm if it's been going for 3 weeks and is still syncing, I'd check a few things. -Activity on the Explorer app. Is there anything there other than Constructing Challenges? Should be at least Beaconing Challenges -If there's no line of sight to other Hotspots and you don't have plans of installing an IoT sensor network, it may be best to move it (if your goal is to earn HNT) -Have you made sure the correct ports are open? 44158 is the usual culprit there. -Have you power cycled it? Usually that's a reasonable thing to do after 48+ hours of "needs attention - offline"


Joshua Froberg - 3/9/2022

Hey there, Nik. I have 12 sensecap m1 miners, 3 bobcats, 1 Rak wireless, and 2 nebras. Initially, while building my house, I had 1 on the first floor of a large apt complex with 3 other miners in my hex. I had a stock setup and somehow still out performed the others that were higher and had better setups. (Only earned 5 hnt per month but I have a 1000+mbps gaming wifi router. Any idea as to why this happened? Also I have depended on trading daily for 5 years now so I’m well versed in that area. My new house could barely allow texts and phone calls to function both ways until I set up wifi but HOA had to ruin the excitement of killer earnings by making me remove the 5.8 fib antenna from the roof. I have every antenna under the sun but was thinking of just using an enclosure for a hidden spot at the highest point. I would have to sacrifice using my Ethernet cable but would it be a better choice with 2-300 mbps both ways just to get it to a clear line of site? I live in Texas so I am blessed with flat terrain and I am a few hex from the edge of the massive grouping of hotspots (all 1-2 story houses until It reaches hotspots in Dallas) same as the second one that I put up at a friends house but that one actually kept up with the one that was wired, had outdoor fiberglass 5.8, and higher positioning. The other one is connected via wifi, inside and just supported in the corner of a room upstairs just by the thickness of the high quality cable near a window. The one I had to move is lower on the backside of the roof but connected with a 14ft 25$ cable. Any suggestions for the others. The 2 make an average of 12-18 bucks a day combined. My family owns commercial buildings all over mckinney and are some of the tallest buildings within a 30 mile radias. I have more enclosures and was wondering if rooftop placement connected to wifi wirelessly to router right below or having them wired on the 5th story attached to the inside of the floor to ceiling windows with 5.8-8 Dbi antennas. Maybe even 10-12 dbi? Those hexes are empty too and some of the buildings are 400 meters+ meaning I could try different miners and antennas. Last question. Is there ahotspot or wireless Services I could use? If I have two modems in my house can I utilize that as well? Sorry for the unnecessary amount of questions that I probably could have researched a bit more. I was just looking for a experience over “In theory” answer if possible.


Nik - 3/9/2022

Hi Josh, whew, that's a lot of questions. You can def go through the blogs and answer 'em. Consider joining the Gristle Crüe to connect with a savvy group, or a custom consult if you want to save time.


Paul - 3/23/2022

Hi, my bobcat 300 is arriving tomorrow and looking forward to getting going. My question is around spoofing. I am in a very low density area but there are two hotspots in my hex, however the adjacent hex to me has none and is literally about 30 meters away in grassland so unlikely to have any more arrive anytime soon. My question is when setting up is it ok for me to set location in this adjacent hex with it being so near or do I risk penalties of some sort. Thx in advance


Nik - 3/23/2022

Hi Paul, typically it's OK to assert within 150m for privacy reasons.


Danny - 4/8/2022

Hello Dear Nik & the rest of your followers. I activated my bobcat miner on 23rd of March 2022. Sadly I have very poor translation scales and I have changed my antenna to 8,0 dBi, no changes at all. My hotspot is : Stale Wooden Porcupine, Helsinki-Finland I had to close my restaurant because of COVID-19 situation. I need a friendly advice from you to guide me please. I only know the basic use of computer ?? I believe that I have a problem with DATA, because it doesn’t show it. I appreciate any help. Thank you anyways. Best regards from Finland! ????


Nik - 4/8/2022

Hi Danny, for the next few weeks, until Light Hotspots are activated, you can expect wildly variant earnings for Hotspots and in general LOW earnings.


Pat - 6/5/2022

Hi Nik, I need to place my antenna 213ft away!! I have options though as I can run power to the miner at the location, my question is, what is the maximum length of cat6e or better I can use. I don’t want to use PoE as I run radio equipment that suffers with that technology.


Nik - 6/5/2022

100 meters for cat 6.


Sam - 8/15/2022

What happen if I followed to someone on helium minor app with purple flag on app sensecap us 915


kshaul - 10/21/2022

I was wondering if I made a mistake and my Bobcat miner 300 is registered with the bobber app and helium hotspot app at the same time? I just got my miner know very little about. All I know the most is that it was very convenient. I might have moved to fast and thought the bobber app wasn’t going to work and put my 300 miner online so I tried going back and fourth to the two apps from my App Store. I have made a few cents, but am worried now that both the bobber app and helium hotspot app both is registered to the same miner with fixed placement when I think only one should be. This isn’t about wallet registration I’m talkin over all 10 replacement registration according to the rules if moved. Please help I’m confused ah thanks


John - 7/25/2023

Hi Nik and warm greetings to you. As we are aware, helium moved to IOT and now there is this HIP 83. The idea is to reward fast miners. Have you done any tests on what kind of miners can make good rewards? For example I have a bobcat 300 and it use to do 350 iot but now it only does 150 iot. My Internet is 1GB download and 100mb upload. When I go to bobcat miner menu via ip and click on speed test, this is what it shows. { "DownloadSpeed": "92.29 Mbit/s", "UploadSpeed": "50.03 Mbit/s", "Latency": "9.749117ms" } When I go to speed test and I test my speed, this is what it shows. DOWNLOAD Mbps 931.95 UPLOAD Mbps 105.41 Idle latency 11, download latency 21 upload latency 53. Each test I do it is around these numbers. Antenna is 6 DBI with a cavity filter. I have an amplifier from acasom which is RX12 TX 3. Can this amplifier hurt the witnessing? Without it, when I beacon I get 14 people witnessing me all the time. I have this Helium geek app and I can see the grey icon which is the unselected hotspots. This icon never goes above 20 minutes because the hotspot is seeing many beacons but I don't get rewarded that often. Maybe every 2 hours or so, which is in the middle icon. When I am in this helium geek app and click top right icon which shows the list or what my miner so and was awared for, I can see the arrival order. I am always late in time gap against other beacons. Biggest question is how do we improve this? Speed of internet is there. Antenna is up at least 20 m high. LMR 400 cable in 10 m length. Any advice? Thanks


Nik - 7/25/2023

Hi John Doe, HIP 83 is first 14 to witness if there are more than 14. If you're the 15th fastest miner, you'll never earn. It sounds like you're in a crowded area that has Hotspots with faster connections around you. Best option for earning (certainly not the easiest) will be to move your Hotspot to a place where you have less competition and can provide unique coverage. Does that make sense?


Raymond Marazzo - 11/20/2025

Is all this info still good?


Nik - 11/20/2025

Nope, it's well out of date. Sorry Ray!


What's The Best Antenna For Your Helium Hotspot?

· 169 min read
Nik
Site Owner

Here is a step by step method for understanding how to choose the best antenna for your hotspot placement. Each placement demands a well matched antenna in order to provide value to the Helium Network and consequently earn the most HNT possible for that location. Do NOT, by the way, try to get the giant antenna in the picture below. While it looks huge and cool and rad, it is the wrong antenna to use for these deployments. I spent a fair amount of blood and treasure to learn that lesson. You don't need to.

First: Hotspot placement optimization is FAR more important than what antenna you use, more on that here.

High Mountain antenna placement for Helium in the backcountry of San Diego

Second, for those of you who just want AN ANSWER: Simple: Pick from the McGill selection. They'll all work well.

Put it outdoors at least 10' above all the buildings around you. Run 40' or less of LMR400 cable to it from your hotspot. If you have to go more than 40', use LMR600 if you're feeling extravagant. That'll probably get you 80% of the results you could get with far more effort and expertise.

Wait, you want to actually learn and match your antenna to your situation so you get the maximum rewards possible?

Ok, let's start with broad strokes: The antenna you choose for your hotspot placement should match your topography, your elevation, and your lines of sight.

Let's start with topography. Topography refers to the buildings, earth, and water that surround, channel, and block your radio signals (propagation.) The topic of radio propagation involves a tremendously deep dive all the way down to the fundamentals of physics, but we'll keep it pretty simple.

BLUF (Bottom Line Up Front) - The flatter your topography AND the more trees/vegetation you have blocking your Line of Sight to other hotspots, the higher gain antenna you can use, up to 9 dbi.

Remember, topography isn't just hills and mountains, it includes buildings, trees, and other obstacles.

Ok, let's get dirty! In general, earth in the form of mountains or hills will block radio signals. Even though a hotspot may seem very close to you, if there's a hill between the two of you, you probably won't witness each other.

You may check out your location on the Helium Explorer Coverage map and think you're perfectly positioned in regards to nearby hotspots, like this:

Remember to check Google Earth!

See how that spot is tucked into a bunch of hills? Unless you put up an antenna that'll stick over the top of the hills, you're restricted to witnessing only other hotspots in your immediate area, and in this case, that area is small!

One of the best tools to use when assessing a new site is HeliumVision. Remember, location is FAR more important than antennas. If you'd like to learn more about HeliumVision (I use it in every one of my consults) I've built a Master Class on it, over here.

Ok, so that's earth. Earth = No Radio Waves Getting Through.

What about buildings? How much will buildings block or reduce the power of radio propagation?

According to a study done in 2012 on a wide swath of building materials and focusing on the GSM 900 MHz band, a reinforced concrete wall that is 20cm / ~8" thick will attenuate the signal by 27 dB. An interior plaster wall will reduce power by anywhere from .8 to 3 dB.

What does that mean? Disclaimer: RF geeks, I'ma get loose with terms here. Relax.

This reduction in power is called "attenuation." In general with radio communications, you don't want any attenuation. Attenuation can happen with earth, buildings, forests, and even window coatings. How much power will you lose? Let's run some numbers.

American based hotspots start off by pushing out 27 dBm. European and other areas start WAY lower, at 14. Add the gain (dBi) from your antenna and subtract the losses from any connections to figure out your Effective Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP).

That means a 6 dBi antenna will give you 33 dBm of EIRP with a US hotspot. 27dBm + 6dBi = 33dBm in the direction of antenna gain. Now you've got to calculate cable and connection loss.

As a rough rule of thumb, each connection (hotspot to antenna cable, antenna cable to antenna, or going through an enclosure wall using a connector) will drop your EIRP by .5 dB. Cable losses vary by cable, which is why most people use a "low loss" cable like LMR400. If you want to run your EIRP numbers, here's how.

Ok, ok, ok, why does it matter whether or not you know your EIRP?

Let's take a short detour into dBm and power. dBm is based on a logarithmic scale. For every increase of 3 dBm, there is twice as much power output. Every increase of 10 dBm has a tenfold increase in power. The difference between a 3 dBi antenna (what most hotspots ship with) and an aftermarket 9 dBi antenna is a factor of 4!

Of course, that 4x power comes at a cost; the beam is focused; more laser and less lightbulb. That means that unless you aim your antenna very carefully, you can blast all that power into places that have no hotspots.

Here is a great example demonstrating attenuation and topography. This hotspot is placed on the north side inside a building. It's up high with a higher gain antenna, and in general, inaccurately aimed over most of the nearby hotspots.

Most of the witnesses it's getting are further north. Some of the signals bounce off to the side, proving that "RF is weird."

To the south, the signals are blocked or attenuated by interior and exterior walls, but apparently there is a small window or opening where those weakened signals are escaping, then going pretty far over the water. Pretty neat, right? I mean, not for the hotspot owner, but it's a neat demonstration of the concept.

That image is also a great example of why you should never put a hotspot antenna inside; you are losing a ton of power before the radio waves ever get outside the building.

Water allows radio signals to travel much further than normal; look at any hotspot next to a body of water and you'll see it will connect with other hotspots at much further ranges across the water than it will across land.

Let's not get too into the weeds here. As I said at the beginning, the general rule for topography is this: The flatter your topography, the higher gain antenna you can use, up to 9 dBi for 95% of placements. Beyond 9 the pattern generally gets too precise to provide the Wide coverage (the W in WUPU) that we want.

Remember, topography includes not just hills, mountains, and water, but all the buildings, bridges, and other structures that might block your radio signal. Cities in general do not have a flat topography, even if they're built on flat land. All those spiky buildings sticking out will gobble up your radio signals.

That brings us to ELEVATION. If you want to bend your mind a little bit, think about this: The higher your elevation, the flatter the relative topography is, and the LOWER dbi antenna you can use. Wait, what?

Remember, a high dbi antenna focuses the signal of your antenna. In an omni antenna (we'll get to directional or sector antennas in a minute), that shape becomes a flatter and flatter plane. If that plane is super flat, it'll fly right over the tops of all those hotspots you want to hit. Let's go through 3 examples.

Now, those aren't how it *actually* works. The gain patterns are nowhere near as different, and a high gain antenna will STILL hit the ground within 1,000' of even a 100' building. Still, you can see why in *most* cases, you want a low or medium gain antenna up high.

You can also run that idea backwards; if you're in a really flat area where you don't have a lot of obstacles, a high gain antenna might be your best bet. Still, most people don't live in the desert, and the flattest state in America has a ton of trees on it. If that's your scenario, get a high gain (6-9 dBi) antenna up over the tops of those trees for maximum coverage.

That brings us in a roundabout way to Lines of Sight. Remember that $39 paper I quoted earlier regarding how much RF energy a given building material would absorb? The general takeaway for us Helium Hotspot owners is this: Our antennas won't blast through much more than 2 buildings.

That means if you're INSIDE the building, you've burned most of the energy of the antenna just getting outside the walls. If it hits just one more "thing", whether it's a building, a tree, or a billboard, that's probably the end of the line.

This "Lines of Sight" idea has an important implication in understanding how some of the top earning hotspot/antenna combos are doing so well. The hotspot Docile Bone Pony* (when this was written, one of the highest earners in the world) is on top of a 16 story building in a major city with a medium/high gain antenna (8 dbi from eBay on 60' of LMR400.) It has Lines of Sight to a lot of other hotspots, BUT those other hotspots don't have great lines of sight to other hotspots around 'em.

That means that DBP is seeing a lot of hotspots that AREN'T seeing a lot of hotspots. I'm going to anthropomorphize this a bit, but their only option is to communicate with DBP. So they do. And DBP earns like crazy. It's an example of the incredible earning potential that exists when providing asymmetric value to the network.

While we're on Lines of Sight, let's talk about the range of a standard hotspot. According to some excellent work done by the inimitable @para1 on Discord, most hotspots do most of their witnessing within a 10km range. Now, an in depth discussion of the implications and restrictions of this table is beyond the scope of this article, but your general takeaway should be "Optimize your antenna for hotpots within 10 km" aka most people don't need a high gain antenna.

@para1's table, posted in Discord

I'll double tap this range thing with an example of a hotspot I run, which has a 3 dBi HNTenna on top of a 20' pole on top of a ~30' building. It *routinely* gets witnesses over 200km away. While it seems that a high gain antenna will get you better range, it doesn't really matter. It's Line of Sight that is the secret here.

Finally, Lines of Sight can be blocked by forests. Depending on who you listen to, LoRa doesn't go through much more than 60 meters of dense forest. I'm sorry rural Florida, you've just got a tough row to hoe on that one. Dense forest in between you and other antennas is about the only time a higher gain (up to 9 dBi) makes sense, and even then it may not make a giant difference. Forests are RF sinks.

There is one more thing to think about with Lines of Sight. The 900 MHz frequency needs some runway, ideally 50'/15m to fan out enough to diffract around obstacles. Read that again and you'll have an advantage over everyone who doesn't get that concept.

The concept of Fresnel zones and diffraction in radio wave communication is one of the fundamental drivers of the "RF is weird" refrain you'll hear whenever you see a pattern that doesn't immediately make sense. Basically, the further out your radio waves go, the more they can spread out along their radiation pattern, the less likely that all of the waves get blocked, and the more likely that at least some of 'em will get to another hotspot.

At some distance they're so spread out that you're basically not going to make a connection, so the effective "window" shrinks back down. Like this:

Check out RadioMobile to get deep on Fresnel zones.

If you set up your antenna so that you've got lots of clear space around it before it hits obstacles, those radios waves have enough spread to start "bending around" those obstacles. This is yet another reason not to set up inside.

Here's another "I definitely didn't go to art school" drawing to demonstrate the idea of runway and diffraction.

If you give those radio waves some room to spread out, they can get around obstacles. Let 'em breathe!

Ok, we've got one more thing to consider before wrapping up. Many of you will have been scouring ham radio sites to figure out how to improve the range of your antenna. Keep in mind that the goal of many ham radio operators is incredible range, but that can come at the cost of broad coverage. Doing exactly what a ham operator does may give you the results they want, not what you want.

YOU want to hit as many high scale hotspots as possible. You'll usually do that by using a low gain antenna up high, with clear lines of sight all around.

Remember, you'll earn the most by delivering the most valuable & provable coverage to the network. The concept is simple. The execution can be complicated. If you want help with getting the maximum value out of your placements or strategy, I'm available for hire.

For those of you who skipped all that and just want to know what antenna to get, here are 4 generally good options for the 3 most common scenarios.

  1. In a building in the city? Get an outdoor HNTenna or a McGill in the 3-6 dBi range, put it outside up as high as you can.
  2. In a building where you just can't get up high? Use the stock antenna that came with your hotspot. Also, find a better placement location. You did read about that, right?
  3. In a suburban house? Get either the HNTenna or a McGill in the 3-6 dBi range and put it on a pole outside and up high.
  4. On a mountain where you can't possible transmit behind you (because the mountain will block your signal) and you have an enormous view of civilization and your nearest hotspot is more than 5 miles away? Try a 8-9 dBi patch antenna, like these.

I'll round this out with what to definitely NOT do. Don't just look at the gain of an antenna and think higher is better. Don't bother with Yagi antennas. Finally, don't worry too much about your antenna. In the big picture of earnings, it is FAR more important to have good placement and elevation. The fanciest, coolest, most high tech antenna in the world won't get you much if you're in a crappy location down low.

Best of luck with your placement and earnings, I'm stoked to be a part of this amazing community! If you’re looking for work in the Helium ecosystem, check out  Helium Jobs. You can post and find jobs there, help support the ecosystem by making it easier to connect professionally, and let the world know that YOU exist and want to help contribute within the Network. Rock on!

Resources and Further Reading

A deeper dive into understanding how RF works.

Calculating RF Power Values (explains why a 6 dBi antenna doubles your power)

900 MHz: The Wireless Workhorse. (Probably why Helium chose LoRa)


List of Helium Hotspots & Their Antennas

Before you read this and assume that you must have a high gain antenna in order to get great earnings, please keep in mind that these hotspot owners are generally tinkerers and often have some expertise in RF theory. The results are a little skewed because of that.

UPDATE: HeliumVision now reports this for all hotspot owners who have entered this on Helium app. I've closed submissions on this page.

Docile Bone Pony - Elevation: 16 stories, Area: Greater Boston, MA. Antenna: 8 dbi omni from eBay, Cables: 60' of LMR400

Sweet Sage Pike - Elevation: 43' above ground, Area: San Diego, CA. Antenna: Nearson 9, Cables: 5' of LMR400

Chilly Blood Mongoose - Elevation: 41' above ground, Area: San Diego, CA. Antenna: Laird FG9026 (6 dbi), Cables: 5' of LMR400

Lucky Menthol Wasp - Elevation: 60' above ground, Area: San Diego, CA. Antenna: RAK 5.8 dbi, Cables: 11' LMR400

Nice Lipstick Chimpanzee - Elevation: 25' above ground, Area: San Francisco, CA. Antenna: RFMAX | ROSA-900-SNF, Cables: 5' LMR240

Interesting Pearl Starling - Elevation: 35' above ground, Area: North Shore, MA. Antenna: RAK 5.8 dbi, Cables: RAK pigtail interface converter bundled with antenna

Jumpy Iron Ferret - Elevation: 34th story, Area: Chicago, IL. Antenna: Stock, Cables: N/A. Indoor setup.

Kind Infrared Lynx - Elevation: 15' above ground, Area: Denver, CO. Antenna: Taoglas 8 dbi. Cables: 15' LMR400

Lucky Dijon Scallop - Elevation: 33' above ground. Area: Englewood, CO. Antenna: RAK 8 dbi. Cables: RAK pigtail cable

Sticky Pear Dolphin - Elevation: 311' above ground (mountain). Area: San Francisco, CA. Antenna: Oukeione 3 dbi. Cables: Bingfu

Petite Menthol Leopard - Elevation 25'. Area: Napa, CA. Antenna: 5.8 RAK. Cables: Bingfu

Best Tangerine Racoon - Elevation: Second Floor Window. Area: Bayonne, NJ Antenna: Stock 3 dBi Cables: 1m pigtail

Warm Juniper Panther - Elevation: 4th floor rooftop. Area: Bayonne, NJ Antenna: Nearson 9 dBi. Cables: 4' LMR400

Scrawny Eggplant Panda - Elevation: 35' Area: Lakewood, OH Antenna 4 dBi Multipole Cables: N/A

Ancient Cider Grasshopper - Elevation: 40' Area: Kansas City, MO Antenna: RAK Wireless 8 dBi Cables: 30' LMR400

Oblong Slate Platypus - Elevation: 400' Area: New York City, NY Antenna: Proxicast 10 dBi Cables: LMR400

Ripe Banana Goblin - Elevation: 2nd floor window Area: Vancouver, BC Antenna: Stock 3 dBi Cables: N/A

Trendy Rainbow Lizard - Elevation: 1st floor window Area: Vancouver, BC Antenna: Stock 3 dBi Cables: N/A

Striped Pewter Osprey - Elevation: 20' Area: Los Angeles, CA Antenna: RAk 5.8 Cables: LMR400


Archived Comments

Helium, Explained (ELI5) | One man's search - 4/4/2021

[…] HUNDRED DOLLARS to spend! I want to make the MOST mon­ey. Ok, ok, relax. Read this arti­cle on how to match your Heli­um hotspot place­ment with your anten­na. Buy any of the anten­nas that Par­ley­Labs sells. That’ll prob­a­bly make you feel bet­ter […]


A Rough Guide To Helium Hotspot Placement | One man's search - 4/4/2021

[…] can read this in-depth arti­cle on how to match your place­ment with an anten­na, but you’ve basi­cal­ly got 3 […]


How to take your Helium Hotspot off grid | One man's search - 4/4/2021

[…] from my expe­ri­ence and stick with a more appro­pri­ate anten­na. You’ll prob­a­bly nev­er thank me because you won’t know the ass-pain you’re miss­ing, […]


John - 4/6/2021

Hello there, I would like to ask you what antenna would best suit my future Hotspot. I'm in Toronto Ontario, 12th floor in a building of 20 floors. What is the best antenna for a balcony with nothing in front of me facing an open area. With only with very low houses.


Nik - 4/6/2021

Hi John, you might want a directional, though an omni would probably be cheaper & easier and less fidgety while being (in most cases) just as good. Really depends on local topography and density. This article should have pointed you in the right direction. If you need more help, I'm available for hire.


The Top 5 Mistakes to avoid with your Helium Hotspot | One man's search - 4/8/2021

[…] go through some vari­a­tion of “What’s the best anten­na, mon­ey is no object?” Please read the post on anten­nas to learn why that’s not a high-earn­ing […]


Leon - 4/10/2021

Hello Nik, Wonderful article. I'm in Europe so does that mean I need to have a higher db antenna to get similar results? (European and other areas start lower, at 14. Add the gain (dBi) from your antenna and subtract the losses from any connections to figure out your Effective Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP). And do you have any recommended antennas like the 1 you're using but for European frequency?


Nik - 4/10/2021

Hi Leon, thanks. Nope, you're restricted by Euro law to lower power settings. Don't sweat it too much, just look for an antenna appropriate for your setup. Usually a 5-6 dBi omni is your best bet.


John Watkins - 4/11/2021

Your article was very helpful as it wasn't too technical for the average hotspot owner. I have been experimenting with my setup a little. One thing your article didn't address is the effect the antigaming measures have on invalidating witnesses because your signal is too strong. Inside stock antenna, I can witness 3 hotspots and my closest is invalid at 360m. I put a 5.8dbi on my roof so it is now 35' above ground. Now, all of the hotspots I witnessed before are invalid most of the time with high SNR. I picked up some additional so it is pretty much a wash as far as rewards. It has been suggested that I put up a 3dbi to lessen invalids closer to me. An alternative would be put up an 8dbi to pick up more further hotspots and write off the closer ones. I have a bunch more on order and want to maximize things like everyone else. The 1 I have now is Blurry Viridian Goldfish. I have a 3dbi and 8dbi on order. Thanks!


Nik - 4/11/2021

Right on. Sounds like the stock up high will be a better option, especially if you have a ton of hotspots close enough to hit with that "general" 3dBi pattern (say, 8-10 km). You're spot on re. anti-gaming which is in general why I wrote the article; too many people think "higher dBi = better antenna" and it's just not the case, for multiple reasons. One thing to think about is that your HS is processing zero data transfer. Anecdotally that results in lower earnings. Pro tip: Add a Helium sensor nearby to track something you might be interested in, which will start pushing data through and make your HS nominally more useful. Remember, an HS is most valuable when it's providing coverage that meets all 4 of the following: 1) Wide 2) Useful 3) Provable 4) Unique. #wupu


Jimmy - 4/22/2021

any recommendation for antenna around Manhattan or NYC in general? if i use the antenna that came with it, would it still be profitable or is it something i should spend extra bucks for antenna? thanks


Nik - 4/22/2021

Hi Jimmy, The short version is that Manhattan isn't a great place to put in a hotspot, it's already well covered. The only reason would be if you have access to the top (roof top) of one of the highest buildings and can execute a Canyons & Crags strategy. If that's the case, you'd still want to stay under 8 dBi.


Action Jackson - 4/25/2021

Hi Nik Thanks for explaining in detail. I'm new into all this and waiting on my shipment of 2 nebra, I saw all these people posting videos of supercharging, and thought of digging up some more info. Im in Richmond BC Can. Right next to the river, on the other side is Van. And van side is on a high stretching out in higher elevation. Which dbi will u recommend? 5.8? 6?7?8


Nik - 4/25/2021

Hi Action Jackson :). The 5.8 is fine for most installments. Supercharging sounds like fizzy marketing, there's not really anything you can do on the hardware side that'll make a difference.


Stephen Refsnes - 4/25/2021

Love this Article, its amazing, THANK YOU! I was just wondering how long antenna-cable can i have from my hotspot to my 5.8 dBi antenna, without losing its signal/power or what i should call it. Thanks!


Nik - 4/25/2021

Thank you Stephen. Up to 60' of LMR400 has been tested and works well, scroll down to the bottom of the article for example setups.


Stephen Refsnes - 4/26/2021

Can i ask one more question? I found a 33 foot RP-SMA cable here in Norway, Its a RG316, low signal loss, 50 ?. Will this cable not work as good as your LMR400, or is it almost the same cable? :) Thanks!


Nik - 4/26/2021

Sure. LMR400 will be a better choice, with attenuation (loss) of 3.9 dB/100 feet. RG316 isn't the right cable to use, loss will be 27.2 dB/100'. These guys say they ship Helium specific cables throughout Europe.


RynoShark - 4/26/2021

If you are on the shore of a big lake with few hotspots on your side, but many numbers 5-10 miles away in line of site, would a high-gain antenna make more sense? It seems like a high gain, 50-100' off the surface of the water would make sense. Then perhaps find a location nearby (900 ft+ away) to install a separate short gain miner to capitalize on providing better local network service in the long term.


Nik - 4/26/2021

Maybe, though it wouldn't have to be super high gain. 5.8 dBi should be fine. LoRa goes a long way. :)


Dylan - 4/27/2021

Hi, I live in the Netherlands and is very flat over here, there are a lot of building tho, Can I use a 8dbi omni antenna if i place at the window? I want to use this antenna: https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/B017RMFY2W/ref=ox\_sc\_act\_title\_1?smid=A23O0K3F9INFH2&psc=1 (translate it from German to English) Do you think it is any good? I want to place one at a window on the 3th floor and one somewhere else on the 5th floor Thank You for your answer, Dylan


Nik - 4/27/2021

Dylan, you *can* use that antenna, but if you put your efforts into getting the antenna outside you'll be able to provide much better coverage than focusing on what antenna to buy.


Ri?ards Eglitis - 4/27/2021

Just wanted to say big thanks for the investment in this artickle!


Linus - 4/29/2021

Hi, I ordered a Bobcat miner 300. Do you have any recommendations for antennas for this miner? LG


Nik - 4/29/2021

Will totally depend on your deployment. *Most* of the time you'll be fine with a stock antenna, and it's usually pretty easy/cheap to swap out antennas.


Mano - 4/29/2021

Hi Nik, Thank you for sharing your expertise. I live in rural area with the ocean just a 30 second drive from me. I am on a hill which allows me to get a panoramic oceanview. There are 3 hotspots 3.7 miles from me. I don't think there is any major obstruction between my house and the hotspots. Should I start with the stock antenna or get the 5.8 dbi? Also, what is a good 5.8 dbi cable for Bobcat. I am waiting for my miners to arrive but will definitely hire you for more advise. Cheers


Nik - 4/29/2021

Hi Mano, With a panoramic view and HS within 5 miles the stock antenna will be fine to start with. If you want to fiddle with it you can pickup a 5.8 dBi or lower, but there’s no huge need. Biggest step will be making sure your HS is outside.


Adrian - 4/30/2021

Hello living in a house in toronto ontario, what antenna should i get? only one floor + basement and my setup would be basement.


Paul - 5/1/2021

Great article, thanks! I’m located on a hill (80m), about 4km from the nearby town. All the hotspots I’m likely to connect to will be in the town, roughly within a 60 degree arc, between 4-10km distant. Is my best bet an 8dbi omnidirectional antenna, or is there something directional that might work better? Thanks.


Nik - 5/1/2021

Hi Paul, your best bet with that distance and elevation is a lower gain antenna. At 8 dBi you're more likely to break the RSSI/SNR boundaries Helium has set, resulting in invalid witnesses and lower earnings. You could do a directional antenna, but the omnis will work well and are usually easier to install.


Nik - 5/1/2021

Adrian, start by reading this article.


john dunne - 5/2/2021

Great article, Thank you for your help! Can you lower your high dbi antenna to perform like a lower abi antenna? For example if you bought a 10dbi antenna but wanted a 8dbi signal instead will using the "cable loss formula" help bring your antenna down to perform like a normal 8dbi antenna?? So a 12dbi antenna with 32 ft of rg58 will perform like 7ish dbi antenna? Thank you!! John


Nik - 5/2/2021

It'll have the same radiation pattern, just won't go as far. I'm not sure why you'd want that.


Post - 5/2/2021

This is a great resource. Thanks for sharing. I recently got an installed an antenna based on this information. Aside from (hopefully) seeing higher rewards, how can I know that my setup is better than the stock setup? Is there somewhere on Explorer I should be looking?


AM - 5/3/2021

Hey Nik, thanks, this is a very useful article. I am based in London UK and have access to the roof of our apartment block, which is 20m high. I intend to position the hotspot on the chimney with a powered cable running to the router. Mainly to get additional height I was going to get a 5.8dBi antenna, does this sound about right, or should I stick with 3dBi antenna? Thanks in advance


misk - 5/3/2021

I will use three devices 1 kilo apart, but the devices will be inside homes. Do you think things will be good with the attached antenna 4dbi bobcat


Nik - 5/3/2021

Not really, that's one of the things with antennas; you don't *really* know if it worked until you watch the earnings for a while. Usually 7 day is the minimum, although if you have radical differences that last at least 4 days that's a pretty strong indication as well. Great work on getting an antenna up!


Nik - 5/3/2021

Depends on how much higher you'll be than HS around you. If you're way higher and want to really reach out, the 5.8 might be a better bet, but I'd probably go with stock just to get that "globe" radiation pattern in the city.


Nik - 5/3/2021

Probably. Depends on what the actual Line of Sight is. Almost always better to get 'em outside.


Aaron Gooch - 5/3/2021

Hi NIK, which antenna would you recommend for a hotspot located in a suburban environment with many many tall pine trees surrounding all of the houses. I'm only going to be able to elevate the antenna to about 20-30 feet which is well below the tree line. The only thing I can find in stock at a decent price is an 8 dbi Rak antenna. Will this help penetrate the forest around me? I also ordered a 5.8 direct from Rak but no telling when it will arrive. Thanks!


Nik - 5/3/2021

The RAK 8 should be OK. Antennas are relatively cheap compared to earnings, so it's usually OK to buy one and if it doesn't work you can switch it out. Keep me posted on how it goes, I'm curious about real-world forest penetration at these freqs.


Aaron Gooch - 5/3/2021

Sounds good. I'll be back in a couple of weeks with an update.


AG - 5/3/2021

Nik, will you look at Pet Brunette Elephant and tell me how you think this hotspot owner is doing this? This hot spot is about 1.5 miles due south of my soon to be location. Thanks


lucy osinski - 5/3/2021

Amazing article and information wow thank you! I live in Santa Monica pretty high up far from hills in a suburban area. Can't decide between a 5.8 or 8dbi , any advice?


Nik - 5/3/2021

Looks like a directional antenna to me. I'd go with an omni if I were you, unless you're backed up to a hill with no over the back.


Nik - 5/3/2021

Hi Lucy, go with the 5.8. :). That's usually the best answer, though it can depend on how far away you are and what is in the way and what's behind you.


Todd Wise - 5/4/2021

Nik, this is the best info I've found! Thank you! I purchased a BOBCAT MINER 300, my terrain is relatively flat with the nearest hotspots about 7km away. Not sure if I should get a 5.8 or 8dbi omni?


Nik - 5/4/2021

Hi Todd, glad you're finding it useful. Either one should work pretty well, I'd go with the 5.8 just to avoid any potential clipping from being outside the RSSI/SNR parameters Helium has. Technically I'd probably buy both and test 'em, but that's just me. :)


Oreoninja - 5/5/2021

Hey Nik. Appreciate the useful info. I've added 2 of my hotspots to the list form to help the community. If the House WiFi isn't strong enough to get to the hotspot, do you think it'd be better to get a repeater/extender and hope to tacklet it or get a portable wifi usb hotspot? A portable wifi hotspot would cost ~$60 to buy and ~$50/month to run (Canadian data providers are expensive)


Nik - 5/5/2021

Interesting, I'm not sure about the extender. In general I avoid WiFi connections to hotspots at (most) costs. If you try it please let me know how it goes!


Doug - 5/6/2021

Nik, I've got a white 5.8 on the way. Will it be ok for me to paint blacK? Everything I've read about painting antennas says to you paints with no metalic properties so I'd definitely do that. I live in a neighborhood with a very strict HOA so I'm trying to keep it as discreet as possible. Thanks


Nik - 5/6/2021

Doug, shouldn't be a problem as long as the paint doesn't have any metal in it.


dominick dercole - 5/8/2021

anyone using an 18dbi?


Nik - 5/8/2021

Sure hope not, that'd be illegal in the US plus way too high for any profitable use.


Galen Schlich - 5/12/2021

Thank you for all of this great info.


Calvin - 5/12/2021

Hi Nik, I am going to place my hotspots on the top of a hill (~50m elevation) and top of a high-rise apartment (~120m elevation), should I stick with the stock 4.2 dbi antenna (Bobcat miner) or upgrade to the 5.8 dbi RAK? Given the high elevation I am worried that the latter might cause me to miss too many low elevation hotspots. What do you think? I live in China so the frequency there is 470mHz. Thanks


Douglas Johnson - 5/13/2021

I live in a community with a strict HOA so I am trying to be discreet. I will be mounting my 5.8dbi antenna on the side of the house up close to the roof line. It will be positioned parallel to the house about 2 inches away from the vinyl siding. Is two inches enough space or does it need to be positioned further away from the house? Remember, trying to be discreet.


Nik - 5/13/2021

Hi Calvin, you'll probably be fine with the stock. Depends on how far away other miners are, but usually the stock antenna works very well.


Nik - 5/13/2021

The further away the better, but sounds like you're constrained by HOA. Look into OTARD, you may have more leeway than you think.


Chance Carpenter - 5/13/2021

Hi Nik, I recently set up Jumpy Fern Copperhead in Scottsdale AZ. I placed the RAK in a custom-modified outdoor enclosure and purchased a 5.8dbi fiberglass antenna and 25' LMR-400 cable with .96dbi loss. It's mounted on a pine tree next to our house. The antenna is mounted to a 1" schedule 40 PVC that's about 15' long and that is mounted to the trunk of the tree. The antenna peaks above the top of the canopy about 2' and is pretty much vertical and at around 30' off the ground. I'm currently seeing 10 witnesses and earnings are decent at around 35 HNT per week so far. I'm not unhappy with that but what I'm noticing is that I'm hitting some witnesses that are really quite far away (one is nearly 50km) and missing a TON that are quite nearby. This makes me presume that this configuration is 'shooting over the top' of those nearby hotspots. That said, in looking at Helium.Vision I am noticing that a bunch of those nearby hotspots are online but not really connected to other hotspots near them and aren't earning much HNT at all. This makes me assume they just set them up in a windowsill and are hoping for the best (which is what I basically had to do for the first week while I waited for my antenna and cable arrived). So I've purchased a 40CM long fiberglass antenna that is 3.0dbi and am considering swapping out the 5.8 for the 3.0 and seeing if that allows me to connect to more of those that are closer. I also have 10 more Bobcat hotspots on order and plan to position them near-ish to my home and want to make sure I can connect to them. Does this make sense? I'd greatly appreciate any input. Thanks for publishing ALL this GREAT content and breaking it down for us Nubes. Your writing is succinct and clear and I really appreciate all the links to great resources and the research you've provided here for FREE. I'd also love to learn more about how to leverage and USE the network - not just provide it and earn from it. Any tips on that would also be appreciated.


Nik - 5/13/2021

Chance, sounds like a good plan to drop the gain down and "globe out" the pattern. I'd also think about buying/building a mapper and driving around to map near those other HS, just to see if they're actually working. You can buy an Adeunis (pricey and fragile, it's what I have but not recommended), a GLAMOS Walker (the current hotness, probably a little tweaky but a far better option than the Adeunis) or build your own (easily the coolest option.) Let me know what you find!


Calvin - 5/13/2021

Thanks a lot Nik. Also if I were to mount the antenna outside the window on my apartment (48th floor, top floor is 56) , would I then be just capturing only the hotspots on the direction that the windows is facing (as opposed to 360 degree with placing the antenna up high on the top of the apartment)? Thanks again, Calvin


Nik - 5/14/2021

Hi Calvin, when you say "on top" of the apartment, does that mean on top of the building or just up high in your apartment? On top of the building will be the preferred placement, but if you can't get that then getting it outside the window should be the next best option for you.


Brandon - 5/14/2021

Have you seen any fiberglass antennas attached to a chimney? If so, any suggestions on attaching? That would be the highest spot on my house.


Nik - 5/14/2021

Yep, plenty of 'em. Look for a "chimney Y mount" and use a pole to get it higher. Rock on!


Martin - 5/19/2021

Hi there, I’m thinking about installing my outdoor nebra miner With a 5.8 DBI Antenna. I’m wondering, if you have any insight. This would be in a densely populated area in Santa Clara County. It will be installed on the second floor of my house. Do you think I could make more if I was to install a 3DBI antenna instead? Any advice would be greatly appreciated, cheers


Nik - 5/19/2021

Probably not a huge difference between the two, although that can depend on the install a bit. I'd test 'em both just to be sure, but I bet you won't see a huge difference.


Kenny - 5/22/2021

Hi Nik, This is a great article, helped a lot to get a clue how this works. Im in the UK, and waiting for my bobcat miner 300. The area where I live is suburban with common 2 floor houses, but there are not too many HS around me. I beleive I would go with the 5.8dbi antenna, but couldn't find any of those you mentioned and in stock (5.8dbi, eu868, for outdoor use). I would appreciate if you could send me a link about a great example. Many thanks


Kenny - 5/22/2021

I mean all I found is for pre order, and none of them are the same as what you mentioned and nonone has them in stock.


Nik - 5/22/2021

Right on Kenny, glad it helped. This is my go-to antenna for 95% of all deployments going forward, though I'm not sure what shipping will be from the US to UK.


Kenny - 5/23/2021

Thank you for your answer. Do you think it is also a good choice? https://m.aliexpress.com/item/1005001830636995.html?spm=a2g0n.detail.0.0.1efbK5dkK5dktY&gps-id=storeRecommendH5&scm=1007.18500.187585.0&scm\_id=1007.18500.187585.0&scm-url=1007.18500.187585.0&pvid=15c0f474-a313-4bf1-bbee-f82aca972736&\_t=gps-id%3AstoreRecommendH5%2Cscm-url%3A1007.18500.187585.0%2Cpvid%3A15c0f474-a313-4bf1-bbee-f82aca972736%2Ctpp\_buckets%3A668%230%23131923%2322\_668%230%23131923%2322\_668%23888%233325%2310\_668%23888%233325%2310\_668%232846%238113%231998\_668%235811%2327182%2352\_668%232717%237567%23937\_\_668%233374%2315176%23832\_668%232846%238113%231998\_668%235811%2327182%2352\_668%232717%237567%23937\_668%233164%239976%23485\_668%233374%2315176%23832&browser\_id=3f4615d320884e65a7708e05c0e44033&aff\_trace\_key=eb5d1953c7c44735b229191673177008-1621767818556-04622-UneMJZVf&aff\_platform=msite&m\_page\_id=wqiqgsptyjwcavid17998e6221419fff680bc7a498&gclid=CjwKCAjw-qeFBhAsEiwA2G7Nl-RTd4OiIMNxa74MWiToCeojecV6q-TxIAmczvMopChAsDhrT5GUcRoCzWgQAvD\_BwE


Nik - 5/23/2021

Sure.


matt - 5/24/2021

Hey Nic. I live on a mountain or large hill, about 200m above sea level there are lot of trees around. Around 5km from me the hill drops down to a large city. Do you think it would be possible to hit any hotspots down there and if so what would be the best set up? Thanks in advanced.


Nik - 5/24/2021

Hey Matt, probably. Check it on HeliumVision, you can run an RF simulation from your proposed spot and have a pretty good idea of what you'll hit. Rock on!


Rudolph - 5/26/2021

Nik, Thank you for the excellent articles and response to questions. I’m going to mount an antenna on the roof of my apartment (outside) but the nearest hotspot is 2miles away, and I’d really like to hit some more in the 5mi range. Is your recommended antenna still appropriate in that situation, or would a higher dbi rating be better?


Rudolph - 5/26/2021

By the way, those mountains look familiar, are you the venerable Atomic Vanilla Locust?


Robert Engelbrecht - 5/26/2021

Nik. I'm 60' up on top of a small condo building ( Amusing Pistachio Python, Bobcat 300 + supplied antenna ). What would your fave ANT-NH900-OUT have as possible advantage/s ?. Thank you for all the valuable info you share with us ! !


Nik - 5/26/2021

Nope, that's another hs owner. I've got Amateur Jade Hare. :)


Nik - 5/26/2021

The HNTenna will be your best bet. I've got one that's hitting over 100 km shots. It's all about antenna elevation & line of sight, not about gain.


Nik - 5/26/2021

Should work as well or better than any other antenna out there. That's what I'm using on all my setups going forward.


Chase - 5/26/2021

Hi Nik, thank you for all of the great insights. I'm considering a Bobcat miner that comes with a 4dbi antenna, but based on your research, I realize a 5.8 - 8 dbi antenna could yield better earnings. My apartment building is a hollow rectangle. I live on the 2nd floor (14 ft from the ground) with a balcony that faces inward. If I set up my miner on the top 4th floor, unless there's a way to lock the cables, its fate would be left to chance that the apartment staff overlook it AND no one steals it, but up there it would face outward and would have plenty of room to diffract properly. With one nearby hotspot within 81m of my address and 6 others roughly between 500m - 1km away, would it be reasonable to expect significantly different results if it faced the inside of my building vs. the 4th floor facing outward?


Nik - 5/26/2021

Always better with clear LoS, but you can't always get that. This might be an instance where the HNTenna will really shine.


Robert Engelbrecht - 5/27/2021

Can you suggest another antenna other than your fave ANT-NH900-OUT ? They don't seem able or prepared to ship to Canada


Nik - 5/27/2021

Hi Robert, Sure, try this Laird.


Robert - 5/27/2021

Thanks Nik. I already have Parleylabs 5.8dBi & 8Bbi antennas here ( https://shop.parleylabs.com/products/rak-fiber-glass-lorawan-antenna-us915?variant=37264623468723 ) . Would they be much worse than the Laird you suggested ?


Nik - 5/27/2021

Nope, about the same.


Lynn - 5/28/2021

Thanks for helping all of us. Very kind


Kevin - 6/1/2021

Nik, Thank you for all your insight. I have 2 RAK and 4 BobCat's on order and plan on deploying them in a town of 125k with only one existing hotspot currently. All placements will be on home rooftops. I plan on mounting a 20' antenna to the chimney with the Miner and Hotspot in a weather proof box at the base and good cable up to antennas. Having read some of your advice I understand the benefit of the hotspot being w/in 5' of the antenna, however, this area has sporadic high winds and ant extra weight up high is an issue. Is the signal loss preventable with better cable? Or is there another direction I should look into/


Nik - 6/1/2021

Don't sweat 20' if you're using LMR400 cable.


J - 6/3/2021

I am looking at the HNTENNA, however I dont see anywhere where it mounts? The pictures just show it kind of floating, and I am trying to purchase all matching parts at once and am not sure what kind of mount or pole is needed.


Nik - 6/3/2021

It mounts to a right angle bar that comes with the package. You mount the bar to the pole, it has a flat part that sticks out at 90. The HNTenna mounts on that.


Nate - 6/3/2021

Hey Nik, really appreciate you and these articles. I'm in a building, urban setting, 8th floor, but on a hill so I'm higher than everything for hundreds of meters in front of me and some slices of my view are unobstructed for miles. Would the ANT-BH900-IN make much of a difference in my case? Thank you!


Nik - 6/3/2021

With unobstructed views you may not see a huge difference. Small differences can add up over time though. I look at it this way: At $120 more than the cheap antenna, I'm getting the best thing on the market (MP Antenna holds patents on their multi polarized antennas.) With HNT at $15, if having the antenna earns me just 8 extra HNT it'll pay for itself.


Nate - 6/5/2021

Thanks Nik. I'm trying to square the concepts in your article with your primary recommended antenna. You show in that drawing and write that a medium gain antenna at relatively high elevation is almost always best. However, the antenna you recommend for most setups boasts a 3 dbi gain, which seems like a low gain compared to the 9 dbi max. Am I missing something?


Nik - 6/5/2021

Typically with Helium, the lower the gain you can use the more witnesses you'll have as it won't break the RSSI/SNR curve. Anything above 6 usually starts creating more invalid witnesses than you want. Remember, the type of antenna you put on has far less effect than the elevation it's at or the location it's in. Don't get too twisted up about gain.


michael scott - 6/9/2021

60CM High Gain Long Range Wide Band 3G 4G LTE Cellular Omni Directional Fiberglass Antenna for 4G LTE Route... Sponsored 60CM High Gain Long Range Wide Band 3G 4G LTE Cellular Omni Directional Fiberglass Antenna for 4G LTE Router Modem Gateway Mobile Cell Phone Signal Booster Cellular Amplifier, Eifagur $89.99 FREE Delivery Mon, Jun 14 Only 17 left in stock - order soon. will these work for the rak miner? they are on amazon


Nik - 6/9/2021

Without seeing the details on it, I wouldn't say yes. I'd go with an HNTenna; they're built for Helium by folks who know what they're doing.


Gary - 6/12/2021

Hi Nik! We just got our helium miner and ordered the antenna you recommended. Our LMR 400 cable that we purchased Ntype female to sma male I believe. This does not fit the diameter to the screw on connector for the antenna. The antenna threaded connector is quite large. Any help would be great!


Nik - 6/12/2021

Hi Gary, check over on the connections page and see if you can match the pictures up to what you have. Also, I think you'll want an RP-SMA male, not an SMA Male.


Gary - 6/12/2021

Hey Nik thanks for getting back to me so quick! I already purchased an Rp-SMA Male to n female and that's not correct. I need the one that can screw on to the HNTenna and that I believe is the N type male but I will look. None of the ends will fit so the RP-SMA Male is incorrect no doubt. I will check the connections page if I can find it. Thanks again.


Nik - 6/12/2021

What miner did you get? The HNTenna outdoor has an N-type female connection, so your cable connector on the antenna side should be an N-type male.


Gary - 6/12/2021

Yes the HNTenna outside one. So I probably need an Ntype female to connect to the male on the antenna right? And the other end to the miner I guess I have to research that too. This is almost as confusing as buying a pressure washer and trying to fit quick connects on lol.


Gary - 6/12/2021

Thanks for the info Nik. I knew from looking at images of connectors that I needed a N-type Male connector, problem is, unless it's just me. The diameter of the female connector seems larger than usual. Am I right about this? Thank you for everything Nik! I can't wait to get this up on my chimney!


Nik - 6/12/2021

Hi Gary, it can be confusing. The connector on the outdoor HNTenna is an N-type Female. You'll need a cable with an N-type Male. What miner do you have?


Luljeta Gjoka - 6/13/2021

Hey Nick are these antennas available for Europe I have rak miners from calchip!


Nik - 6/13/2021

Some antennas can handle a wider frequency range than others. In general (and there ARE exceptions), US antennas won't work well in Europe, and vice versa. HNTenna is releasing a Euro version soon, check in with them to get the latest.


Jerry - 6/14/2021

Hi Nik, I am considering setting up a 3dbi antenna on top of my house in the suburbs. There is a large tree within about 40-50 ft horizontally from where I would place the antenna. The tree also probably has about 30-40 ft additional vertical height compared to the antenna. Do you think the antenna you recommend would be able to get the signal around the tree? There are also quite a few trees around the neighborhood that are of comparable size, although none of them are within 100 ft. I’m just wondering if the antenna will even be able to get any signal out at all or if the trees will ruin the signal. The only other option I could think of is to mount the antenna to the tree and have it coming out of the top of it. Thoughts?


Nik - 6/14/2021

Jerry, with all the horizontal distance you should be fine. It'll punch through a tree no prob; this ain't 5G. :)


corey huguley - 6/15/2021

I have a few questions and I would to contact me on my email. I own 66 acres of land want to mind helium on my land. I seen your picture and would like sent up mine like yours. But my question how do you get great wifi to your outside miner?


Nik - 6/15/2021

Hi Corey, check out the off grid post for more on how to do that.


Michael - 6/16/2021

Great article! Question: Would you anticipate any performance issues in mounting a 3 dbi hotspot antenna on the same mast as a small omni-directional outdoor TV antenna? Will being on the same mast hurt the performance of the helium hotspot antenna? Does it matter whether the hotspot antenna is above or below the TV antenna (other than to say that higher = better)?


Nik - 6/16/2021

Shouldn't be an issue, they're running on different freqs. Higher = better. ;)


Greg - 6/18/2021

The European HNTenna is available now... got two! Hopefully more in the future


Atilla Akdogan - 6/23/2021

Hi Nik, I am using the bobcat with the stock antenna outside on my patio on a 7th floor apartment, would the HNTenna be a better option for me? Also what cable would I need Ntype male to rpsma male? This is a great page you got here my friend kudos. Learned alot and still learning! Thank you!


Nik - 6/24/2021

Hi Atilla, the HNTenna will probably be a better option. For your cable you'll need RP-SMA male to N-male.


Chris - 6/28/2021

Hi, we're not connecting to anyone and we have hotspots within a mile away. We live on a golf course and the line of sight has a wall of 50 foot trees about 200 yards across a few fairways from the antennae. Beyond that is the club house, which is a pretty vast building. The line of sight runs right through the middle of it and the roof is about 20 feet tall. Then there is an open field before it gets to the neighborhood with the hotspots, but there is another set of trees and houses. I believe we are using the wrong antennae which is mounted to our chimney about 15 feet high from the ground.. Here are the specs: High Gain Omni Antenna For WiFi & Cell 3G 4G LTE (10 DBi) Wide Frequency Bands of 698MHz to 960MHz and 1710MHz to 2700MHz https://www.signalbooster.com/products/high-gain-omni-antenna-for-wifi-cell-3g-4g-lte-10-dbi Should we be using a lower dB? If so, what would you recommend. Appreciate any help.


Justin Miller - 6/28/2021

Hi Nik, Great info. I'm on a high elevation but in a ravine that faces the city. So really there's only 30 degrees where I have a field of view, but that's all of downtown. That said it's maybe 20 kilometers away. You mentioned this flat panel antenna: https://www.l-com.com/wireless-antenna-900-mhz-9-dbi-heavy-duty-flat-panel-antenna Would that be my best option? Thanks!


Nik - 6/28/2021

That actually sounds reasonable, give it a shot. :)


Nik - 6/28/2021

Looks like the wrong antenna to me. Try a RAK 5.8 or the HNTenna instead.


Lorant Jakab - 7/2/2021

Is the diamond BC 920 worth it? Will mining rewards be higher? Also it says it's a 9.3 db, will I have lots of problems? My area is Nanaimo but I want to go as far as Vancouver in Canada. Should I be buying a lower db antenna? Any one you recommend? I'm 103 ft above sea level, terrain relatively flat in the area, and towards Vancouver. Thanks Nik.


Nik - 7/3/2021

Hi Lorant, Almost no antenna will make rewards significantly higher. Remember, 80% of earnings come from location, than 15% from antenna *elevation* at that location, and the last 5% or so from the antenna choice. Unless there is a super clear reason (usually extraordinary distance and no other hs close by) I would steer clear of antenna gains over 6 dBi. If you'd like a location assessment along with specific antenna recommendations for your install, consider hiring us.


$51,273 Month Mining Helium...Placement+Elevation+Antenna - TecHubb - 7/5/2021

[…] What’s The Best Antenna For Your Helium Hotspot? […]


David - 7/5/2021

Nik, Thank you dearly for all of the data you've provided here. It's a lot to swallow for a neophyte. But laid out well enough that it makes more sense with additional reads. You suggest ANT-NH900-OUT. All things "equal" (pole, 10 over roof, cabining) in a moderately treed suburban area that is at about the same elevation over the path where the majority of downtown witnessing is hoped (14 ish Km as the crow flies), do you still suggest NH900 over Bobcat stock? If yes, why? I know that there are a high quantity of variables that can impact the results here, but just from a layman's perspective of putting up your suggested antenna vs stock in a suburban area and trying to witness into the downtown area which is about 10 mi away.


Nik - 7/5/2021

David, you're welcome. Keep in mind that antennas won't make a huge difference. Line of sight is key, and 14km is possible but out at the edge when it comes to profitability. Especially with trees (think the flat, well forested midwest area) it can be a super tough task to connect over 14 km. 1-3 km is more reasonable. Personally, I'd upgrade the antenna to an HNTenna just to wring the last few percentage points of performance out of it, but it may not be a huge difference.


Gary Titus - 7/5/2021

Hey Nik! Sorry I just saw I didn't answer your question. We have RAK version 2 miner. I still have it on the windowsill right now. We had to get the ladder, lightning arrester etc. I am so ready to put up the HNT miner! I was wondering if the nut and washer that came with the antenna would be sufficient enough to hold it onto the bracket? We will have it about 25" in the air which will clear the treeline and should be higher than any house or structure in our area. So far we have 5 witnesses with it on the window sill, which is about 10" up I believe. I also researched my area's topography on Google earth, and studied where most of the hotspots are. Thank you for all of your help!


Nik - 7/5/2021

Hi Gary, the mount that comes with the HNT is fine, just make sure you support the pole it's on. Can't wait to hear how it does.


What To Look For In A Helium Antenna - One Man's Search - 7/5/2021

[…] Hot tip up front: Anten­nas have very lit­tle to do with your earn­ings. Most of your earn­ings come from your place­ment, most of the rest comes from how high you can get in that place­ment, and the final lit­tle sliv­er comes from anten­na choice. If you want to go deep into the best anten­na for your Heli­um hotspot, read up on it here. […]


Gary - 7/12/2021

Hey Nik! I am attaching it to a 38" j pipe antenna mast. I have it secured with the provided worm clamps, and I also drilled 2 holes on each side of the mast so its secured by large bolts and curved washers. If the height isn't sufficient enough I will use a long schedule 40 pvc pipe as well. I will let you know when it goes up!


Gary - 7/12/2021

One more question (for now) Nik. Do you recommend PVC type conduit, or galvanized steel? I'm leaning toward pvc type, because if I do get 10 foot it will be easier to setup. I also think it would survive the weather. Your thoughts?


Nik - 7/12/2021

I'd go with metal, but I have a love affair with metal. As long as the PVC is strong enough, it should be OK short to mid term. Check to make sure whatever you're using doesn't deteriorate in the sun.


Brad - 7/13/2021

Any Recommendation for someone that lives on a mountain blocked on one side? I have several antennas to test, but if I want to get a few miles out, below be, would I be better with an 8DBI Omni or like a 4-5 standard Omni or maybe a directional? I love this post BTW, it was super helpful with the visuals!


Nik - 7/13/2021

Hi Brad, a 5-6 dBi omni will be fine for that. Best of luck with it!


Marie - 7/14/2021

Hi Nik! Love your website and I can't thank you enough for everything I've learned from you! I'm getting invalid witnessed beacons and I don't understand why. It says "witness_rssi_below_lower_bound". Could this be because I'm using 5.8 and 8dbi antennas and the beaconner is too close to my location? Would be great to see an article on the subject since there's not a lot of information online! Thanks for your help


Tim Heckel - 7/14/2021

Hi Nik - thanks so much for your help! Silly question - with the Hntenna, would you run the cable from the antenna inside to the miner? Or would you minimize the cable length and put the miner in an outdoor enclosure next to it? I assume the former, especially given my climate (MN). Lastly, you mentioned above that the bobcat miner -> hntenna would require a "RP-SMA male to N?male" -- any links/suggestions where to get one? Thanks again.


Nik - 7/14/2021

Yep, that's a likely reason. It's fine to have a few of those "out of bounds", you just don't want too many. I'll work on an RSSI article. :)


Nik - 7/14/2021

Not sure I understand the question. The HNTenna is fine outside, so you can keep the miner indoors and then run a cable out to it. If it was me, I always aim to get 'em outside with short cable runs; those projects are more fun. :). For cable, try USACoax.


Tom - 7/15/2021

Hi Nik and thans for all the helpful info. Very much appreciate the sharing. I bought the Flat Panel patch antenna on your recommendation via the link to L-Com. One question. You advise to "aim it carefully". Any further elaboration please? I am high on a bluff with a mountain behind and a vast swath of humanity across flat lands and lots of water. Thanks again


Nik - 7/15/2021

Hi Tom, unlike an omni it'll only really push out RF in one direction. You probably don't have to be *that* careful, just aim it at the middle of that swath and you'll be fine. Keep me posted on how it does!


Brad - 7/15/2021

Hi Nik thanks again for all of your wonderful advice. I have the 8 dbi working now and doing quite well. Only connecting to others 30 - 150km away though, nothing close. I may try a directional and tilt it a little [down] as a test. I have a great spot outside, but no way to protect the unit. If I *did* do a long run to it from indoor to outdoor, what would you guess would be a safe length to run to it. I am guessing the exposure will outweigh the cable degradation. I am hoping for about 20-25'. Any thoughts? Thanks in advance!


Nik - 7/16/2021

Hi Brad, 20-25' is no problem using LMR400.


Mike - 7/16/2021

Hi Nik, I am wondering what would be the results considering two scenarios. I have 6 miners, 1 in the middle and 5 in each direction at exactly 300 meters thus forming a pentagon. Scenario 1: I am located in the city and using a 4dbi antenna at a high elevation and the signal might be blocked by a few buildings Scenario 2: I am in a rural area that is completely flat (let’s assume) and have a 4dbi antenna as well but there is nothing blocking the signal while all being in the same formation at 300 meters. Which scenario would give me better gains and will the 8dbi antenna be better for the rural area or not for my specific situation? Thanks


Nik - 7/17/2021

Hi Mike, Neither of those will earn optimally, and there are probably better ways to deploy 6 miners. If you'd like to go through those in depth, book a consult session & we'll go through your entire scenario in order to maximize the (considerable) advantage of having 6 miners in hand.


Easy Helium Outdoor Antenna Upgrade – Tea and Tech Time - 7/26/2021

[…] What’s The Best Antenna For Your Helium Hotspot? A Rough Guide To Helium Hotspot Placement […]


Mitchell Walls - 7/26/2021

That directional you posted is ridiculous. I am witnessing people up to 39km through hundreds of tree and buildings. Only downside is a rarely but annoying get invalid witnesses for nearer people but I'll take seeing 20 people versus 3.


Nik - 7/26/2021

Agree, it was one of my early installs before I had a better idea of how to do this. Glad you're getting plenty of witnesses!


Jodi - 8/2/2021

Hi Nik, Thank you so much for all the amazing posts. I am about to mount an antenna on my unused chimney in the suburbs (flat terrain/1 story houses). I bought a 3dbi and a 5.8db antenna (to test) + an lmr400 cable to run down my chimney. I also bought a lightning arrester and a #10 AWG ground wire. I am keeping the miner inside as it gets up to 100 degrees in the summer here. After reading more about the HNTenna, I feel like I should just get it. If I do, I will need a new coax and lightning arrester (different connections) and a new mount. Can you recommend a mount/pole? Haven't found much on the internet. Lastly, the HNTenna links in this article are broken. It seems hntenna.com has updated their URLs.


Nik - 8/2/2021

Thanks, I'll get those links updated! The outdoor HNTenna comes with a mount. I'd test the antennas you have first, get a baseline, see if you're happy with it. Location & elevation are way more important than antennas. :)


Can I Get A Witness? - One Man's Search - 8/4/2021

[…] This helps explain why in many cas­es, when you get that fan­cy super high gain anten­na, your valid wit­ness­es dis­ap­pear. So what anten­na should you buy? […]


Greg Guadagnoli - 8/6/2021

Hi Nik, thanks so much for all your work, this is an amazing resource. The general principle of higher gain means lower angle is making sense, but the way I'm looking at it makes it appear to me that for an antenna 50 feet up, the 45º band of a 4dBi hits everything from the ground on up starting at about 124 feet out, and and 8dBi (25º) hits it at about 235 feet out. I see how that's a huge difference when you look at them relatively, but in practice wouldn't you only be missing out hotspots that are within that first 235 feet with the 8dBi? What am I missing? Thanks for your help.


Nik - 8/6/2021

You're not missing much there, although every antenna's gain pattern is different; check their datasheet for the antenna to make sure. The other thing that'll cause problems is higher gain antennas will put you on the wrong side of the RSSI/SNR curve. More on that here.


Gary - 8/8/2021

Hey Nik! So we finally got out helium antenna up. We are using the HNTenna you suggested. How long does it take to notice a difference. It hasn't been 24 hours yet and I would describe myself as a patient person, but in this case I'm having anxiety lol. We had 4 witnesses before when we had it installed at the window sill. We still have 4 witnesses but lost 2 of the old witnesses to the south of us and gained 2 more. So we are still at 4 witnesses. I am thinking of going with a higher decibel antenna of this doeant work out for us. If so I am wondering if we could sell this one. You interested? Lol. How important is location NSEW relative to your hotspots installing above roof? Just curious. Should I give this antenna more time and see what happens? It was a pain outing up there, but I don't mind talking it down if I have to. Thanks again!


Nik - 8/8/2021

Hi Gary, give it more time. I'd give it a week. Your witness list only builds when you beacon, which only happens once or twice every 24 hours. You want enough data points to make good decisions, and one or two beacons is less than optimal. Stick with it. :)


Michael - 8/9/2021

Your posts on this stuff are really easy to understand. I'm taking your advice (from our email conversation and from hours of reading this weekend) to buy the HNTenna and am planning on purchasing a somewhat-short cable (probably around 30 inches) from USA Coax. Just using your advice and moving my antenna outside, I'm noticing a slight increase in rewards (~$2-$4 daily). With the new 3 dBi antenna and cable coming, I can only imagine those numbers will go up again. Thanks for all the help you do for this community!!


Gary - 8/9/2021

Thanks Nik! You're right on, I have 8 witnesses now so I'm pretty happy with that so far! Thank you so much for your helping appreciate it. You definitely know your stuff man!


Gary - 8/9/2021

Hey Nik! Now I have to just set up my other miners and I'm good to go. I already have a good location for them. Thanks again!


Nik - 8/9/2021

Super, glad it's working for ya Gary. Rock on!


Jack Schnepel - 8/10/2021

Gary, your comment was exactly what I was looking for. I just set my 8dbi antenna up 23.5ft. I am so anxious to get my miner to actually be mining. I'm glad I wasn't the only anxious one


Igotextra - 8/12/2021

So this is probably a stupid question but I don’t wanna buy the wrong thing lol. My indoor HNTenna just came today. Do I need to buy a N-male to RP-SMA cable for this? And could I possible get a link for reference to which one I need? Thanks in advance!


Nik - 8/13/2021

No prob. You don't need an N-male for it. Take a look at the antenna connection, then compare it to the images on this page. Make sure you also know the connection on your hotspot, then order a cable accordingly. USACoax does good work.


Rya - 8/14/2021

Hey Nik - I tried checking out the recommended antennas from Hntenna but the links only land on the homepage. Is the 3 dbi antenna what you are recommending, or is it another product not currently available?


Nik - 8/15/2021

Hi Ryan, the 3 dBi antenna is what I recommend. Rock on!


Alex - 8/16/2021

Nik, as everyone had already stated, it's great learning from you. I bought that HNTenna, the 3db cone one. I plan on securely fastening it atop a cypress tree, like a star. It will be about 60ft above the ground. The only problem is, my box will have to be at the bottom of the tree, about 50' below. I saw your posts about "don't worry about the antenna", and "keep is as close as you can". I just will have to use about 50' of cable (LMR400,600,900 :) ). My question is, with the db drop of the cable length, and the antenna only being a 3db one, will I be able to squeeze enough DB out of that antenna to do good? Or, do I purchase 5-6db antenna, and have the final value around 3db. Thanks.


Nik - 8/17/2021

Alex, it's a good question and I'm not sure of the answer. How are you bringing power & ethernet to the enclosure at the base of the tree? Can you use PoE to get that enclosure up much higher, thereby decreasing the antenna cable run? Please keep us posted on this as I'm pretty darn interested in the answer. One thing to keep in mind is that the OG miners do really well with just 28.2 dBi, so as long as you can end up with that or more, you're likely to be fine. If you're not sure on calcs, check out this page on Cable Loss & EIRP.


Alex - 8/17/2021

I will be being power and eth to the base. I cannot climb the tree to get it any closer to the antenna. I might need help with the math.


Alex - 8/17/2021

I just cannot climb that tree, its too full, and no branches to climb. Ill bring power and internet to it. I guess I could go POE, but that is not necessary. I might need help with the math.


Nik - 8/17/2021

How are you getting the antenna up it?


Alex - 8/17/2021

So, lol, an interesting idea I had was to take five 10 foot conduit plastic pipes, put them all together, and start at the base of the tree and just go through all the tree branches until it popped up over the top. Worked flawlessly. I’d post a picture if I could. Next, I will use LMR600, and thread it through the tube, tie some 550 cord to the end. Hook the antenna up, pull the 550 though and secure the cable to the ensure the antenna stays put. So far, so good.


Alex - 8/17/2021

I sent you a picture on discord, Helium-Antennas


Nik - 8/18/2021

Got it, posted here for reference. Now I see why it'd be hard to climb that tree. :) Alex antenna at top of dense tree


Frank Oskar - 8/19/2021

Hi Nik, I have purchased and installed HNTenna. I have two miners and they are 1.4 km apart. Here is my situation and could you please let me know your thoughts on below? 08/12-08/18: Miner A - Bobcat Cable: LMR 400, 20' long Location: On the roof Antenna: 6 dbi Miner B - Bobcat Cable: in stock, 4dbi Location: Inside the house, 2nd floor Antenna: 4 dbi Miner A and B could witness each other and beacons did not have any issue, also had mining rewards. 08/18-08/19: Miner A - Bobcat Cable: LMR 400, 20' long Location: On the roof Antenna: 6 dbi Miner B - Bobcat Cable: LMR 400, 15' long Location: Inside the the attic Antenna: HNTenna Issue: Miner A sent beacon and miner B witnessed it, but beacons are invalid: "witness_rssi_below_lower_bound" Miner B sent beacon and miner A witnessed it, but beacons are invalid: "witness_rssi_below_lower_bound" Another thing to add (08/18-08/19): Miner B's beacon was witnessed three times by miner which was 16km away without any issue.


Nik - 8/19/2021

Hi Frank, Check over on this post regarding Witnesses & RSSI issues, it'll help explain what's happening with your 2 hotspots. Love the detail!


Eoin McLoughlin - 8/20/2021

I have a location up 60 metres in a church in Dublin. Dublin being a relatively flat City and the fact that there are only two other hotspots within a 1 km radius I think I should go for an a TBI but what would you think? Rf sims say 174 potential witnesses with 8.0 and 170 with 3.0.


Nik - 8/20/2021

If you're up high you should usually get a lower gain antenna, more like 3 than 8. What's a TBI?


David - 8/20/2021

This is super helpful by the way, thanks for making it easy to digest on a subject I am clueless about. Sounds like your recommendation for me would be to stick with the stock antenna, let me know if that is right! My miner would be indoors (can't get it outside sadly) on the 14th floor of a highly populated city (Oakland, CA). Originally I was leaning towards a 5.8 dbi antenna, but now I have concerns since their are so many tall buildings in the area.


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Joseph - 8/20/2021

after reading your article i have been doing quite a bit of research. i really appreciate the time you put in to writing this up. i have a sensecap on the way. i am trying to figure out what antenna to order because there is not a lot of hotspots in my area (Rockwall, TX) the simulations are with 30 foot LMR 400 at 1.2 loss, 30 feet in the air on the roof of my house, then i tried various dbi in the simulation. the only one that seems to perform at all is 12dbi. i didn’t even want the antenna up this high because it’s a rent house and max with sensecap is 9dbi. it appears from the from the elevation experiments in google maps that there is a 20 foot elevation gain before i get to the lake in any line of site path I try to outline. it seems like directional may not be an option because of the elevation gain and because I can really only get up about 25 foot at the most, that’s my roof peak it basically looks like i’m blocked from all of the hotspot clusters on the other side of the lake due to this 20 foot elevation gain any ideas if this looks accurate? should i just start with a 5.8 dbi omni and see what happens? (geo/address is not my address, but close enough) https://beta.hotspotrf.com/map/?share=81689db12bba4656ac6716e3a413b5b1 https://beta.hotspotrf.com/map/?share=df4867603c6f40f7b33a6f1b8bdedde9 https://beta.hotspotrf.com/map/?share=1a1c78bd7a854777ad89c607d5a67096 https://beta.hotspotrf.com/map/?share=cee96b2feaa149d59718065b7f627f17 Google Maps Elevation Experiments https://imgur.com/a/6Wycsmq I have posted in the sensecap discord and the helium subreddit and i’m unable to get a response . i’m really trying to learn and research here and your articles have helped me so much


Nik - 8/20/2021

Hi Joseph, if you're blocked by elevation, your best bet is to find another location; the antenna won't make a difference. I wouldn't give the simulations too much weight (they're useful, but not the gospel), and I definitely wouldn't use a 12 dBi antenna. Let me know if that helps you.


Nik - 8/20/2021

Hi David, yep, stick with stock to start off. Use an HNTenna indoor antenna if you want to spend money and upgrade, but start with stock.


Joseph - 8/20/2021

Thank you so much for the response. I’m at a loss for another location unless i was to work out a deal where someone takes 70% of my earnings. Do you think a lower dbi antenna would get up and over the elevation without raising my antenna above 25 feet when the elevation gain seems to be 20 feet and it raises that 20 feet in a distance of 1.93 miles from me?


Nik - 8/20/2021

Probably not, but you can try. RF can be weird. Still, I'd focus my efforts on finding another location. Location is 80% of your earnings.


David - 8/23/2021

Hi Nik, My Bobcat is due to arrive any day now and there is a lot of info floating our there... I like what you say and have read most all your posts; a lot of information, most beyond my understanding. Is there a placement optimization map available? Some map that allows me to input my address and based on all parameters, advise where to place my antenna and how high, etc? Is there a service that can help? I know a lot of people who but miners and keep buying more ad new equipment, trying to optimize their initial investment and I rather do this one, and right. Open to suggestions. Thanks, David


Edward - 8/23/2021

Hi, What antenna do you recommend for a 5 story building (60 feet) in nyc?


Nik - 8/23/2021

Hi David, The best tool I've found for placement optimization is Helium.Vision, but it's not automatic at finding the best spot. I offer consulting that'll walk you through the strategy side as well as helping you find the best spot locally, you can read more about that here. I think you're on the right track aiming to get it done right the first time, keep going!


Nik - 8/23/2021

Outdoor HNTenna from hntenna.com


Mark - 8/23/2021

Quick question: I recently upgraded my antenna to the 3dbi outdoor HNTenna. Which antenna do I set inside my bobcat? I chose custom antenna and set it to 3dbi but wondering if I should have gone another way. Would love your thoughts.


Don - 8/24/2021

I have an 9 story office building in a suburban city right next to a shopping center with many business located nearby. There are two other tall buildings across the street, each a few hundred feet away. I have some cell towers on my flat roof over the top-floor mechanical room below but there is about 150 feet between the two cell tower structures. I am planning to put up a Helium 915 antenna attached to the concrete side of the building right between the two cell bundles. The Bobcat 300 will be right inside the building within about 30 feet maximum cable run. What antenna of your recommendation would be the best for this relatively flat area with trees, stores, houses, and other tall/short buildings nearby and below? I can even easily see the nearby airport from the roof. And do you recommend anything better than the Bobcat 300?


Michel - 8/24/2021

Hey, Nick. I have a newly installed hotspot, indoors/behind a thick glass window (no access for outdoors option ), around 70m high, clear line of sight. I got a fiberglass 5dBi antenna for this one, in 24h i got 31 witnesses. But i'm wondering if it would be wiser to upgrade later with a 3dBi? i'm afraid the glass would attenuate the signal considerably for a smaller antenna, would love to get your opinion on this one :) Another question, just wondering if installing a fiberglass antenna indoors is somehow bad for health ^^


Nik - 8/24/2021

Hi Michael, sounds like your install is fine for the constraints you have. I'd probably try a 3 dBi, but I like testing things. As far as a fiberglass antenna indoors being bad for health, check out this post on RF emissions. I'm not sure if there's anything inherently unhealthy in a fiberglass antenna, but I'm definitely not a medical professional. :)


Nik - 8/24/2021

Hi Don, I'd use the HNTenna (hntenna.com) for that deployment; urban deployments with lots of reflected signals are where they'll usually do best. As far as miners, they're all pretty similar, though the Bobcats are apparently sensitive to heat, so make sure it's in a shaded/cooler place.


Nik - 8/24/2021

Hey Mark, you did the right thing; "Custom Antenna" is fine. :)


john Horlieca - 8/27/2021

the question i have is would a multi-directional 12 dbi antenna work 10 feet above a 2 story house? and how long before i see an increase in gain


Nik - 8/28/2021

Hi John, While it'll work to send out RF, most of those transactions will be invalid due to being likely to break the current RSSI/SNR curve Helium uses to evaluate signals. Take a look at this post on Witnessing to help understand that.


Johannes - 8/29/2021

Hello, thanks for the awesome guide. Quick Question, rural Austria all the next hotspots are around 25 km away. The Miner is on a high Building (30 meters), topography is rather flat also no high buildings on the way. What antenna would you suggest? Miner is Bobcat.


Nik - 8/29/2021

Hi Johannes, I'd go with the stock Bobcat antenna mounted on a metal surface or a low gain antenna like the HNTenna. With clear Line of sight and plenty of elevation you don't need high gain.


VM - 8/30/2021

Hi Nik, many thanks for Your precious informations! I need an advice and a help: I live in a suburban flat area. Nearest hotspots are in 9 - 15 km distance. Waht antenna dBi gain do You recommend? Is there some Eropean distributor ar manufacturer for HNTenna ? Are there some alternatives for multi-polarised antennas? Greeting from Europe!


Nik - 8/30/2021

Hi VM, as long as you have clear line of sight (no mountains/hills blocking it) you should be fine with a lower gain (4 dBi or lower) antenna. HNTenna ships to Europe, so you should be fine there. Don't get too wrapped up if you can't get one of theirs though, as a standard vertically polarized antenna will usually do almost as well. Remember, the most important thing is location, then elevation. Antennas just don't matter that much.


mic - 8/30/2021

Good antenna! But I use the antenna for miner from RFAreas. Good manufacturer. And I guess that thier antennas are the best in the world.


Nik - 8/30/2021

All the top manufacturers make excellent antennas, glad you found one that works well for you!


Pat - 9/3/2021

Hi Nik, I need an advice if you don't mind ofcourse I live in on the Hill to be fair with clear line of sight. I've got another helium miners 500 meters under me. I choose 8 dbi antenna but i guess its to strong because is not connecting with them. Any advice? My antenna is on the roof


Nik - 9/3/2021

Sure, try a lower gain antenna.


Moh - 9/4/2021

Hi Nik, thanks a lot for your great article. My city is really crowded (Beirut, Lebanon) and it will probably be filled with hotspots sooner than later. I plan to put my antenna at the rooftop. Highest point. Should I get the 5.8 dbi one (fiberglass) ? Or get a lower gain antenna (from hntenna) or just stick with the original ? Problem with the original is that I am going to need an extension to protect the miner from the rain/high temp/... so it will be a few meters far from the antenna, which cannot be covered by the stock antenna (4 dbi). Fyi: my building is 15 floors tall (around 55 meters tall). What do you suggest? Moh.


Nik - 9/4/2021

Hi Moh, I'd use the HNTenna there; they usually do really well in urban environments.


krpk - 9/11/2021

What to do if I am in flat area but the closest hotspots are more than 10km away in all directions. Which antenna would you recommend?


Nik - 9/11/2021

Get your antenna high enough to have a clear Line of Sight to other antennas. I'd use the HNTenna, but any of the good name brands will be fine.


carlos castillo - 9/11/2021

hello sir, thanks for all this valuable info. so, when would you use a 15db antenna? I purchased a 12 and a 16db and plan to install them on poles on top of roof at total of 35 feet or so in Orlando subs, in florida where there are no mountains. I figured it would help by reaching some hotspots in down town as well, some 5-10 miles away, giving me an edge on reach. I ran the simulator on hotspot RF and it shows that the higher gain antenna would reach more hot spots with higher db antenna. What are your thoughts? thank you!


Nik - 9/11/2021

Hi Carlos, in the US you'd never use a 15 dBi antenna; it breaks FCC limits. 9 dBi is the max. With clear Line of Sight you can go hundreds of km, so a high gain antenna doesn't give you any advantage with only 5-10 miles to cover. Hotspot RF has said they're only accurate to 60% +/- 20%, and with the network changing so rapidly it's probably even less reliable.


adam L - 9/13/2021

Great Article. I'm considering setting up a helium hotspot in Hawaii. I live on the 10th floor of a 20floor+ building overlooking a canal and it's pretty open. Not sure if I can just purchase a stock bobcat and have a decent amount of coverage.


Nik - 9/13/2021

Right on Adam, that should work. Try putting a small metal sheet (think cookie tray) under the Bobcat antenna, that seems to increase performance. Keep us posted on how it goes!


Todd - 9/15/2021

Hey Nik, generally speaking is it better to point an Antenna through a wall (close to it) or set it up next to a window? 2nd story house upstairs bedroom placement. CAN'T do outside. Trying the 4 dbi bobcat and will soon try the 5.8 and 8 dbi rakwireless as well as the 3 dbi indoor hntenna. Subbed to yer youtube and read a lot from you but missed this question above. I can get about 18 inches higher than the window if I setup next to the wall (would be close to ceiling). Should antennas be placed closest to wall or locate a foot back from it? Will report back on all antennas once I get some insight from you and complete all 4 antenna tests.


Nik - 9/15/2021

Depends on window and wall type. Newer reflective windows can be a bear to get through. Give the signal some space to breathe; a foot off or more.


Luke - 9/15/2021

I hope you can help - I need a cable to connect my bobcat 300 to my RAK 5.8 antenna to get it up on the roof of my house. I can not seem to find anywhere selling LMR400 cables with the correct connectors, which I believe are N Female (into the miner) & RP-SMA Male (into the RAK antenna)??


Nik - 9/15/2021

Check with USACoax.com, and call ‘em if you don’t see it on their site.


Louis - 9/15/2021

Hi Nik, Great article ! I am looking more into the type of antenna i will need. My username is unique ceramic deer, it is almost done syncing up. Given my suburban location, with barely any high buildings, do you reccomend using the stock antenna, but simply setting it up on a really high pole ? How much better would a 2 DBI ( stock antenna ) up high be VS say the HNTenna 915 ? Thank you in advance !


Nik - 9/15/2021

Hi Louis, I'd test the stock antenna and get it up as high as you can. The HNTenna will probably do a little better, but it won't be magic.


Jason Williams - 9/19/2021

Hello, I’m somewhat confused on which antenna would be the best for the area that I’m in. My hotspot names are, lively foggy salamander , hidden champagne camel. Both locations are in a Neighborhood, flat with just trees. The closest hotspot is 3km to 6km away. The highest I would be able to get the antennas would be about 9ft. On the ledge of house.


Nik - 9/19/2021

If lots of trees you may benefit from a 5.8, at least until PoCv11 comes. Otherwise, see if you can get it higher and roll with a lower gain antenna.


Andy Margesson - 9/23/2021

Hi Nik, I had a consultant come and asses the installation of an antenna on the roof of the 4 storey building I live in. The issue he has is accessing the roof as it's 25m high. I can get into the eaves and install the HNtenna there, but would there be a significant loss of signal through the roof tiles? Thanks


Scott - 9/23/2021

Great article! Thanks so much for making it. I live in SUPER flat Florida, but there are Pine and Oak trees everywhere between all houses and neighborhoods (no tall buildings or geography), if I can get an antenna on top of my roof, but probably not quite over the top of the trees what would be your recommendation for my Bobcat miner? The beginning of your article makes it sound like I should go higher, up to 9dbi. Does that make sense considering all I have to clear is mostly just the tops of trees? Thanks again!


Nik - 9/23/2021

Hi Andy, get the thing as high as you can and if it's below the roofline, away from the side of the building. Without seeing your situation it's hard to advise, but...the best you can do is the best you can do.


Nik - 9/23/2021

Flattest state in the Union! If all you've got is the tops of trees for miles around, getting signal out will be hard. A 9 dBi will help a bit, but dense vegetation really dampens the signal. It's kind of like fighting a forest fire with a garden hose: It'll help save the house, but it won't solve the problem. Better off getting it as high as possible or finding a better location.


sala mouna - 9/28/2021

Great article I will need the 8 DBI antenna for my case but the device is not here yet


Gio - 9/30/2021

I live on a hill over looking all of Los Angeles. Behind me is more hills. In front of me is city lights. Less than 10 miles away is downtown Los Angeles There are many miners in my immediate vicinity, but I am one of the highest in elevation. How would a yagi work for me? Line of sight is great, would you advise against a 9dbi? What would work best in this situation?


Nik - 10/1/2021

Hi Gio, stick with a low gain omni like the HNTenna. A yagi will just limit your options.


Arturo - 10/1/2021

Hey Nik, GREAT article. I'm about to setup my fiirst hotspot, it's in a location 15km far from the nearest hotspot but with a great elevation in a mountain and with direct sight to it (and the whole city). Do you think the patch antenna would reach this distance?


Nik - 10/1/2021

Hi Arturo, Yep, a patch antenna will easily reach that, but an omni will also easily reach it. I'd go with an omni. Cheers, Nik


Damjan - 10/4/2021

Hi Nik.. my hot spot is in the forest where I have a weekend .. I have 500m to the sea ... the nearby town is 3km away .. across the sea I have towns that are 45km away .. it makes sense to have a hot spot and what would I need to reach hot points I am from Europe Slovenia Croatia


Nik - 10/5/2021

Depends on clear line of sight across the water. It may work well if your hotspot can "see" those other hotspots. If you're surrounded by dense forest it'll be much more challenging.


Steven Smith - 10/6/2021

Hey, Nik. Any changes to what you would suggest for antenna with PoC11 coming?


Nik - 10/6/2021

Nope. I'll stick with the HNTenna for all my setups.


Ash - 10/8/2021

Hi Nik, Thank you for your advice and well written article. I have the (915) 902-928MHz from HNTENNA. What cable do you recommend I use to connect the antenna to my bobcat? The pin size looks different than the stock antenna. Do I need an adapter? Appreciate your help! Have a great weekend!


Nik - 10/10/2021

Depending on length you'll probably want LMR400 or LMR240. Use the 400 for anything over, say, 10'. Check your connectors here, then order the correct cable & fittings from USACoax.com. https://gristleking.com/helium-hotspot-reference/ Should be RP-SMA male to N-type male. Always double check! :)


Giovanni Ghinelli - 10/11/2021

Hi Nik, Thanks a lot for the article, really helpful. I just have a specific doubt about the myner I just installed. I live in Modena, a relatively small city located in the plains in northern Italy, and I have positioned the myner at about 20 meters high (on the top floor of the building). I set up the myner (Sensecap with 2.8 Dbi antenna) about a week ago and I was wondering about the best outdoor antenna to buy (to date I have the myner and antenna inside the house positioned in front of a small window open all day) so I can install it directly on the roof. In your opinion, 5.8 Dbi is better or you can achieve better performance with the 8.0 Dbi? Thank you very much, Giovanni


Nik - 10/11/2021

Hi Giovanni, in a city with elevation you'll want the antenna to be as low dBi as possible in order to get maximum local coverage. I'd got with an HNTenna, but any of the lower gain antennas (4 dBi and under) will work.


Albert - 10/12/2021

Hi Nik, Great articles you post! I have 5 spots I just setup this last week. One of them is called Wobbly Glass Perch. My question is this, can I run a cable from the device (Rak V2) to just the antenna to place outdoors? Perhaps the HNTenna or an outdoor antenna? Hope that makes sense. I can't place the Rak outside, so I have a 9db antenna attached to the outside of my spare bedroom about 15 meters up from the ground with a decent clear view. I have an HOA here, so I'm trying to be utilize as much concealment as possible as well as gaining the best coverage. Thank you!


Nik - 10/12/2021

Sure, use antenna cable to connect the Hotspot and the antenna. You can buy that from USACoax.com, make sure you get the right connectors and you'll be fine.


Paulito - 10/12/2021

Hi Nik- thanks for all your efforts, you are a gentleman and a scholar! Would using a mast on top of a residential roof (to get more elevation) pose any issue with it being a lightning hazard? Do you take that into consideration at all or are there any measures that should be taken to reduce the risk?


Nik - 10/13/2021

Hi Paulito, I use a mast on my house. It's more lightning risk, but for me I'm fine with that. Use a lightning arrestor to mitigate the risk to your equipment.


Stefan Hochstatter - 10/16/2021

Hi Nick, I live in the suburbs outside of Milwaukee. There are three very poorly performing hotspots within a mile of me (one is being relayed). And then there are a ton of hotspots between seven and 10 miles to the south. Since most of the hotspots are that far away, does the low db antenna still make sense? Or should I move into medium gain? I’m planning to mount it on an 8 foot pole on the peak of my roof, which will put it above all of the other roofs. I am at a somewhat higher elevation than anything south or east and somewhat lower than anything north and west but it’s very gradual. So it seems like I have a particularly good location to hit hotspots to the south where all of them seem to be. Thanks for the advice! And great article.


Nik - 10/16/2021

Hi Stefan, sounds you'll have clear lines of sight, so you'll probably be best served with a lower gain (3-6) antenna. 7-10 miles is no problem for LoRa at our output power & spreading factor.


PabloS - 10/18/2021

My miner is on the way but I’m unsure if I should preorder the RAK 5.8dbi antenna or if I should just use the stock MNTD antenna. There is a miner down the street from me “Brilliant Honey Beetle” but I can’t seem to tell what antenna he’s using. By my location, do you think I’d be able to benefit from a 5.8dbi?


Nik - 10/18/2021

Depends on where you are. In the US, a 5.8 is a safe bet, though the clear line of sight your antenna will have to other miners is far more important than what antenna you buy. In the UK/EU, you'll need a 5.8 dBi minimum due to the lower output power of the radio.


Michalis - 10/19/2021

hi buddy and congrats on the article. i live in Cyprus (EU) and i placed one of my miners to a friends house which is located on a slope. from the roof of the house you can see the whole town. basically at 180 degrees you can see the whole town. the rest of the 180 degrees basically you see the mountain. do you think that a Directional Antenna would suit better in this situation? thanks alot!!


Nik - 10/19/2021

Thanks Michalis. How far from the town are you? I'd look at a slightly higher gain omni; never hurts to cover extra area, especially if that coverage might one day be useful.


Salvatore Rainone Jr. - 10/19/2021

Hey great article! My question to you is, what antenna should i use for my set up. My miner is located in Queens, NYC and its about 20-22 feet up right now in my attic. I would like to move it to my roof on top of my chimney. I have a bobcat miner and i use the stock 4bi antenna. Should i just get the outdoor enclosure kit and use the stock antenna or should i buy a different one? Please let me know if you need anymore info!


Nik - 10/19/2021

I'd get the antenna up high and try and leave the Bobcat indoors where it's temp controlled. Probably worth it to get an aftermarket antenna; I like the HNTenna, but it'll also depend on cable length.


Salvatore Rainone Jr. - 10/20/2021

If i leave bobcat in my attic i can run the antenna cable about 20-30feet to the top of my chimney. What dbi do you recommend?


Nik - 10/20/2021

Depends where in the world you are and what cable you use. LMR400 and the US? HNTenna. Outside the US? 5.8 - 8 dBi omni from any of the reputable brands.


Salvatore Rainone Jr. - 10/20/2021

Im in the south part of queens in NYC. Lot of miners in NYC and i am basically on the water so everything is elevated above me. I was planning on getting outside setup for bobcat miner so i dont need a 30ft cable because there will be cable loss. If its better to keep in my attic i will do that and run the wire to my roof and mount an antenna. I just would like to know what dbi is good for me. thanks


Nik - 10/20/2021

Well, to be straight with you, anything in NYC is going to be a tough row to hoe, and the antenna won't make that much difference.


Salvatore Rainone Jr. - 10/20/2021

oh ok. Maybe i should just buy the bobcat enclosure and put it on my roof with the stock 4bi antenna. its 22 feet up right now but on my chimney it would be 30 feet so that should make a difference.


Nik - 10/20/2021

You can def try it. Elevation usually helps, but location is what drives earnings. If you're locally overcrowded, location changes of 8' usually won't matter.


Salvatore Rainone Jr. - 10/20/2021

well if its not gonna change significantly then i rather not spend the time and money to go 10 feet higher. My second bobcat isnt set up but the location i want to put it at has the router in basement.. so i need to figure out how to get miner high up without moving router.


Why work too hard? Make your assets pay for your livelihood! - 10/26/2021

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Kelly Smith - 11/2/2021

My question to you is, what antenna should I use for my setup. My miner is located in Queens, NYC, and it is about 20–22 feet up right now in my attic. I would like to move it to my roof on top of my chimney. I have a bobcat miner and I use the stock 4bi antenna. Should I just get the outdoor enclosure kit and use the stock antenna or should I buy a different one? Please let me know if you need any more info!


Nik - 11/2/2021

Hi Kelly, the antenna won't make much difference; Queens is pretty overcrowded. The *best* antenna will probably be an HNTenna, but again, the local overcrowding is the big problem. You'll be far better off moving well outside the city.


Anna - 11/3/2021

Hey ? I live in a hilly town (20 min south of Seattle) that’s not fully covered but has a couple hexagons that have 2-3 hotspots. What antenna would you recommend for one that’ll be at the top of a 3 story house, on top of a hill that overlooks the main town ?


Nik - 11/3/2021

Hi Anna, I'd go with an HNTenna.


2GBLT - 11/3/2021

DO HIGH TENSION POWER LINES DISRUPT THE SIGNAL. ACROSS THE STREET FROM MY HOUSE ABOUT 200' AWAY I HAVE THESE MONSTROSITIES - 100' TALL TOWERS - 230000 VOLT TRANSMISSION LINES - MY ROOF HEIGHT IS ABOUT 20' - WAS PLANNING 20' POLE & MOUNT OUTDOOR ANTENNA AT TOP - SO ROGHLY 40' - WHICH WOULD LEAVE THE TOWER/POWERLINES 60' ABOVE AND ROUGHLY 200' AWAY FROM MY HOUSE


Nik - 11/4/2021

Good question. I wouldn't think so, but it's possible. Get the antenna high and you'll probably be fine.


Serge - 11/4/2021

In a one story suburban house, surrounded by many similar houses with same surroundings . Highest point is chimney ~25' above ground. Trees 30-80' tall about 30-40' away from the chimney pretty much on all sides, and many trees between neighborhood houses. Have a few hotspots (all SyncroBits) with stock 3dB antennae to set up in the area. I'm thinking a good start would be atop a pole attached to chimney (on each house)...? But what length pole? Should 10' be enough? 20'? Higher? Higher dB antennae, perhaps? TIA


Nik - 11/5/2021

Get 'em as high as you reasonably can. :)


Shawn - 11/8/2021

Just got my Linxdot miner today. I'm in the foothills of the Westside of Colorado Springs, with a view of the entire city. I have 2 questions: 1. Do I need a Patch Antenna? There are dozens of Hotspots I can witness less than 5 km away. 2. Will running my hotspot on wifi (after it's synced of course) cause any reduction in mining rewards?


Nik - 11/8/2021

Shawn, you don't need a patch antenna, and running your hotspot on WiFi just makes it more like the hotspot will drop connection and miss out on rewards. Keep it on ethernet cable if you can.


Patrick Fitzpatrick - 11/9/2021

Hey Nik, Thanks for you awesome articles. Clever and humorous, always easy and great to read. I’ve been debating and reading and yours seems to give the best advice. I was even shocked to see Petite Men­thol Leop­ard I’m your article which is close to me. Question is: My Syncro.Bit miner only gets .01 HNT a day. My location is Napa in the foothills with a forested area. I know a antenna will most likely help. I’m thinking a 8-9 dbi would help my situation most right? I’m guessing if I get it outside on my 2 story home roof it would allow better allow Site of Vision from trees and hilly area. Would you then recommend the 915Mhz / 8 dBi gain Omni LoRa Antenna with 20ft Cable or the antenna that Syncro.Bit sells on their website? Does it make sense to buy the antenna on the Syncro website for it’s the same brand? Also I wanted to inquire about Helium Network Jobs you mentioned as well if there are any opportunities.


Nik - 11/9/2021

Hi Patrick, the most important thing will be to get the antenna up high with a clear line of sight to other hotspots. The brand/dBi generally doesn't matter, just try and keep it a lower dBi (5.8 is more than enough.)


Matteo - 11/11/2021

Guys, I have a question, I am going to place a hotspot in a very tall building - in which I have an office- in the center of a very big city -Madrid, Spain-. It is 60m- 200feet, and I’ll be able to place it outside because we have a terrace. My question is if I should go with an 8dbi, or a 3dbi. I am concerned that an 8 or even a 5dbi are to flat and don’t reach the hotspots that are directly below us (as it is a building literally located in the center). My scale is 1.00 as there are no hotspots in the “dead zone”. Thanks for the advice!


Nik - 11/11/2021

Hi Mateo, since you're in the EU and radio power output is lower, I'd go with a 5.8.


Tommy - 11/11/2021

Is an omni-directional antenna actually omni-directional? Read that theyre not but god knows how i could direct them?


Nik - 11/11/2021

Hi Tommy, "Omni-directional" is more of a guideline; they shoot out radiation in *pretty much* all directions. You could direct them with a metal shield, and companies sell that, but there's no great reason to.


Robin - 11/11/2021

Nik, This article is amazing and your attention to quality and detail is superb. I ordered my FinestraMiner today for my suburban area, but can’t find info online if anyone has hooked up a HNTenna to it for boosted signal. Any experience monkeying with FinestraMiners? Thanks!


Nik - 11/11/2021

Hi Robin, I haven't had my hands on a Finestra, but it should work fine with any antenna. Enjoy!


Jochen - 11/12/2021

Hi Nik thanks for all the provided information. I am actually setting up my miner and was thinking about the antenna. Im in EU in a smaller City with smaller Hills and no Hex is attached at the moment. I will place it as high as possible and thinking about a 8 or 3db one. The next bigger City with the biggest connected Network is about 3 miles straight with a Hill inbetween. Any recommendation would bei appreciated. Kind regards Jo


Nik - 11/12/2021

Yo Jo! :). Probably an 8 for now since it's an EU hotspot pushing out much less power. PoCv11 may change all of this, so just be ready to adapt.


Robin - 11/12/2021

Thank you for being so helpful Nik, the one thing I am not sure was mentioned is whether or not it’s beneficial to use a metal antenna mast or a fiberglass antenna mast to reduce RF interferences? Thanks!!


Nik - 11/12/2021

Hi Robin, I'd go with a metal mast for durability. There's probably no appreciable RF performance difference for what we're doing. I've got clients with both options and either works well.


Vladimir - 11/12/2021

Hey nik, thank you for your information!!! I am living in a City 20 km away from Frankfurt (EU, Germany). In Frankfurt there are a lot of hexs. Between my City and Frankfurt there are no Hills, but there is another City, Offenbach with also many Hex(ca.30) .Offenbach is 13 km from my city. In my City there are 12 Hex. My spots are about 10 m high. Would you Take a 3dbi or 8 dbi Antenna. Any rec­om­men­da­tion would be appre­ci­at­ed. I cant decide and the pocv11 makes the dessicion even more complicated. Sorry for my english and greetings Vladimir


Nik - 11/12/2021

Really hard to say for the Euro region. I'd try the 8 dBi. I don't think there's a great solution because the radio output is so low.


Siegfried mabanta - 11/12/2021

Hi Nik, Im a newbie for hotspot, please help as I no idea for the antenna range or dbi. But planning to buy a bobcat 300 with 4dbi stack antenna. My location is at a urban area with same height of houses and some small trees. Im seeing some hotspot devices near my area with a distance of at 20km and lowest is at 3km to my location. Can you recommend me the antenna i need to get more witnesses connected to my bobcat 300. Appreciate your help.


Nik - 11/12/2021

What part of the world are you in?


Matt - 11/12/2021

Have a SyncroBit stock in my attic now, I estimate 11m height. Planning to move it outside, but can't decide on chimney (which would allow a pretty tall pole, but is maybe 8m away from a tree on one side) or just at the roof peak at least 16m away from any trees but probably won't allow for a super tall pole. In the US so deciding on antenna (there's 3 different ones at the link, I presume you're talking the outdoor US 915 one, priced at $150?)


Daniel - 11/13/2021

I live in an apartment on the second floor… I have access to an outdoor balcony but my MNTD gold miner is currently in my window with the stock 2.3dbi antenna. There are trees and other buildings around and my building is on a hill probably 30-50 feet up from the road. There are two other hotspots within 2 km from me but my miner doesn’t detect them, and others are about 12-14km away. Should I buy a higher gain outdoor antenna and install it on my balcony? Is this a lost cause because of my location?


Nik - 11/13/2021

Hi Daniel, you're far better off finding a new location.


Nik - 11/13/2021

How much lower is the roof peak? I'd probably go there unless there's a 5m or more difference. LoRa likes some space around it. Also take into consideration what is behind that tree that you want to hit (in terms of hotspots.) Yes, the outdoor 915 is the one I use.


Matt - 11/13/2021

Nik, the chimney top is maybe half a meter taller than the peak of the roof. But with a huge lever arm for the chimney I could safely put up a pretty tall pole with the US 915 outdoor antenna on it. I doubt I could put up a 5m tall pole without cheesing off the neighbors though so it might only be like a 2m taller pole if I chose the chimney. Or I could cut down the tree.. Hehe


Nik - 11/13/2021

Tough call. What's the tree blocking as far as other hotspots?


Matt - 11/14/2021

I'd have to take a look, but it's definitely going to block at least 25 degrees in that direction (at least as far as direct LOS). It's "not far" from that tree. There are actually zero other hotspots directly blocked by that tree based on hotspotty, but that doesn't mean there won't be in the near future. Thinking of it, and ease of installation (because I'm going to have to hire someone to go on this roof, it's steep and I don't like heights to begin with), I may just do a short-ish™ pole with the antenna on it. Also, I see the HNTenna and notice it's only 3db gain. The region around us is pretty suburban, and I'd be shocked if another hotspot shows up within 500m of me. But if I look out our upper windows, besides a house or two in all directions, all I can see is trees beyond those houses. In total, visible (LOS) houses from my house is maybe 30 houses because the trees are so mature around here, not to mention we're bordered by a (forest) park. Should I consider going for a higher gain antenna in that case? I presume dipole of some kind? I mean, my best bet would be to put up a 30m tall pole, but...


Nik - 11/14/2021

Height will be more important than antenna. In a highly treed area RF at our freqs is generally hard, so elevation will be your best bet. PoCv11 should even out the playing field for everybody, but it also means it'l be harder to get actual useful gain out of an antenna.


Cathy - 11/15/2021

Great info. You seem like to like helping people. :) When I ordered my hot spot there were no others in my 'red zone'. However now, 5 mos later, there is one... however, there are also more now in my area overall and 3 in my 'sweet spot'. My question is I know the one in my red zone will cut into what mine earns but will the other ones in my sweet spot maybe make up for that? Asking b/c I do have a 'host' who is willing to let me place it at his house (none in his red zone) . Similar terrains, neighborhoods, homes, trees, and number of hot spots. I prefer it ay my house but not if having 1 in the red zone really does cut into rewards. Not hooked up yet... just got it. Thanks so much for your great info!!


Nik - 11/15/2021

Hi Cathy, check this post on HIP 17, it'll help you make an informed decision.


Antony - 11/15/2021

Hi Nik, or maybe someone know... I have a question about length of cable. I bought Bobcat and I need to buy outdoor antenna for miner, also cable for antenna with 40 meters length. 1) can miner work with 40 meters cable between antenna and miner 2) what type of Antenna I need 3) what type of cable I need


Heather McMahon - 11/15/2021

I live in a pretty secluded area with a couple of green hexes. Although they have no witnesses not too far from me. Woodsy area with some hills and lakes. I am trying to decide between a 5.8 DBI & 8 DBI this will go outside high near my roof. I am torn on which one I should get. There is a city with a ton of hexes and witnesses about 26 miles from me.


Uknown - 11/15/2021

Hi, I have ordered a bobcat 300 miner and I like to ask you about the antenna cable length. I understand that the length of the cable is 1 meter that comes with the miner. If I use a different antenna what is the maximum length of the cable I can use in order not to have a signal loss


Nik - 11/15/2021

Depends on the type of cable you use, read this.


Nik - 11/15/2021

5.8 will probably do well, just get it up high. Honestly there won't be a huge difference, especially after PoCv11 which levels out all radiated outputs. More on that here.


Nik - 11/15/2021

Yes, read this. Probably LMR 900.


Andrew Holman - 11/15/2021

Hi, thanks for the great info. I have a 5.8 antenna and was wondering if mounting it to a wall or in front of a window is best? This is on the 2nd story of my house. I do eventually plan to roof mount once I can get access. Also, I recently reinstalled the stock Rak wireless miner antenna too as I lost about 50% rewards for the week the 5.8 was connected and wall mounted. The unit with stock antenna was sitting in the window previously. Witnesses with the 5.8 dropped as well. Went from 13 to 8.


Matt B. - 11/15/2021

Hi Nik, I am trying to trouble shoot for my brother in the Austin Texas area. He has a nebra outdoor and is unfortunately a bit far north of the city in Leander Tx. I imagine it as if he is really far from other hot spots and wants to reach the others towards the city so based on what I read he probably wants a mid to high gain antenna pointed specifically in the direction of the city until the network grows out north closer to him. Would this be the right train of thought and do you have a recommendation on antenna ? Thanks


Nik - 11/15/2021

I'd stay away from high gain antennas and focus on finding a better location.


Lessons Learned From A Year Of Helium Deployments - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium - 11/15/2021

[…] 6 months into this, after writ­ing the first few arti­cles (the Rough Guide and the one on choos­ing an anten­na specif­i­cal­ly), I start­ed get­ting phone calls from peo­ple need­ing help. At first it […]


MIke - 11/17/2021

Hello, everyone. I need your advice. I am currently using the 4db antenna from Bobcat (about 2m High) and am wondering whether a 5db omnidirectional antenna (https://www.wimo.com/de/18003-868) or another antenna would make sense. my location: Little Magenta Dolphin There are tall buildings around me Or does it make sense to put a 2nd antenna over a splitter in the backyard? My building is made of reinforced concrete


Matt B. - 11/17/2021

Not an option but appreciate your feed back. Austin Tx is a bit too dense with miners to find a "better" location . Were in the outskirts of town now so the goal is just to reach further distances. What antenna does best for that ?


Nik - 11/17/2021

A standard RAK 5.8 from Parley Labs or the HNTenna will do fine with clear line of sight.


Matt B. - 11/17/2021

Thanks Nik, I can't believe how many replies you've got on here! Do you have any material on understanding the need, if any, to ground these antennas outside on poles or in our case, a roof? Like, am I going to get hit by lightning and get the house burnt down?


Nik - 11/17/2021

Well, technically you should ground every antenna, though it's usually more to protect your device from static discharge and less about preventing/stopping a lightning strike. If you look at most antennas on buildings (not just Helium ones) you'll see that plenty of them aren't grounded. If your antenna is easily the highest thing around and you have lightning storms regularly I'd be more worried about it. Again, technically you should, in practice many don't.


Rene bartum - 11/18/2021

Thanks Nik for the great article! I was brought here by youtuber Anonymous Miner. I live in a city called Ocala, Florida. The city itself is pretty small considering Orlando, Florida is about 1 hour away. I used https://www.scadacore.com/ to help find elevations and line of sight. (Again thank you for all the information you placed above) I have 2 questions... 1) The goal is get to the highest elevation possible with no obstruction around? 2) There's probably a total of 10 hotspots in my area (compared to over 200+ in Orlando) Does the number of hotspots of witnesses reflect the amount of coins earned?


Nik - 11/18/2021

Yes to 1. For 2, less than 40 hotspots makes it harder to reliably witness enough beacons to earn consistently at higher rates. You earn more per witnessed beacon with less miners, but there are less opportunities to witness beacons.


Johnny - 11/22/2021

Hey gristle! I finally got my antenna up with 21 foot of lmr 400 and the HNTenna. 3dbi you recommended. I reported the dbi in the app accounting for the loss for the cable but not the arrester( another .4? I assume ). Is it detrimental if I don’t change it. I was always curious if what will happen if you report in the app incorrectly. Thank you !


Nik - 11/22/2021

Hi Johnny, right on! I wouldn't worry too much about a loss of .4.


Thorsten - 11/25/2021

Hi Nik, great summary. Thanks a lot for that. I wanna buy your recommended Antenna for outdoor on top of buildings (number 1 on your list). But this one is only for USA and Canada. Do you have by instance a recommendation for Europe? Greetings from Germany, Mate.


Nik - 11/25/2021

Hi Thorsten, HNTenna makes a Euro version, here. :)


Perceival - 11/26/2021

Hi Nik, My country is operating at AS923_1, zone3. Will the "USA/CAN (915) 902-928MHz White Outdoor Helium Antenna" work in my area? Thanks, appreciate your help.


Nik - 11/27/2021

Hi Perceival, looks like that freq plan supports different bands; what country are you in?


Ivan - 11/29/2021

Hello Nik, Thank you very much for publishing this. It is very good to understand better what we are supposed to achieve, i never had contact with info about radio waves and antennas and they are fascinating! I was looking the other day at some cellular towers, and they look like to use many directional antennas to achieve the 360 degree coverage. I'm on the highest floor of a 350' building with access to the roof, do you think I would benefit from this kind of setup? Is it possible to use multiple antennas on the helium network? Thank you very much for your time!


Nik - 11/29/2021

Hi Ivan, Happy to help! I haven't yet seen a working Helium setup with multiple antennas. Lots of folks have tried it, but it's generally far more complicated and a PITA than just setting up an omnidirectional and getting the thing high.


Ivan - 11/29/2021

Thank you for your reply Nik! Sure, they indeed look very complicated. I bought the RisingHF RHF2S308 hotspot with 8dbi antenna, I will try to use it stock, do you think i would benefit from using the Omnidirectional https://hntenna.com? Thanks again and have a great day!


Nik - 11/29/2021

Depends on where you are. In the EU and other lower-power-radio zones, a higher gain can really help. In the US, in general, the lower gain antennas like the HNTenna will do really well.


John - 11/29/2021

Hey Gris! I got decent miners around me. Some right next to me. And others 3-4 miner block spaces away. I live in an apartment on the bottom floor. Do you have any recommendation of where to put the antenna ? And what dbi to run. Im the US. Semi populated area. I was thinking of putting it right outside, hanging it right above my porch. Thank you


Nik - 11/30/2021

Hi John, Yeah, get it outside and as high as possible.


Jackson - 11/30/2021

Thanks for the great article. Is the goal to get as many witnesses as possible? If two miners are both earning the 1.00 reward scale would 100 witnesses do worst than one that witnesses 190? Would a higher witness count mean that the antenna is correctly being utilized for the typography that we are in. We are currently testing 8dbi, 12dbi and 16dbi, all outside about 10m off the ground.


Nik - 11/30/2021

Hi Jackson, no, a beacon can only be witnessed by 10 other hotspots. If more than 10 hotspots witness that beacon, 10 are randomly selected.


Vladimir - 12/1/2021

Hello Nik, thank you for all the information you share with us. Is a VSWR: ?1.63 ok for a 5 dbi antenna? https://store.rakwireless.com/products/5dbi-fiber-glass-antenna-supports-863-870mhz?variant=40024050270406 Thank you!


Nik - 12/1/2021

Yep, anything under 2 is fine.


Phil - 12/7/2021

Hi Gristle, I live in a very rural area with very few hotspots, my miner should be here any day now I am in the UK with the closest big group of hotspots within line of site are about 90km away across the sea. I'm 150m above sea-level with the antenna location 10m above that. Would a directional antenna be better for me


Nik - 12/7/2021

Hi Phil, whew, those are big distances for the EU. Yep, I'd probably go directional, at least until PoCv11 comes online.


johnny - 12/7/2021

Hey gristle, hope you been well. Setting up another hotspot next week at another buddies house. Its up on a hill, pretty decent view underneath not super high up though, but I would want to reach miners to the next city over about 35-38km (kent wa to seattle wa). (fat cluster of miners) going to mount it up on his chimey with lmr400 cable prob 25-30ft. Box will be wifi but in the same room as the router probably 15ft away. I got a 8-9 dbi antenna( cant remember) as part of a bundle with my purchase. Is that too powerful of an antenna since im a bit up hill with elevation. or should i get something like a 5.8 rak wireless. Also, is there a way im suppose to be facing the antenna, like which part of the antenna is forward lol thank you! keep up the good work, you are the light of the helium community XD haha


Nik - 12/7/2021

5.8 will prolly be fine, but you should def test that (blog post here on how to test antennas). Dude, put in the effort to get that thing wired via ethernet, NOT WiFi. WiFi will cause you heartache. If the antenna is directional (usually a square or blocky shape) it'll matter which way you face it. Otherwise, it won't.


johnny - 12/7/2021

You are right gristle, ima whip my butt into shape. Im just gonna run 30ft of lmr400 instead of 28ft and run it down the chipney so i can get my miner next to my modem to be connected via ethernet!!! lol. If 5.8 is good enough, i guess il set my 8dbi aside and buy a 5.8! is rak a good one or do you have recommendation between 5.8-7dbi to buy. thx


Yeah! - 12/7/2021

Hey mate. I am reading again and again to take everything in! May I ask? You mention that "our antennas won´t blast through much more than 2 buildings". Is this true for the european miners too that work in different frequencies? I am a bit new into this, so excuse me if this totally off. If it's right though, it would explain why my 2 isolated miners do not witness each other, while they are in a distance of approx 300-400 meters. Thanks again! *(Large Lavender Wasp, if you fancy taking a look :-)


Nik - 12/7/2021

Yep, though it's less the frequency difference and more the power output; much lower in EU868. Cheers, Nik


Aaron Olson - 12/9/2021

I bought a 10 dbi antenna with 33' of cord. It doesn't seem like the best quality cord. Approximately what is my dbi?


Nik - 12/9/2021

Hi Aaron, the product you linked to says " 32.8FT RG58 SMA cable ,include 1pcs RP-SMA adapter". Best case you're looking at a loss of 4.482 dB from the cable and a gain of 10 from the antenna. There are def better options. :)


Hans - 12/10/2021

Hi Nik, with a lot of enthusiasm I read your posts. You impart an incredible amount of knowledge about helium and everything that goes with it. Many thanks for it! I live in Berlin and in the near future I will install a helium miner on the roof of one of the highest buildings in the city (125m). I expect a bit of a coverage shadow, because the antenna has to be placed on one side of the buildings roof and the length of the mast is limited by the maximum allowed total height. The plan is to use a ground plane antenna with 5.15dbi. After reading your post I am a bit unsure if the antenna gain might be too high. What is your opinion about this? With best regards from Berlin. Hans


Nik - 12/10/2021

Wie gehts Hans! You've reached the limits of my high school German. ;) I think the 5.15 dBi is fine. Test it and see, but I wouldn't worry too much about antennas.


Erick Cortes - 12/13/2021

Hello friend first of all I wanted to congratulate you for all the valuable information that is here! I wanted to ask you which antenna do you recommend? I live in an area where there are many hills and houses around it, I am like in a hole, the closest hotspots are after 10km and the furthest 40, all of them are at a higher altitude ... I can put an 8dbi antenna at a great height ??


Erdi - 12/13/2021

Hello, thanks for the info. I have 2 questions. 1.Is it a huge problem if I install a 3dbi antenna slightly tilted on a high building ? 2. What is the best dbi antenna for a bay area (seaside with low elevation like 3 - 4 m near sea - across coasts are around 10 to 20 km away)?


Nik - 12/13/2021

Thanks Erick! Getting the antenna up high is way more important than the type of antenna. Any of the good ones will do; HNTenna, Mcgill, L-com, etc.


Nik - 12/13/2021

Hi Erdi, I'd work pretty hard to make the the antenna is correctly oriented and not tilted, although at 3 dBi the gain pattern will probably allow for a little error of vertical. "Best dBi" is a red herring. Any decent quality antenna will work well, getting it high is the important part. 10-20km over water is easy for LoRa.


Stacey - 12/13/2021

Hello, I just ordered 2 miners. I live in a very rural area I have two other miners 13 miles away then the closest ones are 30 to 50 km away. Terrain is mostly flat. I plan to mount the antenna outside about 30 ft high maybe a little higher. What antenna and other equipment should I be looking at.


Nik - 12/13/2021

That's not very close; I'd set your expectations low for earnings until you have more hotspots within, say, 5 km. A higher gain antenna might help, although getting the antenna itself higher is what will make far more difference.


Duane Lusted - 12/14/2021

Hi Nik, Only just got into Mining a few days ago, and have a 3 month wait like others for my Linxdot. Live in the UK, and live in a normal 2 story house. Got a few hotspots around where I live, but then others are like 10 miles away. Been reading that UK have max 16dBm, but wanting to go with outdoor Antenna instead of the 3dBi indoor it comes with to increase chances of earnings. So, going by that and the new PoCV11, I assume I want to go a max 4.5dBi (looking at Paradar 868 one)? Or should I just get a max 3dBi outdoor one?


Nik - 12/14/2021

Hi Duane, getting the antenna outdoors and up high will be way more important than type of antenna. Either of those (3 or the 4.5) look fine. Enjoy getting it all set up!


Tony - 12/16/2021

Hi Nik, Dig the content. I am a complete newbee. Have my first miner in hand. I am going to try to get it all up and running in January. I live in South Jordan Ut. The topography is rather flat except for the other houses going up in the area. I have a Direct TV antenna on the house that is no longer used. I was thinking of putting an extension on it of 5 feet or so. And getting an antenna that is 48". Not sure what to buy? 5.6 dBI? Will run cable on outside of house. Will need 30 ft or so. Will the LMR 400 work? Can I add additional miners? Thanks and have a great Christmas.


Nik - 12/16/2021

Hey Tony, welcome to GK-land! 5.8 dBi is fine for your antenna. Getting it up high and outside will give you the best performance. Read this to help you understand the density requirements. Rock on.


Jurgis - 12/17/2021

Hello, i appreciate all this info here, I’m interested in buying this miner and antenna, would you think I’d be able to mine anything or connect with someone else if I live in small city approx 500ppl, got 2 hotspots like 15km away in little more populated city 4000ppl it’s at the same sea level as me but there’s forests starting after like 2km from my location. In Europe, Latvia main city is Riga ,there are many miners There it’s about 60km away But the sea level there Is about 200ft less than at my location but also there’s forests between, I live in 3rd story and I could get antenna on roof which would be like +10metres. Just wondering if there would be any antenna that could get me a connection that far or is it profitable with no connections. I find it hard to find information on this. Any help thanks!


Nik - 12/17/2021

Hi Jurgis, you probably won't connect with the situation you described, but I'm betting new Hotspots will pop up in your city soon.


Con - 12/17/2021

Hey Nik, Thank you for the great article. I'm on the 5th floor of a 8th floor condo. Would I need to ground an antenna mounted on my condo balcony door window? If so, would a lightning arrestor suffice?


Nik - 12/17/2021

Technically you should ground all outdoor antennas. Lightning arrestor is part of that chain for sure. In practice you'll find many antennas ungrounded, even by pros. Your mileage may vary.


Elton Hammonds - 12/18/2021

After reading your article, I'm confused by your statement about just forgetting yagi antennas. Why? I've just ordered my Bobcat 300 and outdoor kit with sun shade from RAK. I'll be monitoring the internal component temps closely and am planning to possibly buy a bigger box, crack open the miner to install some heat syncs and cooling fan arrangement to keep it running at optimal temps while adding a thermostat that will monitor the temp inside the box, triggering a cooling fan for the box when it gets too hot inside. Either way, I plan to mount it about 4-5 feet oof the ground onto a pole that will likely be about 30 feet tall. For an aerial, I was thinking of connecting two antennas. The first would be a whip like this one: Signalplus Lora 868/915MHz 900-930MHZ 15dBi Fiberglass Antenna 86inch for Helium Bobcat HNT Hotspot Lora IoT Bobcat Miner Miner Longfi LoRaWAN Blockchain https://www.amazon.com/dp/B092RVG7JZ/ref=cm\_sw\_r\_apan\_glt\_fabc\_CTWF3Q215J9Y2RXSQ07R?\_encoding=UTF8&psc=1 The second would be this yagi, which I would be properly pointed at an area about 15 miles away with many more miners than I have in my immediate area: https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/rf-solutions/ANT-MF-YAG23/5845729 My plan, as I've imagined it so far, is to use a coax splitter at the top, which I am guessing might cost me 3-5dbi and figure I will have the best possible chance of really helping form a bridge for the helium network into my area by using that particular yagi in conjunction with that particular whip 30 feet up, so as to not be blocked by trees and 2 story houses. But, you're saying the Bobcat will absolutely not allow this??? Based on what? I know the dbi actual total dbi will be slightly diminished based on running on 915mhz, by the splitter and furthermore by the 30 feet of coax to the bottom of the mast. But you say this won't work with the Bobcat 300 because the Helium network won't allow for it? Where do you get that information from? I haven't read that anywhere yet. I'm not saying you're wrong, but I just haven't read it anywhere yet. I have a long background in military communications and had given quite a bit of thought to it based on my geography here in central Florida, just north of New Port Richey, and my familiarly with wavelength propagation. Thanks for posting this article and I hope to hear back from you here or by email at [email redacted] thanks ?


Nik - 12/19/2021

Hi Elton, it's definitely not that the Bobcat or Helium won't "allow" it. There is a long and thorough conversation about the whole thing over here. You're thinking in terms of normal radio communications, where it's Ok if a signal is too strong, or you can still pull useful info out of a signal that's slightly too weak. With Helium, the signal has to fall within a much narrower range in order to "prove" it's where/what it "says" it is. IF you're going to use a splitter (which I generally don't recommend as it adds complexity and decreases signal strength to both antennas), both antennas will need to have the same gain. That's because you can only report one gain to the app, so if your whip is 15 dBi the yagi will also have to be 15 dBi. In the specific model you linked, it's not, it's 23 dBi. So you'd have to use an attenuator to bring it down, which will complicate things and negate the whole purpose of using a yagi. You could, if you like playing with radios and math, futz around with an amplifier for the whip, although that's also not recommended. Because 915 and specifically LoRa is such a robust carrier of small packets of data, you don't need to do anything fancy. With clear line of sight (which you'd need anyway for the yagi) you can easily go 30km, and I've seen up to 200km over water. I mean, I get it. When I first found Helium I thought I could apply a previous career's understanding of RF to make "the ultimate antenna setup." I understand the intent to apply past experience to this in order to increase value/coverage etc. I'm not saying it won't work, it's just generally not worth the effort. Helium is built to keep things ultra simple. Just get a low gain antenna up high, report loss accurately to reflect EIRP, and you'll be doing the best you can do for a given location. Remember, *location* is critical to earnings. Antennas & cables & connectors and loss are what give you the last 10% or so of your earnings.


Nash Willis - 12/19/2021

Hi Nick, I live in Clinton wa. 98236. I would think I could order number 4 on your list and roof mount it and point it at Everett. But I do have one close to me and that and one more within 5 miles of me. Thank you, Nash


Nik - 12/19/2021

Hi Nash, just updated the post. I used to recommend those patch antennas, but that was before PoCv11. There's just not that useful anymore. If you get an HNTenna up high you'll be doing about as well as you can do, although you can def try other antennas as well. The big obstacle will be not that many hotspots near you.


Aaron Olson - 12/25/2021

Thanks for the post. I out mine in the attic for two days and it got more witnesses, but less HNT and less overall activities. Should I put it in a spot with more activity and more HNT or in the spot with more witnesses?


Hans - 12/27/2021

My sister is in a great spot central Charlotte, NC. Only one other on her Hex. I have a stock 4DBi antenna on a Bobcat miner in her office window on second floor. Could I do better 10-15 ft higher up INSIDE her attic? What antenna would be good for inside an attic and close to downtown of a city.


Nik - 12/27/2021

Antenna won't matter much, 3-6 dBi is fine. Under-report on app to punch through known attenuators.


Hans - 12/28/2021

Thank you Nik. Would you say window on second floor is better.. or attic 15 ft higher with the stock 4DBI. Currently getting 1.0 scale and 36 witnesses in window. When you say under-report... are you referring to if the antenna is 4 DBI.. put 2.8? Something like that? Really appreciate your service to the community.


Nik - 12/28/2021

Yep, you're offsetting for the known attenuation of your attic. Can't emphasize enough that you should test that prior to doing it.


Jamie - 12/30/2021

Why are directional antennas no longer recommended after PoCv11? Would the longer range of a 9dbi directional antenna not pass validity checks, as the system assumes the range should be within the parameters of a 9dbi omni antenna?


Nik - 12/31/2021

Hi Jamie, they were never really that useful in the Helium space. I tried a bunch of 'em thinking they'd outperform omnis, but so far that hasn't proven true for my deployments. The range isn't an issue; a 3 dBi will reach 200 km, so there's no "range" reason to get a higher gain antenna.


Matthew Yim - 12/31/2021

Hello again! So I noticed that the antenna you recommended that looks like a dome is only 3dbi. Do you recommend that over rak wireless 5.8dbi? I’m in a suburban area , specifically ashburn, va if you wanna take a look.


Matthew Yim - 12/31/2021

Wow to your most recent comment about 3dbi reaching 200km! I had no idea that was the case?!? Then why are so many people opting for higher gain antennas?


Nik - 12/31/2021

Hi Matthew, antennas don't really matter. I've been using the 3 dBi HNTenna with good results, but any of the good antennas from 3-5.8 will be fine.


Nik - 12/31/2021

I don't know why so many people are using high gain antennas. Probably a mistaken belief that "bigger is better".


Zach - 12/31/2021

I'm about 3/4 up on a small mountain/large hill. I just deployed my hotspot with a Rokland 6dbi about 4 days ago. Might be a bit early to tell, but only witnessing about 3 times a day, and being witnessed about 5 times a day (less than .1 HNT per day). Reading this, I'm wondering if going lower would be wiser since most everyone on the side that isn't blocked by the mountain is below me. However, some of the HS I've witnessed are doing close to .7-1.0 HNT per day with antennas with higher gain than me 7.5-9dbi. Very confusing which route to go here, but also limited timeframe on the data to really make an assessment. I also input exactly 6dbi into the app and wonder if that affects my results as well.


Nik - 12/31/2021

Hey Zach, let it go another day or so before you make a final decision. Earnings probably have less to do with the antenna than the location. Location is critical.


Justin B - 12/31/2021

Hey so I have a question, I have a freedomFi miner that comes with a tiny little 1.2 dBi antenna. It's a relatively new set up. I've got the device sitting next to my second story Window, and it just doesn't seem to be witnessing or being witnessed very often. I've witnessed devices and been witnessed before, but none of my beacons have been seen in the past 2 days, and I haven't witnessed any of my neighbors either, so I'm not really sure what's going on. I can't realistically mount an antenna up any higher due to my HOA, but I can probably put a relatively covert outdoor antenna right outside my Window, as long as I don't drill any holes in the building. Central Massachusetts if it matters. Is this likely worth my time / money? Or is it likely that I'm just not in a good location.


Nik - 1/2/2022

If you can't mount it higher and you're not getting the results you want, I'd look for another location.


Mike B - 1/3/2022

I have a question. I currently have a 5.8dbi Omni directional that is attached to a PVC pipe that is attached to the conduit pipe with electrical wires leading into my house. Could the close proximity to those electrical wires be causing my terribly low earnings? The actual antenna is probably 6 ft above the wires but the coaxial does rum down beside it. Thanks in advance!


Ed - 1/4/2022

Hi Nik, Great information. Thank you! I have a Linxdot miner on order(only one with a reasonable delivery) and getting my site ready. I am in the hills in rural area at 900' AGL. There are multiple miners in front of me in a clear line of sight at an elevation of ~ 300' AGL. My clear line of sight view shed is ~150 degrees. All miners are in this view and between 8- 15km away. I was planning on mounting the antenna outdoors on a building, mast height ~ 45' AGL. I will be just below the deciduous tree canopy which would be 150' in front of the proposed location. It should be noted that there is a radio tower 500' away (behind the proposed location) from proposed location at 150' AGL with fire and police columniations equipment. My concern is having enough reach to hit the miners in my view. Reading through your info i learned that i should not use a high gain antenna but most likely a low or medium gain. What antenna i be looking fo? Can you make a recommendation? I am happy to pay a consulting fee to pick your brain as i want to get this right. Take care, Ed


Nik - 1/4/2022

Unlikely. Earnings are far more a function of location and elevation than antennas/cables etc.


Nik - 1/4/2022

Hi Ed, if you're surrounded by trees it'll be a tough push to get out no matter what antenna you use. I might go with a 5.8 and under-assert gain to give it a little more punch getting through the trees.


Ron - 1/10/2022

Hey Nik, Reading through your articles and comments on articles. Are you saying that asserting the dbi in the app will actually impact your signal to the antenna? I bought a hotspot off a friend and he only had an 8dbi antenna, it's up in my attic until the snow melts and I can get on the roof. No one was witnessing my beacons, but I set the antennae in the app to 5Dbi and now more witnesses. Is this expected if the app setting does have an impact? (have a 5.8dbi on order now, i think the 8 is too much)


Nik - 1/10/2022

Hi Ron, Asserting the dBi will only decrease signal power if the asserted gain puts you over the legal limit. Otherwise, the asserted gain is just used in the calcs. Does that make sense?


Andrés Martínez - 1/10/2022

Hi Nik, thanks for the info! My hotspot is 25m high and theres only like three buildings around the city, and the city is kind of flat. Would you recommend me a 5.8dbi antenna?


Nik - 1/10/2022

That should work fine. :)


Mike - 1/11/2022

Hi Nik -- I finally got a couple hotspots deployed using some of the knowledge gained from you, including this article. One of my recent hotspots (Elegant Turquoise Panda - a bobcat currently with manufacturer antenna sitting in a window) is positioned such that it seems to be witnessing & getting witnessed by hotspots that have lower transmit scales. I am in the process of putting up the "oil can" 3 dbi HNTenna outdoors, as that had been my plan since researching all this last summer. However, I have really started to question whether this will have any better result (OR may actually hurt current results!) than the current setup. In thinking through ways to optimize the setup, I have noticed there are many more hotspots with higher transmit scales to the north. So I came back to this article and, like some of the other comments here, I noted that you removed the recommendation for a directional ("patch?") antenna. I thought that might be a good solution to get more activity with higher transmit scale hotspots. I know "outside and up" is recommended, so I am going forward with the HNTenna, but if a directional antenna might help exclude lower transmit scales, wouldn't that make sense? Thanks in advance. I've really appreciated your articles and see that I've gotten behind a bit!


Nik - 1/11/2022

It's an interesting idea, to aim your coverage at "high quality" hotspots. The only way to know for sure is to test it, but...the location itself is the driver of earnings. A "bad" location is hard to overcome, no matter what you do with elevation, pointing, antennas, etc.


Mike - 1/11/2022

Thanks so much! I think it is a good location -- up on the ridge on which downtown KC lies and, given the first few days with the basics and being indoors, it appears to be earning at to slightly above the network average. I'll let the comment thread know how the switch to HNTenna outdoors works... Next question is "What was the directional antenna you had recommended back in the earlier version of the article?" Also, since it seems you have gotten away from deployments with directional antennas, would you happen to have one you want to get out of your way for cheap? ;-) Again, Thank you!


Nik - 1/11/2022

The heavy duty 9 dBi patch from L-com. I'll hold onto mine for other projects, but they're pretty cheap anyway.


Kevin - 1/14/2022

Hi Nik, what dBi would you recommend for a hilly terrain? I currently have a 5.8 dBi about 20 feet from the ground on top of my house. However, I sit in a depression on 3 sides and moving to another location isn't really an option. I know if I could get it higher it would be better, but what if I can't? Would a 3 dBi be better because of the wider angle to get it out and up and for diffraction or maybe I am understanding that wrong? Not super worried about range, if I could pick up more of the other hotspots within 5km of me I would be happy. Thanks for your time.


Ernest - 1/14/2022

Hey Nik, I live in the suburbs on a hill and have an antenna on top of my roof about 40~ feet above ground. I am running 40ft of LMR400, which comes down to about 1.57db of loss. I used to run a 5.8db antenna in my attic when I had near 0 loss. Now that I've put it on the roof, I swapped to an 8dbi antenna to offset the 1.57db loss from the long cable. Was this a valid action or do you think there would be better coverage with the old 5.8db antenna? For reference, I used to get around 300 witnesses and ~80 witnesses with the miner and antenna in my attic.


Nik - 1/14/2022

Hi Kevin, a 3 dBi antenna (and gain pattern) might help provide broader coverage, but I wouldn't expect a huge change. The obstacle is earth, and no amount of (reasonable) gain will get through a hill.


Mike - 1/14/2022

What type of material can be used for antenna mast. Since these miners seem so light I was thinking of mounting my syncrobit and rak 5.8 antennas using 1.5 " PVC 20 ft high . But im reading generally PVC is a poor material?? I also presume I would still want to use a lighting arrestor although I understand the rak antenna has grounding? Using PVC would I have to ground the mast??


Nik - 1/14/2022

Hi Mike, PVC is probably not the best material for long term outdoor deployments. I use metal masts, 4130 steel (which is probably overkill.) No matter what mast type, you should use a lightning arrestor and run a wire to ground.


Michael - 1/15/2022

Trying to decide between a Hntenna 902-928MHz, and a McGill. Location is flat, in an area well populated with miners. Elevation would be 30ft.


Nik - 1/15/2022

Probably not a huge difference. Location & elevation drive earnings. Both are good antennas.


Patrick - 1/15/2022

Hi Nik, Thank you for really great information. I saw some youtube clips with a guy having similar surrondings as me having good success with a Yagi antenna. So I was thinking of getting one. Then I saw here that you say don't bother with the Yagi. Why is that? Is there some other brand you would prefer if going the directional route? Thanks a lot! Patrick


Nik - 1/15/2022

Typically the Yagi beams are too narrow to cover a broad area, which is what the Helium ecosystem generally wants.


Michel - 1/18/2022

Hye Nik, A high gain antenna might anyway be very useful for acquiring more IoT devices signals... So, I would not discourage 10-12 dBi antennas ...


Nik - 1/18/2022

Hi Michel, hmm, I don't think that's correct. Talking with BFGNeil, the way a high gain works and the protocol sensor data is transmitted on aren't a great match.


Zeth L. - 1/23/2022

Hey Nik, I live in a pretty rural suburban area (flat land, mostly 1 and 2 story houses around, no extremely tall buildings) closest hotspot is around 4km away. I just received a SenseCap M1, and I have it set up with the stock antenna (1.2 dbi I belive) mounted high in a window about 12 ft/3.3m above the ground. Reading your info I assume a 3dbi antenna would suffice if I were to mount it roughly 20-40 ft above the ground and outdoors. The name of my hotspot is Overt Silver Viper in North Carolina. If you could let me know your recommendation and opinion, that would be much appreciated. Thanks!


Jeff S. - 1/25/2022

Hi Nik, Thanks for the interesting piece and while a lot of the jargon is over my head my takeaway is location is key and that the right antenna for the right topography makes a difference. I have a SenseCap M1 about 25' above ground level on my roof with an 8 dbi antenna. Switching from my bedroom window with my 3 dbi to my current set up made a difference but not as much as I would have expected. My pattern looks quite a bit like your NY example showing attenuation and topography (I am Tangy Cobalt Python if you care to look). I will try going back to the 3 dbi on the roof to see what happens. If that shows even better results would purchasing a 5dbi possibly given better results than both 3dbi and 8dbi? Or would 3 dbi and 5 dbi likely be about the same? Thanks in advance


Nik - 1/25/2022

Hi Jeff, it's always a little bit of "test and see" when it comes down to it. I don't think you'll see a huge difference no matter what you do antenna-wise, the key will probably be getting it higher.


Allan - 1/30/2022

Hey Nik, Love all your content especially your Youtube channel! :) Quick question: I live near the ocean which obviously extends out flat, but behind us there is a significant hill that rises up quickly. Lot's of hotspots on the otherside of the hill but probably unreachable... My thinking was to put up a 9 db omni antenna or maybe* a mcgill 10 db directional and point it across the water and go for the hotspots 10-25 kms away as I see a lot of local hotspots with low transmit ratings and thinking maybe they will drag me down a bit. Thanks! Allan


Nik - 1/30/2022

Yep, not unreasonable to routinely hit that distance across the water, but you won't need 10 dBi or even 9 for that. A 3 or a 6 will be fine. I've got a 3 that routinely hits over 100 km away over water, sometimes as far as 200 km. 30 km is nothing. :)


DANIEL KAUFFMAN - 2/3/2022

Do you have a rule of thumb for how you weigh the trade-off between putting an antenna up as high as possible vs. the loss from additional LMR400 cable length? For example: If I am putting an antenna on top of my residential roof in a suburban area, am I typically better off with a very short mast and ~3' of LMR400 cable, or a 30' mast with ~33' of LMR400 cable? Ideally, one would want a 30' mast and ~3' of cable, but that would require putting the helium hotspot outside at the top of the mast which has some complexities and limitations. My initial hypothesis is that height is more important than cable loss, so a taller 30' mast with ~33' of LMR400 cable would earn more than a very short mast with minimal cable loss.


Nik - 2/3/2022

Agree re. height being more important than cable length/loss. At 30' you're not losing much on LMR400.


Drei - 2/9/2022

I have been looking for anyone mentioning multiple Antennas. Could you have 1 that reaches further and 1 that reaches wider in your area? So one higher up and one lower? What about 2 hotspots at the same location, 1 with the 9dbi further reach higher up so it covers the whole city and the 2nd one with a 4/5dbi so it covers the wider area?


Nik - 2/9/2022

Hi Drei, technically you can do this, practically it's usually not worth the hassle. The coverage from even a 9 dBi isn't as narrow as I draw it in the pictures. The location will be far more important than the actual setup on the location. Video on this topic here.


Ioannis F. - 2/11/2022

Hello NIK Thank you for the article and all the info, really great! I am waiting for my Sensecap M1 this Monday and I would like your advice about upgrading the antenna. My height is 100m+ (high rise apartment), my180degrees (front) is unobstructed and quite flat( Qatar ) , 180 degrees on the back the same but my building will be blocking. Unfortunately most of the available hotspots are on the back and some on the front..does an upgrade on the antenna be worth it? I can’t go higher. Thanks for any time you put to share some advice.


Nik - 2/11/2022

Hi Ioannis, I'd start with the stock antenna for 3-5 days and see how well it does. If you're hitting in a nice pattern all around you there's no huge need to upgrade. LoRa is pretty robust and can get through a building or two.


Drei - 2/15/2022

Hi Nik, thanks for the previous, reply. If I read up a little more... which I did, I would have found out the answer. One thing worth mentioning to others is that if you want to run 2 hotspots in the same area, try at least different squares, or have 2 isps, since using 1 isp will cause troubles and can become invalidated. Now, in the UK it seems my choices are limited. What do you and anyone else from the UK recommend? 1) mcgill microwave 4dbi 2) mcgill microwave 6dbi 3) paradar 4.5dbi 4) paradar 6.5dbi My location is London Suburbs towards Essex (Brentwood). One one hand I have London, on the other the countryside. I realise that in London my signal is going to stop the moment it reaches any flats or high buildings, which now you get everywhere.


Nik - 2/15/2022

Hi Drei, any of those will be fine. If you want to support the GK blog you can use this link for the McGills; they give me a referral fee for that at no cost to you. No big deal if you don't, it's just an option. I haven't seen the paradars but as long as they're not knock-off cheapies they'll do a good job as well. There WILL be slight differences in all of 'em, but you'll have to test to figure it out, and from what you've described, any of those gains is a great place to start.


Dan - 2/15/2022

Hey I got a pretty stupid question, but I want to make sure. I want to buy LMR - 600 with my Panther X2. On their site it says this "LoRa Antenna - RP-SMA-K". Which connector should I have on my LMR in order to connect it to that miner.


Drei - 2/16/2022

Hi Nik, of course I will use the referral link:)


Nik - 2/16/2022

Thank you!


Omar - 2/17/2022

Hi nick. I almost follow and read all your articles tried to apply most of the scenario could quite my location. But still in a very bad rewards.. I'm in 70 meter high building behind me the mountains in front of me the hall city. I used 5 dbi I'm no 8 and 12. All of them did nothing. I tried to use the filter. Then directional 8 dbi antenna still my rewards are very bad. Around me lot of p2p internet providers and many higher tower for gsm and tv satellites.. I'm so confused .tried so many ways but nothing helps my sensecap miners or votes miners. However in my cou try it's not easy to get the McGill it rak antenna we are only using the Chinese made antennas. But what to do. 8 months of searching trying and experiments. That's one of my miner try to check and tell me if there's some issues I didn't noticed (Brave carmine donkey) now hooked the 8 dbi directional. Lmr400 4 meters. Open port real up and stable power as well. Many that is in advance. Cheers buddy.


Nik - 2/17/2022

You're one of the highest earning Hotspots in the area, there's probably not much more you can do. Great job so far!


CARLOS MOENCK - 2/20/2022

HELLO I WOULD LIKE YOUR HELP IN CHOOSING THE BEST ANTENNA FOR MY NEW SENSECAP M1 THAT ARRIVES ON WEDNESDAY. I LIVE IN MIAMI, SOUTHWEST, WHERE MOST OF THE BUILDINGS ARE BETWEEN 1 AND 2 STORIES HIGH, BUT THERE ARE LOTS OF BIG, LEAFY TREES. SO MY QUESTION IS THE FOLLOWING, KNOWING THAT I WILL PUT MY ANTENNA AT A HEIGHT OF 4 METERS, I CAN'T PUT IT HIGHER THAN THAT: 1- PLACE AN 8 DBI OMNIDIRECTIONAL RAK ANTENNA. OR 2- PLACE A 3 DBI MULTIPOLARIZED OMNIDIRECTIONAL ANTENNA LIKE THE ONES SOLD BY HN ANTENNA. I THOUGHT ABOUT THE FIRST OPTION BECAUSE WITH THE 8 DBI ANTENNA AND MY LOW HEIGHT I CAN REACH EVERYWHERE AND PASS ANY OBSTACLE LIKE TREES AND HOUSES HIGHER THAN THE HEIGHT OF MY ANTENNA. I THOUGHT ABOUT THE SECOND OPTION BECAUSE OF THE OPPORTUNITY TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE MULTIPOLARITY BUT I THINK THAT THE 3 DBI INTENSITY WOULD BE LIMITING MY POSSIBILITIES TO REACH MORE HOTSPOTS DUE TO MY LOW HEIGHT. SO I APPEAL TO YOUR HELP AND EXPERT OPINION ON THE SUBJECT HELIUM, FEEL FREE TO RECOMMEND ME WHAT IN MY CASE YOU WOULD DO. AND IF YOU HAVE PURCHASE LINKS FOR THE TWO VARIANTS IT WOULD ALSO BE OF GREAT HELP. THANK YOU IN ADVANCE FOR YOUR VALUABLE HELP AND COOPERATION WITH THE HELIUM COMMUNITY AND HAVE A HAPPY SUNDAY.


Nik - 2/20/2022

Hi Carlos, if you're that low and have to punch through trees, a 6 dBi from McGill will get you the best of both worlds. Link here: https://grstl.ink/mcgill-6dbi


CARLOS MOENCK - 2/20/2022

THANKS A LOT GRISTLE KING YOU ARE THE BEST


Shukhrat - 2/28/2022

Hi Nik, Very helpful article. What would you recommend for me? I live on a hill with lots of trees and 2-3 story buildings. Basically New England. The hotspot is nice vanilla jaguar. The back of the house is pretty much blocked by the hill. However, I plan on putting my miner up on a tree, probably 50-75' up in the air. Hopefully, that can help with the hill. What would you recommend for antenna?


belvin.jerrod - 2/28/2022

Hi Nik, I am getting ready to put a hotspot @ a friends house. Hotspotty & HV mark it as a GREAT spot & simulation. Due to his HOA, he cannot have an antenna on the house. That being said we can get it up to the attic. Which antenna would we use? The Hntenna indoor or outdoor? Thanks


Nik - 2/28/2022

Prolly a higher gain if you have to put it inside.


Shukhrat - 2/28/2022

Hi Nik, I had posted a question earlier today. Would you be able to give an antenna recommendation?


Nik - 2/28/2022

The McGill 6 should be fine: https://grstl.ink/mcgill-6dbi


Chris Evans - 3/12/2022

Hi Nik, thanks for the continued quality content! HNTenna doesn't have a 915MHz option for AUS/NZ, will the US/CAN one work with my 915MHz hotspot here in AUS? If not, do you have any ideas on suppliers that manufacture multi-polarized antennas for the AUS/NZ 915MHz network? Cheers mate, appreciate all the great work you do. :) Chris


Nik - 3/13/2022

Yep, the US915 will work just fine over there. I checked with David de Haaij on this, you've got an "expert" go ahead from him. :)


J-F - 3/14/2022

Hi Nik, Do you known Laird Antenna? I would your knowledge in Multi Polarized Laird Multi https://www.digikey.ca/en/products/detail/laird-connectivity-inc./TRAB9023NP/3521732 vs HnTenna ANT-NH900. Did you known if this antenna is similar? The Antenna is cheaper like hntenna and no custom and duty to Canada. Regards J-F


Nik - 3/14/2022

Looks like a 3 dBi antenna, I don't see anything about multi-polarization. Another 3 dBi option is the McGill.


pcste - 3/14/2022

Hi Nik Im still a bit confused about cable loss. I'm looking to put an antenna on a roof in a small city in uk (no high buldings around but a bit of a hill on one side) was going to get a mcgill 3dbi. i have to run nearly 40ft of lmr-400 cable which would give me a loss of 1.7db does that mean my antenna then becomes 1.3dbi ? if i am running a lot of cable should i choose a 4dbi or 6dbi because of cable loss? Thanks


Nik - 3/14/2022

It won't change the radiation pattern, but it will bring the signal strength down to 1.3 as you've calculated. A 4 or 6 dbi antenna might be a better option there. I'd test your stock antenna first, you might be surprised by performance.


Richard edwards - 3/15/2022

Hi Nik, great info. Seriously, good advice for noobs. However, I disagree with some points. Firstly, high gain antennas should always be first choice. All the sites I designed for the first UK national IoT network had procom 9dBi antennas, be the sites 10m or 70m high. So many people make this mistake. Secondly, higher gain antennas do not fly over the top due to being laser like. The diagrams are just the 3dB beamwidth (area where power is half of maximum). Coverage is still provided outside this area. Added to high elevation and you're still good. For example, the sites we had in London provided good coverage even down the thin narrow streets with high buildings either side. Thirdly, correct about indoor propagation loss.. with the sigfox network i worked on 5m inside was OK, but much more than that was a problem. Quite happy to provide more info on cellular network radio planning, performance and optimisation.


Nik - 3/15/2022

Hi Richard, great points on the overshoot; I've got to update that graphic. :) Keep in mind that with Helium, people are deploying to maximize earnings, not provide sensor coverage. In the early growth of the network, high gain antennas were penalized. At this point (March 2022) the gain doesn't matter much, so a high gain is fine. Interesting to hear from a real world expert, thanks so much for chiming in!


Bryan - 3/18/2022

Hi Nik, Thanks so much for the information! I just got a SenseCap M1 and set it up (Brave Cornflower Rattlesnake). I live in an area that is a bit congested with other miners at resolution 10 there is 1 too many and at resolution 4 there are 455 too many so, the transmit scale all around me hovers around .50 - .65. There are nearby cities that have really sparse network density (all resolutions are wide open) and when I witness units there they have full transmit scales. There is probably room for improvement with my setup - maybe trying to optimize for reaching out to the less populous networks using an 8 or 9dBi antenna? I rent a townhome with thin roofs (no insulation and asphalt shingles) and currently have my miner set up, indoors, in a window sill on the 3rd floor and am using the included 2.6dBi antenna. I might be able to mount an exterior antenna to the outside wall of my unit (though the HOA might not like that). Today I found that I have access to the attic and can mount the antenna about 15-20 feet higher than I would be able to mount it on the outside of my unit. What would you suggest as the best setup? 1. Get an aftermarket antenna and park it in the window sill (25-28 feet high). 2. Get an aftermarket antenna and mount it to the outside wall of my unit (25 - 32 feet high, maybe). 3. Get an aftermarket antenna and mount it in the attic (35-40 feet high). After a few hours of googling I can’t find a good resource on how much power I may lose putting it in the attic (some people say as much as 50%).


Nik - 3/19/2022

Higher is usually better, at those distances you can manage the cable loss with thicker cable (LMR400 or 600).


Terry - 3/21/2022

Hi Nik, Im considering to start my mining journey and I would really appreciate your help. I live in the countryside in the UK (near Ripponden) where around here there are only 5 hotspots about 1.6-2.4km away from me. There are not a lot of houses in the village and there are mostly fields and hills. I was thinking of my putting the antenna at the top of the house (outside) through my attic room so roughly around 7-8m elevation. Could you please advise what would be the best antenna for my use and whether you think there would be any decent rewards? Thank you in advance for your time


Nik - 3/21/2022

Hi Terry, a 6 dBi from McGill should be fine if you can get it outside. Rock on!


Lach - 3/21/2022

Hi Nik, Am looking to order a 3dBi antenna, is there any significant difference between say the ANT-NH900-OUT-WHITE and a standard fiberglass pole 3dBi (860-960MHz)? Cheers


Nik - 3/21/2022

Performance-wise, yes. Earnings-wise, probably not huge. Really depends on where you're deploying. In an urban environment with lots of reflective surfaces a multi-polarized antenna can make a big difference. In suburban and rural environments it may not make as big of a difference.


JimmyWireless - 3/24/2022

I have a two way splitter, go with one Omni and one directional?


John - 3/28/2022

I live at a condo and unlikely to be able to get my miner outside on the roof. Area around is fairly flat with a few hills, suburban. My options are outside, 2nd floor balcony or inside 3rd floor window, there's a tree about 20-30feet in front of the window. Balcony is also near said tree and would also be somewhat blocked by the neighbor 15 feet away. Trying to figure out which of those is best. Considering rak vs higher DBI hntantenna, or if I can ever find a multipolarized 8dbi.


Hamazz - 3/29/2022

Nik, Love your hard work and support to the community. I got a bit of confusion on best setup, Lower vs higher Dbi, thinking of going higher gain directional tilted down slightly. I currently got a 5.8Dbi omni antenna at a height of 12m off the ground, 75m up a hill, 87m total, looking onto the city with flat topology. There is nothing behind me, thinking of going for a 8dbi directional antenna tilted to focus on the city below, as there is nothing behind except mountains. Due to some tall buildings lower down the hill, part of the signal gets blocked im thinking as the witnesses have dropped from 45 odd to 13 recently. and i know there are at least 70 plus hotspots in the vicinity. Any advice


Nik - 3/29/2022

Hi Hamazz, I'd probably leave the setup you have, although you're welcome to experiment. Did witnesses drop after you changed antennas, or was there nothing on your end that you did?


John - 3/29/2022

Hi NIk, Any thoughts on mine above about the 2nd or 3rd floor condo / what antenna to use?


John - 3/30/2022

Hi Nik, Any recommendations for my placement/antenna? (The one above with the 2nd floor balcony and 3rd floor window)


Hamazz - 3/30/2022

Nik Did not change the antenna yet, i think changes in the network and OTA firmware upgrade could be the reason for reduced witnesses. I also got a 3dbi Mcgill Omni which i have not used yet, was trying to decide between going for that or a directional, as there will be no hotspots behind me, so half the signal going out by the omni will not achieve anything, focusing the Dbi on just the forward facing would result in more witnesses?


Shanon - 3/30/2022

Nik, Would fitting a cavity filter to a 6Dbi omni antenna improve the signal quality and cut out the noise of the other frequencies resulting in better rewards?


Pete - 3/30/2022

Great article! Thank you so much. Once thing is unclear for me. I understand the higher the dbi the more laser beam, does that mean that higher dbi are NOT omni-directional? Do I need to rotate my antenna 20 degrees at a time for a week to see if my results will improve?


Nik - 3/30/2022

The whole laser beam idea is a little over exaggerated. Higher dBi will focus your signal more, but it's typically not enough to really worry about. In general, it squashes it from the top and bottom, just like if you pushed on a balloon from the top and bottom. No need to rotate.


Nik - 3/30/2022

Hi John, I'd just try both for 10 days each. There's no clear/definite answer without gathering data.


Nik - 3/30/2022

You *might* see better results with a directional antenna, but unless there's anything blocking your current signal path you probably won't notice a difference.


Nik - 3/30/2022

Only if there's current high interference from other radio signals; if you're on a cell tower or near a cell site.


ken - 3/30/2022

Hi, Is there a difference between the McGill 6or 8 DBI and one you get from Amazon?


Nik - 3/30/2022

There certainly can be. McGill tunes & tests theirs, so you know what you're getting. The Amazon ones can sometimes be smoking hot deals and sometimes be...smoking hot piles of garbage.


elize - 3/31/2022

Great advice


Pete Kepler - 4/3/2022

What do you think is better; antenna in an attic at 35 feet AGL or outside 15 feet on the top of a back porch?


Nik - 4/3/2022

Hi Pete, you'll have to test that. I'd start with the 35' AGL option.


Mr. Rado - 4/8/2022

I have 10 miners and use rfareas magnetic field antennas. the best for me. from the center of my town (Sofia) I have links up to 40 km. and there are very many interferencies near the antennas. good result for me.


Sebastian - 4/16/2022

Hi Nik I live in Hornsby, Australia, my house is surrounded by hills, mountains(lots of trees), only 5% of surround area lower than my house. I mean my house is located under valley. I recently bought HNTenna and installed to replace normal 3dbi antenna(before 6dbi) but it looks very similar performance so far. Do you recommend any other antenna? or HNTenna is better than other? in my house conditions.


Nik - 4/16/2022

Hi Sebastian; no antenna will blast through earth. Not much you can do in the bottom of a valley. See if you can find a better location for it.


Yoann - 4/16/2022

Nik, Thank you so much for your hard work and support to the community, I'm looking for the SenseCAP M1 hotspot EU868 I'm in France, it work on other frequency and I'm a bit confused about the best setup to choose in my case, I'm in a small building at the first floor so not so high, other buildings are higher the building is located around a circle place with other buildings around the circle and some trees in the middle of the circle place there is two streets crossing each other with car traffic and a subway station underneath In the back of the building it is enclosed space with other buildings Also there is already 2 hotspot already visible on the map around about 150 meters (500 feet) away each - should i use the 2.8 dBi because of the round circle space at short distance ? - or the 5.8 dBi to go through the few threes and many cars ? - or the 8 dBi to go through all buildings through the place ? Thank you in advance for your time,


Nik - 4/16/2022

Hi Yoann, 5.8 will will probably be fine for ya. Rock on!


5 Plug & Play Income Ideas 2022 | Crypto Gem Tokens - 4/17/2022

[…] antennas article: https://gristleking.com/antennas-for-helium/ Helium placement article: […]


Alan - 4/18/2022

Good morning, I have a 9dbi mcgill antenna on the roof at 20 meters height + or - I leave a hospot link but it gives me invalids in several hospots at 30km... https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/112gw67DtWkv9oK6kGi3EX2LnKZPAU4D5AeYR1EtF8P42sfamUsW help please simulation , Would a 6dbi mcgill one be better?


Nik - 4/19/2022

I'd look at how many invalids vs valids you're getting, and which are high and low value. Does that make sense?


Richard S. - 4/21/2022

Nik, you are a great help to the community, much appreciated. I've spent a considerable amount of time trying to find a straight answer to this, but apologize if you've addressed it before. Currently, What happens if you don't update your aftermarket antenna specs on the Helium app? Will it affect the performance on the antenna if the info is not updated correctly to reflect proper DBis? Would the update be needed for each antenna/gain option to actually reap the benefits? As a rule how long would you run each gain option as a test to have an appropriate data sources to pick a winner? Then once you pick a winner update the specs on the Helium app? Cheers Richard


Nik - 4/21/2022

It'll decrease signal strength if you assert a gain that puts you over the legal limit. More over here. 7 day minimum to get good numbers. Check the YouTube interview with Matthew Patrick for more on collecting good stats for Helium related decisions.


The Crawfords - 4/25/2022

Hey Nik, I live out in the country with hills and trees, my nearest fellow hotspot is over a mile away. s it still worth it to set up a hot spot? Gunny


Nik - 4/25/2022

Hey Gunny, if you've got a clear line of sight to that other hotspot you're likely to connect with it. LoRa can easily do a mile. Ideally you'd want a few other hotspots AND have a use in mind for the coverage Helium provides.


Josh - 4/26/2022

Hi Nik- I bought the Peoples Antenna based off your recommendation above. They charged my card but never received any order confirmation and they won’t return support emails. Have you found them to be a generally good company? Do you have a backup budget selection? Thanks for the great content!


BT - 4/26/2022

Any suggestions to maximize my earnings Sensecap M1 with 5.4db antenna placed on the second floor in my house next to the window currently getting around 3$ worth of HNT If I buy a higher DB antenna my earning would increase? whats the best one ? saw filters? Amplifiers? Seeing many things online and getting confused as I dont want to spend too much so what would be my best options https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/11ADQM15ioZM4KnQoTG7sUAfFe73mox61fdSpZmzUFQcFXKjxyy


Nik - 4/27/2022

Higher gain antenna probably won't do as much as getting your antenna outside and up higher. :)


Nik - 4/27/2022

Hi Josh, they're a generally good company, though growing fast and will have stuff like this slip through the cracks. I'd re-ping them on email one more time, and check through your spam for confirmation. McGill are also good antennas.


Georgi - 4/27/2022

Hi. I want to get Senscap M1 with antenna but I don't know which antenna shoud i get... This is my location https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/hex/881ec152b7fffff Behind me It is suburb area with 1/2 houses everywhere and in front of me it is pretty much wooded area. What antenna shoud i get 5.8 , 8 , 10 . Which one should be the best in my case?


Nik - 4/27/2022

Hi Georgi, I think you'd be fine with a McGill 6 or maybe higher. Remember, it's more a factor of how high you get your antenna and how much line of sight it has to other antennas than it is which antenna you buy.


Georgi - 4/27/2022

I would probably put it on 10 meters (+- 1-2 meters). I don't know which one should I choose. I would really appreciate it if you tell me which one in particular is the best. This is a reply to your comment APRIL 27, 2022 AT 7:38 AM. Thank you in advance, Georgi


Nik - 4/27/2022

Hi Gerogi, click this link to go to the McGill 6 dBi, which should be fine for you. Remember, the antenna doesn't matter as much as the elevation.


Georgi - 4/28/2022

The elevation in my city is around 390 meters. Will the 6 dbi antenna be the best choise for me?


Nik - 4/28/2022

Hi Georgi, citywide elevation has very little to do with what antenna you should use. It's the specific elevation at the point of install, and how much clear line of sight (to other Hotspots) that gives you. The 6 dBi should be fine.


Moe - 5/3/2022

Hi nik this my location and i want your advice which antenna you recommended to use https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/11e9gtZYsxr1EE42SdipydLU6Ti3PJVXpdNRqAZv3W8XFRwBqgZ


ryan - 5/9/2022

I just want to know where to get the equipment your using


Nik - 5/9/2022

Anything in particular? McGill's got a wide range.


Jeff S. - 5/20/2022

Hey Nick, quick question. My buddy says to purchase a ‘signal booster’ which attaches to the Miner (Bobcat 300 - in my case) to boost signal ex: FBP-915S. Not near any cell tower and antenna is high above the roof lines in a suburban neighborhood. My first thought is overkill and signal loose out of the gate. Should I consider this booster add-on or chalk it up as BS? Thanks for your time, Nik!


Nik - 5/20/2022

I wouldn't worry about it, but only testing will tell. I haven't used a signal booster on any of my setups so far, and some of them are miles from the nearest Hotspot. All performing fine.


Rusty Ruch - 5/22/2022

Is there info on here about how to get my Bobcat out of relay mode?


Nik - 5/22/2022

Yep, go here. Light Hotspots should make this a thing of the past.


Allen - 5/24/2022

how many km will the 5 dbi - 9 dbi antenna's reach in ideal location? what do they max out at?


Nik - 5/24/2022

Oh, 200 km with clear line of sight is not unheard of, and that's for a 3 dBi antenna.


Lyubo - 6/1/2022

Hey Nik, great job with the information above. You are a master at this and a fantastic member of the community. I recently got my Bobcat 300 and was wondering if it would be safe to put the stock antenna outdoors on the roof for example for better coverage. I really feel that it would improve my earnings as currently, I have it set up inside next to a window. Also, and sorry if you had already addressed this, but would the connection from a wi-fi signal (the signal is coming from an extremely stable 4G connection from a router) be much worse than ethernet? Thank you in advance and keep up the great content!


Nik - 6/1/2022

Hi Lyubo, fine to set up the stock Bobcat antenna outside, I believe it's outdoor rated. Almost always better to get the antenna outside & up high if possible. As far as WiFi vs ethernet, I always figure out how to connect to ethernet cables as that avoids any issues with WiFi, but if WiFi is your only option that's fine.


hangman131st - 7/5/2022

looking to getting into mining is a 15dbi over kill looked online and seen one that is compatible with a bobcat 300, I live in an area that is mostly flat and lots of trees. I would like to get as much range as I can or is there a limit on what I can use. I live in Michigan


Nik - 7/5/2022

Hi Hangman, yes, 15 dBi is overkill. You'll probably be best served with a 9 dBi, just get it up as high as you possibly can. Location is far more important than antenna (or elevation, for that matter).


Martin - 7/12/2022

Hi Nik.I hope you can help with this. I live in Gillingham dorset in UK at altitude 70m.there are a few hotspots in my town but they all seem to be inactive. in town 4 miles away from me there are hotspots which are working fine but the town is at altitude 200-220m, there is a chance to connect with them but what antenna should I buy? 6dbi, 6.5dbi or even bigger ?I would say my town is between the hills. second issue is placement of hotspot. In attic is usually 33C. is that too hot for miner?i can place it on second floor of my house but will have to run a 5m cable. what would be the best? hope you can help. regards


Nik - 7/12/2022

Hi Martin, No antenna will blast through hills. There's a chance the signal will bounce off something and get to the far side, but that's unreliable. In general, 6-9 dBi is going to be your range, and anything in there should work well. The best place for an antenna is up high, the best place for the miner is usually somewhere in a temp range humans can tolerate. Specific miners have specific temp parameters, double check yours. I'd run the 5m of cable to keep the antenna high and the miner out of the heat.


bonusik - 7/12/2022

hi. Thank you for your response. the stronger antenna, less beamwidth it has, for example 6,5dbi has 30degrees vertical, but 8.5dbi has only 10degree vertical. would that matter around hills?so can 6.5dbi reach higher over the hill then 8.5dbi?Am i understanding right? I am thinking about 6dbi but if 7 or 8dbi will work better then I will go for it. regards


Nik - 7/12/2022

Don't worry so much about the "right" antenna. Location is far more important. Antennas don't really matter. Any decent brand from 6-9 dBi will do as well as anything else in the location you're describing.


Xavier - 7/17/2022

Hello, We are having Milesight helium hotspot, model:UG65-868M-EA-H32. Please can you recommend the suitable antenna models for this hotspot to improve coverage and earnings. https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/1121aRSBSxheung9eFVStXmcV3hsyjU6wcWYkhUNeVGBD8H1qPKh Thanks,


bonusik - 7/21/2022

hi. Thank you for help. 6dbi antenna bought and instaled. I had 4dbi antenna for 2 days and then swapped on 6dbi 2 days ago but I can not see any difference in witnesses, rewards etc. is that normal?or should I wait a few more days? regards


Nik - 7/21/2022

Pretty normal. Switching antennas typically doesn't do a ton to change things; location & elevation are what really matter. I'd wait a few more days to make sure. 7 day minimum for assessing, sometimes more depending on local density.


jeremy west - 11/18/2022

i live 7 miles and have a 50 feet or so placement what dbi antenna should i get im so confused


Nik - 11/19/2022

Hi Jeremy, don't worry too much about the dBi. It won't make a huge difference. If you need "buy this antenna" advice, I'd just pick up a Parley Labs 5.8.


2024 update: Utah’s crypto antenna mystery remains unsolved - Swap - 5/24/2024

[…] the owner of the website/blog Gristle King – A Guide to DePIN, only known as ‘Nik,’ shared a photograph of what appears to be him standing next to an antenna for a Helium hotspot as he […]


How Much HNT Will My Hotspot Earn?

· 41 min read
Nik
Site Owner

One of the most frequently asked questions in all of the Helium space is: “How much will I earn?”

Here's how to get to a reasonably accurate prediction for your location. We'll start with numbers, do some more numbers, do a little educated guessing, and end up with a conservative estimate of how much a given spot will earn.

The Global Average

Starting at the top, the global daily average for a Helium Hotspot that's online is .091 HNT/day. How did I get that? Math.

I took the share of HNT we Hotspots get monthly (26%), added in the unused HNT from Network Data Transfer, removed the Hotspots that are offline, and came up with a reasonable global average. Just in case you missed it above:

The Global Average For A Helium Hotspot is .091 HNT/day As Of March 6th, 2022.

So, is that YOU will get? On average, probably. Of course, if you're reading this blog, you're probably above average. In that case, how do we make a reasonable guess for how much YOU will make, in YOUR location. Lemme show ya:

https://youtu.be/o5uHEK6eLXg

Here's how I'd do it: Take the Global Average as my start point, see if my Regional Average is higher or lower, take a look at local res 8 hexes, decide whether or not my deployment will be above or below average, and make an educated guess off of that.

If you want help with that, try either of the Helium Courses on this site, or you can join the Gristle Crüe and jump in on weekly calls where you and a bunch of other folks into Helium can learn from me and each other on how to crush it in Helium.

Here are all my sources for this info:

  • Number of Hotspots, DC burned, HNT Price: Helium Explorer
  • Percentage of Hotspots Online: DeWi ETL
  • Number of HNT Distributed Per Month, PoC & Network Data Transfer Percentages: Helium Docs

Here are the resources used in the video:

I'll finish up with what Helium USED to be like. This was post was initially written in mid-March of 2021. I'm leaving it up mostly for historical purposes (and so some of the older comments make sense.) Rock on!


LEGACY STUFF - READ THIS IF YOU WANT TO SEE WHAT HELIUM WAS LIKE IN MAY OF 2021

Oh, the other question you'll have is along the line of: If I only have XX hotspots in my city, and I own them all, how much can I expect to earn? There are many caveats to this, mostly centering around how many of those hotspots can "see" each other. One SUPER important thing to note from these examples is that most hotspots owners do a poor job of deployment, earning on average 2 HNT/day. An optimized hotspot with good placement should earn at least 8 HNT/day. If you'd like help with doing a much better job, consider hiring me to help you maximize your earnings.

I'll give you a few real world examples of 7 day earnings. (data here, as of May 9th, 2021).

  • Flagstaff, AZ - 6 hotspots - 79.52 HNT
  • Jerome, AZ - 6 hotspots - 97.91 HNT
  • Midland, TX - 4 hotspots - 57.3 HNT
  • College Station, TX - 4 hotspots - 68.25 HNT
  • Charlottesville, VA - 4 hotspots - 46.15 HNT
  • Erie, PA - 4 hotspots - 25.89 HNT
  • Elfrida, AZ - 3 hotspots - 57.98 HNT
  • Arizona, TX - 2 hotspots - 24.67 HNT
  • Columbus, GA - 2 hotspots, 42.50 HNT
  • Three Rivers, MI - 2 hotspots - 14.26 HNT

For those of you who want to see how I come up with averages and be able to do it themselves, here’s a 10 minute video that uses Sitebot. Sitebot used to be a superb resource, but has degraded and is no longer good for this. Still, I'll leave this up so you can see the thought process.

This will show you how much HNT you should expect to earn on average, and you’ll learn how to easily refine that number for yourself, in your city.

https://vimeo.com/523620857

Before we move on, let me set some expectations. This post was originally written in mid-March of 2021. We only had 22k hotspots on the network at the time. 3 weeks later (April 5th) we had 25k. That number will continue to go up, probably to 200k by the end of the summer of 2021. Within a few weeks of it being written, all the hard numbers in this post will be wrong. Still, you can use the method in the video to calculate what the numbers *should* be for the next few weeks for you.

First, I’ll knock out my assumptions:

I’ll assume that you are NOT going to plug in your hotspot at Mom’s house and walk away. If you do that, you should expect to earn less than .1 HNT a day.

I’ll assume that you’re willing to spend money, time, and effort to optimize your hotspot placement. As in, more time than your friends and family think is “reasonable”.

As I learned long ago from Shawn Alladio (one of only two humans to ever ride a jetski over a 100' wave) if you want to do awesome things you should be unreasonable. Be like Shawn. She’s rad.

I’ll assume that you understand the general intent of Helium. Psst, it’s to provide as much useful coverage as possible for IoT devices running on the Helium network.

Finally, I’ll assume you’re not contemplating a “lone wolf” placement, which is one where there is no possible way for another hotspot to connect with you via radio signal.

Ok, with that out of the way, let’s start high. Like, way high. The top earning hotspot in the world (as of March 14th, 2021) is Rough Chili Bird, in Springdale, Arkansas. Before I tell you how much HNT they’re earning, let’s define “top earning.”

Basically, no Helium data for earnings is useful at anything less than a 7 day cycle. 24 hour, even 48 hour stats are just too variable to be useful. As an example, here are the daily earnings for a reasonably high performing hotspot.

As you can see, they vary wildly day by day, and if you constantly fiddle with it in order to improve, you’ll be responding to noise, not signal.

Helium is all about signal.

Back to the world’s highest earning hotspot, Rough Chili Bird.

The Bird earned 2,850 HNT over the last 30 days. Yeah, that’s a lot. At current HNT prices well, people work a lot harder for a lot less money per month.

Second place is Docile Bone Pony over in Cambridge MA, earning 1,787 HNT in the last 30 days. No, I don’t make these names up, and neither do the hotspot owners. They’re randomly assigned.

Here’s the top 10 earners, pulled off of Sitebot.

So that’s the MOST you’re likely to make. You probably won’t make that much. I went through a few cities (including my own, America’s Finest City) to give you some averages.

For your average hotspot, you’re looking at right around 8 HNT/day.

I got that by going through and weeding out all the hotspots making less than 1 HNT/day. If they’re doing that, it’s pretty obvious they’re not in this to crush, and that’s my goal. CRUSH.

I was curious about the crushers, so I went through the top 1,000 Hotspots in the USA and found the average was more than twice as high; about 23 HNT/day. You can reasonably expect that if you optimize density, elevation, and antenna, in that order.

I went through a few example cities (San Diego, Seattle, London, and Berlin) and then I looked for the answer to the second most popular question I get asked, which is:

“I live in a small city and could buy 5–10 hotspots right now. Should I do it? How much will I make?”

The stats are in the video, here’s the boring stuff for those of us who read.

San Diego has 142 hotspots earning more than 1 HNT/day. The average hotspot earns 9 HNT/day, and the top earner pulled in 1,334 in the last 30 days.

Seattle has 90 hotspots earning more than 1 HNT/day. The average hotspot earns 8 HNT/day, and the top earner pulled in 706 in the last 30 days.

Seattle Helium Hotspot Earnings

London has 188 hotspots earning more than 1 HNT/day. The average hotspot earns 8 HNT/day, and the top earner pulled in 1,266 in the last 30 days.

Berlin has 134 hotspots earning more than 1 HNT/day. The average hotspot earns 12 HNT/day, and the top earner pulled in 1,617 in the last 30 days.

Berlin Helium Hotspot top earner

Finally, I found a small cluster of hotspots that is typical of any small deployment in a city. It was on the south side of Cypress, in Limassol. While there are 10 hotspots deployed there, only 5 have been running for 30 days or more. Those 5 average 16 HNT/day, but the top earner only pulled in 592 in the last 30 days.

Helium Hotspots in Limassol, Cypress

This should help you get a rough idea of how much you’ll make. For more on Helium Hotspot Optimization you can read my guide over here.

If you’d like a different take on earnings with an orientation toward what might happen in the future as the network grows, check out Steve’s article over on DeWi.

Best of luck with your deployments, let’s grow this network together and CRUSH! If you’d like help with a Helium deployment, from a single hotspot to an entire ecosystem, consider hiring me.

None of this is investment advice. Keep reading and learning. You could lose everything. I hope you don’t. I hope you win so big that you track me down and plant a big wet kiss on my cheek and slip a QR code with 10 BTC into my pocket because you just have that much to spare. Here’s to your success!

Archived Comments

Mark Cobleigh - 3/18/2021

In your article about maximizing your hotspot you mentioned that we shouldn't use more than 5 feet of cable. If that is impossible, what is the max length we should run if we're using LMR400 cabling? I have a few spots that will be very high and very difficult to get to after initial install (renting a boom lift) and want to run about 50 feet of cable down to about 15 feet above ground where the hotspot will be. I hate to go through all this just to find out that 50 feet of cabling is too much. Also, I can't seem to find much information on "terminating" LMR400 wire. With regular coax I have my own tools and can run my own cabling from a spool of it. Can I do the same with LMR400? Thanks in advance, and great articles to read, best yet.


Nik - 3/18/2021

Hey Mark, I need to re-word that "5' rule". It's a good idea to keep cable as short as possible, but it's not a game-ender if you have to make a long run. That's what low loss cable is for. One of the highest earning hotspots out there uses 60' of LMR400, although that is definitely the exception, not the rule. :). 100' is probably the max length, but you're going to lose a fair amount over that length, so you'll need to offset that with antenna selection (beyond the scope of this article & comment) and elevation. To terminate LMR400 you'll probably spend about $300 in new tools, then there's the cost of the cable & the connectors. You're probably better off just getting USACoax to build you custom lengths. Here are the recommended tools from that linked video on how to terminate: CCT-02 cutting tool - $45 CST-400 prep tool - $100 CT-300/400 crimp tool - $150 Biodegradable silicon lubricant


Robert - 3/18/2021

I use 12' of LMR-400 on a 5dBi Nearson antenna and earn roughly 20HNT per day with roughly 8-10 recent witnesses. My Antenna is around 24' off the ground and on a hill with a good line of sight. I used USA Coax to get 10' and 2' LMR-400 cables connected by a lightning arrestor. There isn't really a hotspot that should be witnessing mine that isn't. To me, height and line of sight are the main factor. Having said that, I could have settled on only 5' of cable, but was concerned about making the mast top-heavy with the enclosure and hotspot mounted near the top. Wondering if you've had any trouble with wind on that super high mast in San Diego? I'm planning on setting up 3 outdoor antennas in a rural area so that they can witness each other and provide coverage to a small city of around 50,000 people. I'd like to shorten the coax, but am concerned about the top heaviness. Any tips?


Nik - 3/18/2021

Robert, agree 100% re height & line of sight; those (and correct density) are what determine the majority of earnings. Connections are a distant fourth. I guyed that pole on the mountaintop; the weather station that's also on there has recorded 58 mph gusts, and all appears to be good.


The Top 5 Mistakes to avoid with your Helium Hotspot | One man's search - 4/11/2021

[…] info. I’ve writ­ten about how to opti­mize your hotspot place­ment, which anten­na is best, how much you can expect to earn, […]


Martin - 4/12/2021

The three words for location names should be tied into the Awesome global mapping system "what3words" which is also catching on really quick. The three words identify a unique grid location on the world where people are now using it for deliveries (pizza, drone etc) and is far more precise than a traditional zip code. For instance, my location in the world is "straddled.spinning.myself". Combining Helium addresses with what3words is very logical to me.


Robert Engelbrecht - 4/16/2021

I understand the 300m hotspot separation but . . I intend installing on the roof of my 5flr condo building and we're on an escarpment in my city . So I'm wondering if I could place two hotspots ( one each on the east & west ends of the roof which is about 100m long) using two flat panel antennas backed with metal sheeting and directed 180deg opposite each other. I'm hoping this will allow me to reach the max number of hotspots in my city (Calgary, AB, Canada) and optimize my earnings. Comments ?


Nik - 4/16/2021

Hi Robert, you'll clip your own earnings by having 2 in the same hex 8, plus you may run into black box rules designed to combat gaming. Better with an omni up on a pole on the roof.


Tucker - 4/16/2021

Hey Nik Just ordered an indoor one for my apartment. Looked on the map and saw I am in a red zone with one about a half mile away. I live in Los Angeles. How will this effect my potential earnings?


Nik - 4/16/2021

Hi Tucker, Being in the red zone will clip your and their earnings, and you won't be able to witness/earn from each other. If you can find another spot outside of the red zone (assuming you're talking about Helium.Place) you'll double your earning potential.


Knut E. - 4/20/2021

Hey! I'm considering getting some hotspots, I really love the concept and all of that... But I realized that two things might limit my earnings. 1. I live far from the closest active hotspots (we're talking 325km away, they're in the capital, and I'm not) 2. There are mountains cutting my line of sight from the closest "medium" city (no hotspots there either, but I could set up one there as well, the distance from my home hotspot and the one in the city would be ~13km) Would you say this would still be worth it, or should I just drop it and move on?


Nik - 4/20/2021

Hi Knut, Probably not worth it to set up a bunch of lone wolf hotspots. If you can manage a deployment where 3 or 4 hotspots can communicate and provide useful coverage, that'll be a much better option.


jorge - 4/21/2021

Hey Nik, thanks for the write-up. Very good stuff. I'm still doing my research but leaning on the Nebra Outdoor and just pre-order now. Based on your other write-up, this would be a good way to go. Checked the coverage map around me and there seem to be a good amount of hotspots nearby. I'm in City of Miami proper, in a house, closer to the more densely populated areas, and the downtown and financial districts where there are high-rises. Still reading up, but I see one hotspot that's about 4 blocks from me, has a good amount of witnesses, and respectable earnings potential. But I see others that are not so great. I'm going to walk by there tonight to see if I can scope the aerial. I also checked helium.place and there's about 15 hotspots in the sweet spot outside the 350m radius. Seems like it could be pretty lucrative based on the earnings of this one hotspot 4 blocks away, but the earnings of the others pale by comparison. What's driving the difference? I'd like to start with one, but we have an investment property about 2.5 miles away from our primary residence that I could expand to. I have a second investment property, but that's about 12 miles away and there doesn't seem to be a lot of hotspots out there.


Nik - 4/21/2021

Jorge, the uneven earnings are probably due to what I call a "Canyons & Crags" strategy, where one hotspot can see many others that can't all see each other. The one that can see many gets earnings "focused" on it.


jorge - 4/22/2021

Interesting. Thanks for the insight. I walked around last night and could not see an aerial anywhere on that house, so I started wondering if the location assertion was correct or maybe your C&C strategy explains it. This hotspot is approx 397m from my location. And has witnesses as far as 2km out. I'm very curious about it and I wonder if I could benefit by having this hotspot right outside the invalid witness zone. https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/11HDX56zJiVUxXWMrrXbtAbaNoSEP16TgN4jTdbY3wHBpCo9PtJ I also walked by another four that are all clustered, around 800m from my location. They look to be on the roofs of a commercial structure. All considered, seems like a good scenario to move forward with a Nebra outdoor and see where it goes. Thanks for letting me bounce ideas and would appreciate your comments on the above.


Will - 5/3/2021

Hey NIK, I live in a rural town of 1500 that has none of these. The next town over has 3hotspots . which is about 15miles away. if buy 3 or 4 of these and place them throughout town will it even be worth the time and money?


Nik - 5/3/2021

Probably. Look for sets of 3 that are isolated and check out earnings. Last time I did that it was 60 HNT/miner/month with a 3 set. Not amazing, but not bad either.


Helium, Explained (ELI5) - One Man's Search - 5/9/2021

[…] How much will I make? Short answer is from .7 to 70 HNT/day. Most of you will make less than 8 HNT/day. Some of you will earn more than 20. […]


Lisa Helser - 5/16/2021

I live in a county that has only 1 green dot, 15 miles from me. Is this worth me getting into? Thank you


Nik - 5/16/2021

Probably not if you're only going to get one and it can't connect with the other one. Best to have groups of at least 4, see The Dice 5 strategy, here.


James Cowin - 5/18/2021

Hey Nik, Couple of questions. First let me say thanks for your help and this page, lots of good info and a LOT to read so please forgive me if I am asking questions that you have covered elsewhere. I live in a third world country, who would use my hotspots? Do I have to advertise? Where does the "money" come from? There is a city in this country (where I have friends) and it has three hotspots. Would placing 3 of my own hotspots in that city (new total of 6 hotspots not in any RedZones) be better or worse than installing 3 hotspots (no others in the entire city) in my city assuming the same population density? What is the ideal spacing of hotspots on level ground? Thanks


Nik - 5/18/2021

Hi James, anyone who wanted to use IoT data could use your hotspots. Tracking, environmental variables, inventory management, etc. You'd earn HNT from the data that gets passed. You'd probably be better off adding 3 hotspots to the city that already has them. Ideal spacing on level ground is probably just meeting res 8 hex requirements, say, 600m-1km apart. Depends on a ton of variables, but that'd be where I'd start.


James Cowin - 5/19/2021

Thanks for responding so quickly Nik, As you mentioned in one of your posts, if I keep reading I will find answers, which I did, like the 600-1000 meters apart which I found. However your answer of placing hotspots in the other city surprised me. Another question which unfortunately wont really help your USA readers but may be important to those like me, living in 3rd world countries. In the USA, network speeds are in the 50-100Mbps range, however down here a basic internet connection could be as low as 3Mbps (of course there are faster, mine is 50 down/5 up) but is there a minimum required internet connection speed for a Helium Hotspot? James


Tom DAngelo - 5/23/2021

Hey Nik, Great info! Hoping to get your thoughts. I have a couple of Bobcats and am about a week in. With one of them, I am about 36ft up in an apartment. I am seeing 15 average witnesses but earning less than 1 HNT per day. I have a 9dbi coming witch I hope will help. Any thoughts on why such low earnings? Thanks. Tom


Nik - 5/23/2021

Hi Tom, probably due to a few factors, mostly around density and the amount of "unique" coverage you're providing. Have you run any RF sims over on Helium Vision? The 9 dBi may decrease valid witnesses. Have you looked at the Challenge Receipt Analysis dashboard to see if your witnesses are invalid?


Nik - 5/23/2021

There is, but it's pretty low. Bottom of this page. :)


Tom D - 5/23/2021

Thanks Nik. I have run some rf scenarios and it looked pretty good. Just ran the Challenge receipt dashboard and showed “no results” for all categories. Chilly Carrot Cuckoo Tom


Nik - 5/23/2021

Looks like you're getting scaled at .5 and providing what I think of as "one-way non-useful coverage", which is a bummer, because you're actually expanding the network. It happens when you have something out on the edge of a network that's only communicating to hotspots that all already see each other, and not "connecting" two large regions. I have a similar hotspot that I've got to move.


SEAN O CONNELL - 6/1/2021

How do I solve the hotspot `being relayed` issue using wifi ? Would Ethernet solve it and does this decrease my earnings.


Tony - 6/5/2021

Hey Nik, I live in a 3 acre farm land far away from the city. I have decided to purchase 20 helium miners and place it 300m apart from one another. Would this work in my favor?


Nik - 6/5/2021

You're going to need more than 3 acres to place them all 300m apart, plus you'll need to have it's own separate connection to the internet. Think about adding value to the network vs just providing non-useful coverage.


SEAN O CONNELL - 6/6/2021

Hi Nik, which is more useful in earning HNT - Lora end node coverage or witness proof of coverage ?


Nik - 6/6/2021

Hi Sean, for earning HNT it'll be PoC.


James Graves - 6/28/2021

Hi Nik, I am looking to buy a couple of these...I have no nodes in my area (Suffolk, VA). I am going to try buying two and putting one in my FIL's house, about 5 miles away and see what happens. If I can make money with it, I might see if I can clue some other folks in the area in to this to get some nodes built out-will just two nodes manage to get anything? Also, what do you think of building out nodes in the country? I have a lot of friends about 15 miles outside of town with several hundred acres...we could build out nodes in that area, as well-I'm just not sure if nodes out in the country serve any kind of purpose. It is just a few miles from Franklin/Petersburg/Suffolk, so-maybe?


Nik - 6/28/2021

Hi James, typically you want your hotspot to be able to see at least 4 other hotspots. That being said, having 2 is 10x better than having 1. As far as building out in rural areas, that can work well although you have to be pretty careful about distance and line of sight for pure earnings purposes. Over the long run, hotspots that are placed with an eye towards growing WUPU coverage will do the best.


MICHAEL - 7/13/2021

Hello I live in a town of 12000 with no miners. Wad looking at placing 5 to 7 around town close enough they could see each other but not closer then 800m. Would that enough to get cash back on miners in a couple months? Thanks


MICHAEL - 7/13/2021

Hello I was looking at placing 5 to 7 in my area. There are no others there could I make my money back on the miners in a couple months? Thanks


Nik - 7/13/2021

Hi Michael, it depends on what the price of HNT is when you get them, and how many miners are on the network. It's pretty reasonable (though NOT a guarantee!) that they'll pay off within a few months if they're all optimally placed.


Nicolas - 7/19/2021

Hey, i live in Dubai..i checked the helium map and i noticed that nearest hotspot is 12 Km away from my appartment..and i think im alone in the city where all the miners are in downtown dubai (14km far ) so how much i could probably make a month ?? Is it woth it?


Nik - 7/19/2021

Hi Nic, with the closest miners 14 km away I wouldn't expect top tier earnings, but it may surprise you. As far as how much per month, I don't think anyone can give any kind of accurate answer. Your best bet is to look for other miners with the same position as yours and see how they're doing, then average that out. Helium seems to pay off faster than damn near any other project I've seen, but it's not as fast today (July 19th, 2021) as it was even a month ago.


zaid - 8/1/2021

hi nick im from pakistan there are only two hotspots near my city which are almost 80km away from my city would it be worth in my city for hnt mining


Nik - 8/1/2021

Hi Zaid, probably not worth it with just one. You *might* hit them, but you're better off putting up at least 2 (and better, 5) yourself.


MacStone - 8/2/2021

Hi, I am still trying to wrap my head around how it works but, am I correct in assuming that if nobody uses the WiFi provided, you don't earn anything ?? Im just wondering as the closest to me is 25km distance and I was considering setting up 4-6 units in my town where there is nothing going on. (population of roughly 9000). Any comments/advice would be appreciated. Cheers


Nik - 8/2/2021

Nope, earnings are only partly based on the data you processed. To be clear, you're not providing "WiFi", you're providing a different type of coverage (IoT coverage via LoRa). You'll earn the most by your hotspots "talking" to other hotspots, proving that they are where they say they are. 4-6 units is a good number to earn optimally as long as they have good spacing and Line of Sight to each other.


James Cowin - 8/6/2021

Hi Nik, With respect to earnings I ran across two USA hotspots that have me thoroughly confused... sneaky-golden orca……. 40 witnesses and only 3 HNT for a month and sharp-grape-grasshopper…..zero witness and 67 HNT for a month. Obviously it happens, but could you offer an explanation as to why? Jim


Buster - 8/11/2021

I'm at the bottom of a hill my Bobcat Miner is 20 Meters up on my roof with a 8dbi antenna . I'm showing two hotspots nearby, will I be able to witness them if its showing them near by on the Coverage Map data? Its is also showing that I sent Data I transferred a data packet. my hot spot is. Restless Rosewood Cat I hope I'm not a lone wolf.


Buster - 8/11/2021

If you don't witness right away are you pretty much a lone wolf?


Nik - 8/11/2021

Hi Buster, nope, it can take time to witness. Remember, you've got to witness a beacon from another hotspot. Hotspots can beacon once a day and sometimes much less, so if you only have a few nearby you may have to wait a few days to build up your witness list.


Nik - 8/11/2021

Good news that you're transferring data packets; you're a useful part of the network! Witnessing other hotspots is a function of line of sight; if your antenna can "see" their antenna, you'll witness 'em.


Frank - 8/13/2021

Hey Nik, is there a better way I can contact you with further questions?


Nik - 8/13/2021

Hi Frank, sure, via Contact form here or if you're interested in consulting, here.


Frank - 8/14/2021

How Likely would I be able to put a hotspot on a cell tower, and where would I go to find out more info.


Nik - 8/15/2021

Hi Frank, at the base of most cell towers (or on the fence around cell tower sites) is contact info for the tower owner. Start there. You're usually better off looking up local WISPs (Wireless Internet Service Providers) and working with them. The big cell tower companies aren't really set up to do business with individuals, but WISPs are usually Mom 'n Pop shops that'll work with you.


David - 11/14/2021

Hi Nik, I’ve read a few of your articles now and I’ll just lead off by saying thank you for sharing your knowledge. I’m waiting on pre-ordered miners and simply trying to work out as many issues before I even see them delivered. I live in a relatively rural area with a small town 7 miles away and pockets of small subdivisions about 1-2 miles apart from each other. Flat terrain but lots of tall trees surrounding neighborhoods. I plan to place an additional set up at a family members house via roof top antenna. However, I’m worried about how tall I can realistically make the antenna. The home is surrounded by tall trees, approximately 70 feet tall. This property is maybe 3 miles from my home LoS. Is it worth placing a setup there based on trees? I plan to have a roof top antenna at my home, 2 story home. I’ve ordered 5.8 dbi antennas for my planned roof top rigs. I do have friends in most of the surrounding neighborhoods (1-4 miles away range) and plan to sweet talk setups at their properties as well. *Most of those have minimal tree issues.


Nik - 11/15/2021

Hi David, LoRa at 915 will go through 60-100m of dense brush, maybe more in the US with our higher output. I think you'll be fine over the short distances you're talking about, but getting your antennas high will be key.


Darius - 11/15/2021

Does level above the sea count?


Nik - 11/15/2021

Not sure what you're asking. If it's elevation for the app, nope, just your antenna height above ground.


Jonathan Libbrecht - 11/26/2021

Hello, I have received my sensecap miner a few days ago, but I have a question. I suppose that the numbers you are using here are not relevant anymore, because with an average of 8HNT/day, you would be looking at 9600 dollars a month. But what would be a good average daily number to be aiming for? (Just so you know, I am from Europe). At the moment, my choises to place the miner are: 1. in a crowded city with already 10 other miners in my hexagon. 2. around 10km (6 miles) from a big city without many miners closeby. 3. around 2km (1.3 miles) from a normal sized city but with a forest of around 150m between me and the city. Sadly, the trees are just to high to go above them. (p.s. I am currently using a 6dBi antenna) Where would you recommend me to place my miner? I really want to thank you for your time!


Nik - 11/26/2021

Hi Jonathan, yes, those numbers are long out of date. Globally, the average hotspot earns .2 HNT/day (as of 26Nov2021). None of those are good options. I'd look for other, better locations where you have better density close by.


Nicole Vada Harris - 12/3/2021

I have earned 1.992 Helium in 2 weeks. Static 1.0


Nik - 12/3/2021

That's not very much. What's your setup/location look like?


JamesD - 12/8/2021

Hi Nik, First of all, great posts, here and on other boards. I live at the edge of town out on the edge of burbs. Lot of miners 1-2 per hex through 15 miles of burbs to the north (and more in the downtown beyond that). To the south, none. Farmers. I.e. west, nw, n,ne and east have miners. Sw, s, se nada. I just got my antenna and was going to head the roof to get a little higher up. I picked up a high drive because it's flat and I want to pickup for miles. 2 questions, a) what can I do if anything with my dynamics of all the other hotspots on 1 side and b) is it worth getting up on the roof and putting the antenna up there (vs inside)? Thanks sir..let me know I'd you have unix or hadoop questions and I'll return the favor :)


Nik - 12/8/2021

I'd put an omni directional up and get it as high as possible. Now I've got to go Google hadoop. ;)


Me Smith - 12/18/2021

Hi Nik Great post. Thank you for sharing. Tart Maroon Ant here…just started but trying to leverage all I can. Ok seeing .17/day right now and just swapping to a 5.8db antenna in the roof yesterday. Is there anything else I should be doing to critique these numbers? I’m at the highest point in elevation around and there are some getting .34-.49 close by with similar setup and signal(which is .6). Any recommendations would be helpful. Thanks


Nik - 12/18/2021

Be patient. Once you lock in a location & get it high and gather 7 days of earnings data, that's going to be what you'll get unless you make a change.


Mr smith - 12/18/2021

Thank Nik Is there a way to improve transmit scale? I’m showing .60 currently. Also internet speed wise I have the best 800mbps(getting 295 wired and 80-130 wireless). Does that make a different? Would I help to add a repeater upstairs to improve the signal up there? Thanks again


Nik - 12/18/2021

Gotta move it (or others) to change scale. https://gristleking.com/hip-17-why-are-you-getting-scaled/ Better on wired connection just because it's more stable.


Brendon - 12/28/2021

Hello Mike, glamorous stone wasp here. I just deployed a nebra indoor hotspot with a 12dbi antenna I installed on the roof. House is on a hill in a densely populated city. So far my 2 day total is .6 HNT. There are 5 other hotspots in my hex. Should I do anything different. Thank you!


Nik - 12/28/2021

Yes, read through a few more articles on this blog, namely the Best Antenna and the HIP 17. :)


Shuayb Magan Barre - 12/29/2021

Hi Nik Thank you for the information and as myself I want to buy some helium miners and I will buy the course soon. I have one question can the miners work any part of the world ex Africa etc, especially undeveloped country Thank in advance


Nik - 12/29/2021

Depends on what radio bands your country allows, but they'll work in *most* places.


John J - 1/1/2022

Hey Nik, I am halfway between San Diego and LA in Southern California. I've been watching and reading so many mixed reviews. The internet full of amazing knowledge, but its hard to find the truth. Where can I find legit numbers as far as expectations go? Also, if signal strength is what matters most, how do I go about learning how to optimize signal strength? I looked at the map, and it doesn't look like anyone is in my hex. There is 2 in the adjacent HEX. Any advice is much appreciated.


Nik - 1/2/2022

Hi John, I'd start with the reading through the blog. As far as expectations, typically you'll earn the average of your closest 10 hotspots, unless you do something extraordinary. Check out the Helium Basic Course, that'll give you a bunch of good info in about an hour.


Brian T Sload - 1/2/2022

Hi, I'm in a suburban area no hex's around but I should be able to set up 3 next to each other. Another 1 mile away. Do I need people to actually run a app to mine HNT? Can u run two miners next to each other? Thanks Brian


Nik - 1/2/2022

Hi Brian, short answer: You can, but they won't earn well. You usually want at least 1,000 meters between miners. If you want to learn everything you need to know about Helium in just under an hour, I'd recommend enrolling in the Helium Basic Course.


Arlinson - 1/6/2022

So Nik if there is a suburban area and no hex's are around but I have 4 miners can I put them 300-1,000 meters apart and be able to get more HNT ? How much HNT should I be getting ?


Nik - 1/6/2022

Hi Arlinson, That *could* be a good start; how far away are the nearest miners outside the 4 you're thinking of deploying, and how many are there (roughly)?


Doug haynes - 1/12/2022

Hi, I am up 10 stories in a condo no obstructions overlooking hundreds of hotspots my earnings in November were .54 daily now it’s dropped 2.28 I have an eight DBI antenna what do you think the problem is


Nik - 1/12/2022

Hi Doug, it's likely that the area is just getting overcrowded. Probably not an antenna issue, though you can go with a lower gain and see what happens. I wouldn't expect a drastic change there. Most of your earnings are a derivative of your location.


MRon Cause - 1/12/2022

Hi Nik, I have a bobcat 300 with an 8dbi rak antenna about 11m high. I’m getting over 100 total witness on average over the past 5 days, 0.62 transmit scale, earnings around 12hnt per month. My question is, I see a guy 2 hexes over (smooth teal ostrich), same transmit scale, running a rakwireless, at 1.2dbi, claiming 0 meters (via explorer) and he’s getting over 17hnt in the last 30 days. He only has 75 witnesses over last 5 days. How is he getting that much with such a setup?


Nik - 1/12/2022

Hey MRon, earnings are a function of location, and a 1.2/0 assertion just means they haven't updated their details in the app yet. 2 hexes is 1,600-3,000 meters away, which can provide a significantly different coverage. After the max witness number (18) is met, earnings are a function of the quality of the witnesses, not the quantity.


Eric Thiessen - 1/12/2022

Thank you for all the info. I just bought 3 bobcats and putting them up with in a rural area. Closest other miners are about 20km away. What do you think 3 miners bouncing signals just off each other will make in a day. I am still setting things up as we speak. Can you tell me why one miner gets the normal 3 to 4 challenger rewards a day but the other only see 1 maybe 2 “challenger” rewards. Could this be internet connection related? I am Hooked to Ethernet but I can’t figure out why one isn’t getting the “challenger” as I thought this was supposed to happen roughly 3 to 4 times a day. Sync status is usually at -1. Internet is only 4mps download. However just down the road the internet is maybe 7mps and that machine is working fine. Just wondering what is cutting out my machine from getting it’s “challenger” rewards.


Nik - 1/12/2022

Hi Eric, your hotspot should challenge 1-4 times/day. Interesting that the slower connection of the two isn't challenging as much. Any way to make it faster?


Dwzcrypto - 1/21/2022

My hotspot has been online for 4 months but earning next to nothing, tried 3 different antennas, and I can see multiple hotspots near me, but only witnessed one, and they are in the same hex.


Nik - 1/21/2022

Check line of sight to the other hotspots. Antennas are probably not the problem.


Nahu Dimitri - 2/2/2022

Amazing information boss... would love to follow up (and pay for a consultation) and discuss which miners you'd suggest purchasing and how you set it up


Nik - 2/2/2022

Right on Nahu, reach out here to schedule a consult.


Jeff - 2/9/2022

Hi, I have a friend in a good sized American city (>1MM<2MM) who owns and / or manages several dozen Air BnB apartments in maybe a dozen buildings. All in a three mile square area in the hopping hip redevelopment part of downtown. Since he controls the units and the internet/wifi situation, and each of these buildings will typically have a "top floor" that is roughly as high as all the other buildings in this historic district (3-4 stories), does this seem to be an inherently promising situation for him I know nothing about existing networks or coverage in the area. Lots of tech-savvy hipsters in this part of town. I will turn him on to researching this if he would seem to have a comparative advantage perhaps worth his research and/or deployment time. (And refer him to you...) Thanks!!


Nik - 2/9/2022

Yep, probably a reasonable bet to make there. :)


Sam M. - 2/23/2022

Hi I recently purchased a senscap miner and was having a great deal of trouble getting my hotspot off of relay would you have any advice for establishing the port with an xfinity/comcast account as I am not having much help finding videos.


Nik - 2/23/2022

Hi Sam, try this workflow for getting off relay.


PCBA factory - 4/6/2022

i like it it can help me


Robert - 4/20/2022

Thanks Nik! Really great info! Question for you, I live in a 2 story house in a suburban city with many hotspots around. I’ve been using the stock 4 dbi antenna and placing mining rig in my attic with the stock antenna sitting on the window sill of the attic window. Bobcat is connected via WiFi (which is why I see the relayed status? Not sure). I have 34 witnesses but average less than .1 HNT/day. I plan on upgrading the antenna to an exterior 4 or 5.8 dbi antenna and mounting it on the roof. My question is, is it better to: A) Move the bobcat and Ethernet link it to the router on the first floor and then connect the antenna on the roof via lmr 400 cable. I would need to run about 50 feet of cable? B) Keep the bobcat linked via WiFi in the attic and connect antenna using about 10 feet of lmr 400 cable for better signal retention? C) Keep the bobcat in the attic and run an HDMI Ethernet cable to the modem along with the LMR cable (about 50 feet) to connect with the modem?


Nik - 4/20/2022

Option A sounds best.


Freewing RC Jet - 5/15/2022

thank you very much, i like the article , it can help me


Kelpie - 5/22/2022

I can put an antenna on top of the highest point in the West Midlands, UK. 360 degree line of sight as far as the horizon. Several major cities within ten miles, Inc Birmingham, Wolverhampton and more. Is it worth me looking into this?


Nik - 5/22/2022

Probably. Depends on local scaling; if there are too many Hotspots in the area it'll be hard to earn, as the majority of your earnings come from Witnessing. Check the local high and look around at the local average. I use HeliumVison for that.


Far UVC lamp - 5/23/2022

OK, IT IS good articel,thanks


bdabilisim - 6/7/2022

Icy Fiery Mule this is my device and i earn very little, i don't do my transmate scale 1 how can i increase it


King - 7/7/2022

I am a first time mining my bobcat 300 been relayed im having the most hard time in my life i need help please.


Nik - 7/8/2022

Hey mug, just be patient. Keep it connected to internet and power and just wait. It may take a week to see a change. Best to go do something else in the meantime; you're still very early in the adoption of this technology as far as blockchain + meatspace (Helium + LoRa in this case.)


A Rough Guide To Helium Hotspot Placement

· 106 min read
Nik
Site Owner

This was written in late 2020/early 2020 for folks curious about optimizing a Helium Hotspot placement. Some statements are out of date, though the meat of it all is generally correct.

Most start with their antenna, which is (almost completely) the wrong approach for maximizing earnings. The only way you could make a less efficient improvement at the start is to focus on what cables to buy.

There are four fundamental aspects of an optimal Helium hotspot placement; antennas and cables are at the bottom of the list for importance.

Before we get there (relax, it's only a few paragraphs away), let's get a few important points out of the way:

First, while I think everyone reading this should buy at least one hotspot and place it as optimally as you can, over the long run you'll earn far more by figuring out a way to actually use the network and not just provide coverage.

Second, if you follow and read through every link in this article you'll be ready to make excellent decisions about the best possible hotspot placement. The whole thing (Helium, antennas, optimum hotspot placement) will take about an hour to digest and understand.

Third, if you don't want or have the time to figure out Helium on your own, for a long time I offered both courses and consulting.

ASSUMPTIONS

  1. You know that Helium is a network of Hotspots that transmit and receive radio signals, then pass those signals onto the internet. In general, the more signals a given hotspot receives, the more HNT it earns. When this was written, Helium was on its own chain. It's now on Solana. Hotspots record transactions on a blockchain and reward owners for providing coverage with HNT, a cryptocurrency token.
  2. You have, or have ordered, or are thinking about ordering, a Helium hotspot.
  3. You haven’t read every last post and thread on the internet about maximizing a hotspot placement. :)

There are only a few things that really matter when it comes to your hotspot placement. Some of them will change over time, some of them are fundamental. All are driven by just one goal over the long term:

ADD VALUE TO THE NETWORK

FUNDAMENTALS FOR OPTIMUM PLACEMENT

In order of importance:

  • HOTSPOT DENSITY
  • ANTENNA "VIEW"
  • APPROPRIATE ANTENNA
  • MINIMIZED & HIGH QUALITY CONNECTION LENGTH/CABLES

HOTSPOT DENSITY: Optimum density is determined using Uber's H3 map. At the low end, hotspots won't earn from other hotspots less than 300 meters away. At the high end, hotspots can "witness" other hotspots 50 km out.

Back to the Uber map. The map uses (mostly) hexagons to form grids of different sizes. Each size is called a “resolution” or “res” for short. Each hex size has an appropriate density for its resolution.

Here is a dated interactive map (it stopped being updated in late fall of 2020) of density and hotspot placements. It's color coded and fairly intuitive. Green means good density, red indicates too dense. Here's a quick screenshot:

At each "res" there is an optimal number of hotspots per hexagon. That number can change. It is determined by a base rate of hotspots per hex plus the number of hotspots in surrounding hexes. Go ahead, read that sentence again a few times. The details are in HIP 17, look for "Proposed Chain Variables."

Yes, it’s a bit complicated. It was made this way in order to programmatically account for density differences between cities, suburbs, and rural areas.

Here's a screenshot map of San Francisco (pulled from the HIP 17 Visualizer) to give another perspective.

Screenshot of San Francisco using the HIP17 visualizer.

Notice the green hotspots don't have other hotspot as close to them as the orange and red ones. Red is the worst; they're basically on top of each other and providing duplicate (or triplicate or worse) coverage, which isn't useful to the network.

If you want to know if your location will be good, you'll need to study HIP17.

If you read HIP17 until you understand it, you'll be in the 1% of Helium Hotspot owners who don't really have questions about optimum density.

It looks complicated at first, but it's actually straightforward. If you've ever read about Goldilocks and the 3 Bears, you'll have an understanding of hotspot density: Not too dense, not dense enough, but just right.

If you need to visualize things, use HeliumVision or Hotspotty. Use the options for hex overlays in HeliumVision or just zoom in and out on your Hotspot with Hotspotty. If you need help with HeliumVision, consider taking my HeliumVision Master Class.

If you don't have the time or just want to skip that part, you can hire me and I'll help you pick the best option for your area and circumstance.

BOTTOM LINE: You need to have optimum density for maximum earnings.

ANTENNA VIEW: Before you go ordering the latest and greatest super-hot antenna (more on that later), make sure your antenna has a view. A "view" has three important aspects.

  • Outside. Walls and even windows will block radio waves.
  • High above other obstacles.
  • Clear view to as much as possible.

The view of your antenna is far more important than upgrading your antenna. A higher elevation "stock" antenna (the one that comes with your hotspot) will outperform a super fancy antenna that's low down EVERY TIME. You can see the line of sight of your antenna to specific spots using RF Line of Sight or Helium.Vision.

Get as high as reasonably possible. How high? From the American Radio Relay League's document on antenna placement:

“To a distant receiving station, a transmitting antenna at 120 feet will provide the effect of approximately 8 to 10 times more transmitting power than the same antenna at 35 feet.”

You may be thinking, "I'll never get my antenna 120' high." That's OK, do the best you can, but know that until you get it high, you'll be missing out on earnings.

A good rule of thumb to start approaching 90% of optimum earnings is at least 20' above your roof and surrounding roofs.

Here's an example of a good elevation placement:

Correct elevation placement on rooftop

That antenna is on top of a 23' pole on top of a 15' high roof in suburban San Diego.

Anecdotal reports show that even a *1 meter* elevation difference can noticeably affect earnings.

Get as clear a view of as much “civilization” as possible. Remember, the network is only as valuable as the USEFUL area it can cover. A hotspot on top of a mountain with clear views of nothing but nature for 30 miles is not covering (to the network, anyway) USEFUL territory.

A hotspot on a suburban roof surrounded by a few million people and lots of data opportunities will provide far more useful coverage.

Correct elevation is vital for maximum coverage. LoRa is more or less a line-of-sight radio technology. While the radio waves will go through a few things (a wall or two, a window, or a leafy tree), for the most part you want to be able to have a direct line of sight to both your coverage area AND other hotspots.

APPROPRIATE ANTENNA: The antenna is what most people focus on, thinking that if they just have the "best" antenna they'll make the most HNT.

The antenna shipped with any purchased hotspot is already pretty good. However, as many Heliites are both tinkerers and driven by earnings, many will “upgrade” their antenna in order to reach more hotspots.

Antennas do 2 things: They transmit (tx) and they receive (rx). Most folks get wrapped up in how well an antenna transmits, but in the long term that doesn’t matter that much, as the value of Helium is in how well an antenna can RECEIVE.

Remember, the Helium network offers value by being able to receive transmission FROM sensors TO hotspots, then push that information onto the blockchain via an internet connection.

While there is and has been a place for being able to transmit powerfully, that value will diminish rapidly over the coming year.

What the heck is "dBi"? It refers to the focus and shaping of the energy an antenna transmits and receives.

Here's a quick dbi gain visualizer:

I can hear you now: "Ok dude, but what antenna should I buy?"

You can read this in-depth article on how to match your placement with an antenna, but you've basically got 3 options.

First, and recommended: Don't buy anything, just use the antenna your hotspot came with. Get your density and view squared away first.

Second, if you've got a great placement with the right elevation, buy either an HNTenna or anything in the 3-6 dBi range from McGill.

Third, if you feel like you need something higher gain and you understand the trade offs of a higher gain antenna, get a higher gain antenna from McGill.

"But, but, what about the [insert fancy antenna] I read about on the Discord chat? Shouldn't I get the most powerful antenna possible? I want more money!"

Big antenna with a long view on a mountain.

No. Re-read the above piece on having a "too powerful" antenna.

The one pictured above is a high gain sector (directional) antenna on top of a mountain. Despite having an enormous "view", it does worse than many placements that are much closer to other hotspots. I replaced it with a 3 dBi omni, no difference in earnings. Density matters more than antenna.

Even "hot" antennas that are tuned to fit within Helium guidelines (decreased transmit and receive power) won't radically outperform other antennas.

One Hotspot owner I know ran a Nearson 9 vs a Rak 8 dBi in early 2021 and kept track of earnings between the two. The RAK beat the pants off the Nearson.

MINIMIZED CONNECTIONS: Ok, now we're coming to stuff that doesn't really matter but you'll ask about and geek out on anyway. How should you connect your hotspot to your antenna?

This is RF 101 (Radio Frequency): You want a thick, clean, short (ideally 5' or less) cable that goes from your hotspot to your antenna. I recommend and use LMR400 from USACoax.

If you're running a cellular backhaul you'll probably be fine with another LMR variant for the cell antennas (each setup is unique) but you will want to place those cell antennas external to the enclosure.

Get your hotspot up high near your antenna to keep cable runs to the antenna short. Run power and ethernet to the high hotspot, then have a short antenna cable to the antenna. Do not (if you want max earnings) place your hotspot in your attic then run 20' of thin crappy coax cable to your antenna. That will create more radio power loss than you want.

If you MUST have long cable runs, spend the money on good cable. If you do that, you may (but probably won't) get the same results as Docile Bone Pony, which uses 60' of LMR 400 and is on top of a 16 story building in the middle of a large city.

So. That's most of what you need to know about a optimum hotspot placement.

ADDENDA

What else should you know about when it comes to Helium hotspot earnings?

How much HNT you get per witness/beacon transaction will change as the network develops more fully. With a limited amount of HNT made available (2.5 million per month until August 2023, when it drops to 1.25 million/month) to reward transactions AND many more hotspots coming online in the next few months, earnings will steadily dilute.

Yeah, but how much can I earn? Check here for a very rough estimate. This can change significantly, so it's just a starting point.

No matter what, with the growth of the network your HNT earnings will CONTINUE TO DROP.

This MAY be offset by an increase in HNT price. It may not.

How can I earn even more? The long play with Helium is to figure out how to actually use the service. What kind of data can you collect, what kind of sensors should you use, how can you offer that as a service?

If you want help with that or with optimizing your hotspot placements, I'm available for hire.

How much power and data do hotspots use? Hotspots use about as much power as an internet router, and as much data as heavy Netflix user who watches 2 or 3 movies most nights (100-150 GB/month). This will continue to increase until Light Hotspots come online sometime in early 2022.

If you live in the First World and have a broadband internet connection, having a Helium Hotspot will be basically unnoticeable to you from an energy cost/data use perspective.

I'm ready to buy a hotspot, where should I order? I'd recommend ordering a hotspot from ParleyLabs.

Is there a difference in hotspots/miners/radios? Not really. It's not like you can get a more powerful miner that'll earn you more. The biggest difference is when they'll arrive, which is a function of how fast they can be manufactured.

Is it really worth it to put up a Helium hotspot? I sure think so. Will it be for you? If you have an optimal placement and follow all the advice above, probably. This isn't investment advice. You could lose all the money you put in.

How much can I make? If you do a good job, between .5 - 1 HNT/day as of March of 2022. More on that here. Or just go to Sitebot and start poking around to see what the current maximums are.

How do I turn HNT into cash? Open up an account on any reputable exchange.

Is this a safe investment? No. This is cryptocurrency competing with giant telcos (Telecommunications Companies). It may be a boomer (like when Uber competed with cabs or Airbnb competed with hotels) or it may be a flop (like every other startup company that tried to take on the big dogs.)

You should not re-finance your house to put up hotspots. You should be able to lose all the money you put into hotspots without putting yourself, your family, or anyone you know at financial risk. Sheesh.

Should I just hire you to do all the work for me? Maybe. If you don't like to read or geek out, or you just want to try Helium without spending a few months researching it, I'll walk you through the process of setting up the best possible placement for your situation. You can take my courses (look on the top of the page under Courses) or go here to get started.

RESOURCES

Software

  • Helium Vision - Paid service w/free trial for assessing locations. Definitely try this out!
  • Hotspotty - Excellent way to visualize density issues AND to manage your fleet
  • HotspotRF - use code gristleking for 20% off your first month.

Mapping

Hardware

Media & Learning Resources

Archived Comments

Cam - 2/14/2021

Looking to get in touch about hiring you for a helium miner project im working on. please shoot me an email.


Thuong Nguyen - 2/19/2021

Thank you for this resource. I live in Lake Forest. I am interested in your services. May I please get a quote?


Nik - 2/19/2021

Cam, done. :) You can also fill out my form here.


Nik - 2/19/2021

Hi Thuong, sure, fill out the Helium Consulting form here.


A Rough Guide to Hotspot Placements by Nik – Parley Labs - 2/24/2021

[…] post was originally written here by Nik. With his permission we are reposting here because the information is just too good! You can reach […]


Buster - 2/27/2021

Great job here NIK! Quick question....with regard to the Helium.Place....Of the 3 locations I had planned, 2 have 1 miner in the hexagon, and 1 had non (2 just barely outside it) Is it better to have them inside the hexagon or outside?


Nik - 2/27/2021

Do you mean the other hotspots are in the red hexagon? Definitely don't place 'em there. :). If you mean that you're seeing other miners in the larger hexagon grid (outlines, no color) that Helium.Place generates when you click any location, you're probably fine. Just as a rule of thumb, in almost every case under say, 5 km distances, it's better to have hotspots further apart rather than close together. Remember that the overall goal is to add value to the network, and that translates as providing broader, unique coverage.


Nana - 2/27/2021

Great piece. I just placed an order for an indoor miner and stumbled on your write up. When I checked my address, I would be the only one in the red hexagon but it still says it's too close to witness, even though others are at least 5kms away. Does this mean I shouldn't place the miner in my house?


Nik - 2/27/2021

Hi Nana, Hmm, I'm not clear on what you mean. When you click on any location in Helium.place, it'll always put your spot in the center of a red hexagon. The hexagon is meant to show you if you're too close to any other hotspots. If you see any other hotspots within that red hexagon, you won't be able to witness them, nor they you. Sounds like you'll be fine; if the closest miners are at least 5 km away you're going to want to make sure to get your antenna up high. Best of luck with it!


Sanyi - 2/28/2021

Hello! Do you think it will be good that way? 3 pieces will be placed in the village where I live. Distance from each other: 1.2km - 1.3km - 1km Thank you for your response!


Nik - 2/28/2021

Hi Sanyi, If those are in a rough triangle and have clear line of sight to each other, that'll probably work well. Let me know how it goes, sounds pretty good. 4 would be better... :)


Sanyi - 2/28/2021

Thanks for the quick reply! I'll write how it goes. One more question!:) Do you think there is a difference: Outdoor Hotspot vs. Indoor Hotspot? thx


Marko - 2/28/2021

You say "you’ll earn far more by figuring out a way to actually use the network and not just provide coverage"... can you provide some examples of what you mean by this? Are you suggesting users start up some business based on using IoT devices? That's quite the step from plugging in a hotspot and letting it sit there.


Buster - 3/1/2021

Ok, so rule #1 - never put a router in a hexagon with another router....good stuff, thank you for this info.


Buster - 3/1/2021

Hello......also, should a location allow you to put the device in their spot, but are uneasy about connecting it to their network because they are paranoid about security, would an alternative be a cell signal hotspot to connect the miner to?


Nik - 3/1/2021

Buster, totally dependent on what resolution of hex. At resolution 8 you can have up to 4 HS without penalty. This is one of the most confusing issues for most HS placements, but a thorough reading of HIP 17 will clear it up.


Nik - 3/1/2021

Marko, yes, that's the best long term play (as I understand it.) The easy money days of plugging in a hotspot and watching it earn a ton just for providing coverage are rapidly waning (March 2021). This doesn't mean we can't still make money with Helium, but it does mean we'll have to work a lot harder for it.


Nik - 3/1/2021

Other than one can be put outside and be weatherproof and the other needs to be protected from the elements, no. Equipment is generally the last thing to optimize and gives you the least bang for your buck. If you have a stock hotspot in a bomber location you'll outperform a completely tricked out mega-antenna setup every time.


Nik - 3/1/2021

Sure, you could use cell backhaul to connect your hotspot. Realistically, the point of entry for an attacker is just as likely to be a wifi printer as your hotspot, and the printer would probably be easier. You could set up a separate WiFi network on your router just for your HS.


Isaac Keller - 3/2/2021

Hey Nik, awesome article. This has me really pumped up! Quick question. There are no other hotspots within 10 miles of me. However, I own 2 properties and have 2 family members, that when you map out our locations roughly forms a rectangle that is 4 miles by 2 miles. Are we simply too far apart? Or if we get our antennas up high enough will we be able to communicate with each other? Thanks so much for any advice you’re willing to offer!


Nik - 3/4/2021

Get 'em high enough and you'll be fine. LoRa stands for Long Range; 4 miles is no problem if you've got line of sight.


Billy - 3/8/2021

Hi Nik, thanks for the article, i am about to order 5 devices, my city doesn't have any hotspots, would it be ok to set them up 5-7km away from each other? i have family and friends places that are approximately 4-7 Km away from each other, and can put the hotspots higher than any other buildings, need you advice, thanks in advance


Nik - 3/8/2021

Billy, that should be fine. Keep me posted, psyched to see how it turns out!


Billy - 3/8/2021

Thanks for the quick replay ,so i calculated the exact distance , its as follows, A----B is 1.6Km B---C 2.7 km C----D 7.1 Kmm D---E 5.3 Km E---F 6.5Km the are aliened like a straight line or more like a zig zag what are your thoughts, Gratitude .


Billy - 3/9/2021

so the exact distance between each points is as follows, from A to B is 1.2km B-C 2.3 Km C-D 7 Km D-E 5,6 Km E-F 4,5 Km would this be fine? thanks in advance


Nik - 3/9/2021

Hi Billy, those all sound well within LoRa capabilities. Nice job measuring it out, now you have to make sure you have as clear a line-of-sight as possible between the hotspots.


Billy - 3/11/2021

Thanks for the replay Nik, i have 2 other questions , the distance varies between 1,5 km to 7 km max between points, some points has 1.5 km between each other and some has 7km and some has 5,5 km would it be ok ? 1- would it be profitable in a 3rd world country? where people use only social media and basic gps apps 2- can i hide my signal from the helium map so no one can know my address ? these questions are so important for me to decide weather to do it or not. Thanks a lot for the help


Nik - 3/11/2021

Billy, no problem. 1) It *should* be profitable anywhere as long as you have enough hotspots and are eventually passing data through them. 2) For now, you can't hide your location on the Helium map. That may change in the future although no guarantees, and there are minor workarounds for privacy-minded invididuals. If you'd like more help I'd be happy to set up a consulting session with you and walk you through a superb deployment.


Billy - 3/11/2021

Thanks again, for the replay, the problem is that dealing with cryptocurrency is prohibited in my country (which sucks of course) that's why i was trying to figure out if it is possible to hide my location in case some haters or sick people try to do me harm , i mine Ethereum with 20 gpus and enjoying it and really loving HNT , i didnt understand what you mean by "there are minor workarounds for privacy-minded invididuals" how to setup a consulting session ? i left my email, give me a way to reach you please thank you


Nik - 3/11/2021

Hi Billy, here's the consulting option: https://gristleking.com/life/helium-consulting


How Much HNT Will My Hotspot Earn? | One man's search - 3/18/2021

[…] This should help you get a rough idea of how much you’ll make. For more on Heli­um Hotspot Opti­miza­tion you can read my guide over here. […]


alf0 - 3/20/2021

Hey Nik, I've read it twice. Really nice guide. As I understand you are not fan of indoors. I'm trying to setup LoRA to my village with friends where currently there is no hs at all. Range will be max 2 km where some of them will be 400-500 meters to each other. We already bought indoor once. it is flat area and there is no high buildings around. Do you think it is gonna be problem if we keep them indoor ?


franco habre - 3/20/2021

Hello, I know in general that it is advantageous to have a VPN established. Do you recommend having one while operating the helium hotspot at home?


Nik - 3/20/2021

Hi Franco, Good question, I'm not sure of the answer. If you're already running one you're probably fine to just add your HS onto the network, but again, I'm not totally sure.


Nik - 3/20/2021

Thanks Alf0! Depends on what building material is, where they are (wall or window), how high (second floor/first floor), how far away they are from each other. I'd spend the extra money & effort to get 'em outside and up high.


Ben - 3/24/2021

Hi Nik, really appreciate the time and effort you've put into your Helium posts. Quick question - why do you recommend Parley Labs over the other manufacturers? cheers, Ben


Nik - 3/24/2021

Bryan at Parley Labs is the only one of the manufacturers/distributors I've physically met and talked with. I've made multiple purchases from them, both before and after meeting Bryan, and have always gotten fast service, straight talk on what to expect both on tech & shipping dates, and very helpful advice. The other manufacturers aren't bad, they're just less known to me.


alf0 - 3/28/2021

Hey Nik, Thanks for the reply. I'm confused about something. You said there is no need to change default antenna as a first step. But in the photos you put, they use different antenna in the top of the pole and connect it to the hotspot. If we are using default antenna, is that mean put the indoor one into ip66 case and locate the case itself at the top of the long pole in the roof? Or are we gonna take the default antenna on the device and put it top of the pole?


Alexandre Herculano - 3/28/2021

I Nick first of all really good article! Congrats. I live in Portugal and the helium are staring now here, I ordered a 5x nebra indoor and I will put them in a small city with 5 different locations +300m away but no more than 2km what you think about that? The indoor antenna will work good? I Dont have anyone here with hotspot and I will put 5.


alf0 - 3/28/2021

Hey Nik, Thanks for the reply. I'm confused about something. You said there is no need to change default antenna as a first step. But in the photos you put, they use different antenna in the top of the pole and connect it to the hotspot. If we are using default antenna, is that mean put the indoor one into ip66 case and locate the case itself at the top of the long pole in the roof? Or are we gonna take the default antenna on the device and put it top of the pole?


Nik - 3/28/2021

Depends on your set up and constraints. Your two basic options are to run a long ethernet cable to an outdoor hotspot, then have a short antenna cable run to the antenna, OR have a short ethernet run to an indoor hotspot and then a long antenna cable run to the the outdoor antenna. If you put your hotspot outside, there's extra work and expense that goes into weatherproofing it, but your antenna cable will be shorter. If you put it inside you don't have to weatherproof it, but your antenna cable will be longer. The photos are of hotspots optimized specific to their location. I've always felt it's worth it to go through the extra effort of weatherproofing everything and having a short antenna cable run, but other hotspot owners have made it clear through their earnings that a short antenna cable isn't essential. Again, remember the order of importance for earnings: Placement/location, elevation, antenna, cables. If you're near (let's say within 2 miles of) a bunch of other hotspots, the stock antenna will probably be fine if you get the elevation up high and have good lines of sight. If you're further out you'll want to really start looking at different antennas and their radiation patterns in order to find the one that works for you.


Nik - 3/28/2021

Hard to give you a definite "Yes that'll work" or "No that won't", BUT if you're putting 'em in a small city with locations between 300m - 2 km apart AND they all have clear line of sight to each other, you should be fine from a placement perspective. See the Cypress example at the bottom of the "How much will my hotspot earn" article. As far as indoor vs outdoor antenna, it's always better to get your antenna outside the building. If you need specific help with this deployment, check out my Consulting page.


alf0 - 3/28/2021

Hello, It's nebra indoor plastic 2dbi tiny antenna. I haven't seen any example in youtube or google using it as a outdoor antenna. Is it gonna be fine to put it top of the pole? Thanks


Nik - 3/28/2021

Sorry, I misunderstood. Check with Nebra to make sure. In this case you’re probably better served with an outdoor rated antenna.


Helium, Explained (ELI5) | One man's search - 3/28/2021

[…] Will a Heli­um Hotspot be able to pen­e­trate low?e glass? Yes, but the sig­nal will be damp­ened. It’s always best to get your anten­na out­side and up high. More on that here. […]


Illhireyou - 3/29/2021

I just spent way too much on a second miner after tremendous success with a shared miner with my friend. I should have a decent spot but am literally mining 100x less than my first spot even though I seem to have a better location. How much does it cost to hire you??


Nik - 3/29/2021

Consulting services found here.


Anton - 3/31/2021

Hey man! Thank you for this update its much needed! Why do you think that mining will become harder and dilluted? Isn the reason for better rewards wider data transfer? So the bigger the network the wider the data transfer, the wider the data transfer the bigger the rewards? Did I miss something? Thank you for your answer in advance!


Nik - 3/31/2021

Rewards will dilute in large part due to the massive growth of the network. Over time we may see the data start to pay off, but it won't be anything like the first, oh, 12 months of rewards for HS on Helium.


Anton Prekpalaj - 3/31/2021

So becouse of the exponential grow of the network the rawards will be lesser becouse of what? Data will be scarced or what? Can you elaborate a bit, becouse i thought "the bigger the network the bigger the rewards"?


Nik - 3/31/2021

In the long term and depending on network growth, we may see higher data-related rewards, but... not for a while. With 100k hotspots online in the next few months, the same size witness/beacon rewards pie will be shared amongst a much larger group.


Nils - 3/31/2021

I’m just saying... this guy is the real deal. Solid understanding of Helium and an interesting, honest chap as well. Nik will sort it.


Nik - 3/31/2021

Thanks Nils, glad it's been helpful for ya. Stoked to see you light up your town. ;)


What's The Best Antenna For Your Helium Hotspot? | One man's search - 4/2/2021

[…] stock anten­na that came with your hotspot. Also, find a bet­ter place­ment loca­tion. You did read about that, […]


How to take your Helium Hotspot off grid | One man's search - 4/4/2021

[…] A Rough Guide to Heli­um Hotspot Place­ment — Before you get all hot and both­ered about going remote, see if this’ll help you find an eas­i­er, bet­ter location. […]


Bryan - 4/4/2021

Hi, I’m considering the indoor device from Parley Labs but wondering what you think about the Bobcat device shown on the Helium website. It looks to have more storage and a better cord, so was wondering if the Parley Labs device would perform less optimally.


Richard Street - 4/5/2021

Hi Thanks for the article. The best I have read. I wonder if you can help. I have 5 box's coming next month. I live in a small town my house is on a hill so I guess I am lucky there. We have no hotspots for 25miles. My questions are. 1. Would my best return be to put all my 5 box spread out in the town? or would I be better putting 3 in one town and 2 in another? 2. Do you get a much greater return in a higher populated area? 3. Is it best to spread out your box's as far as possible (as long as they can still see each other) or as long as they are 350 meters away from each other the result will be the same. Any help would be appreciated. Richard


Nik - 4/5/2021

Hi Richard, exciting news about the hotspots you have coming! Read through the Earnings post to get an idea of how much or how little you might earn in areas with dense deployment vs sparse deployment. I can do a custom dive into this for you if you'd like. Very short version: *Probably* better to have 5 in your town, but that's without really knowing any of the details.


Nik - 4/5/2021

Hi Bryan, both the Bobcat & the indoor Nebra from Parley should perform the same when it comes to earnings. As soon as I have either in my hands I'll do a quick review of 'em, but this is a case of placement and elevation being far more important than what model of hotspot you have.


Bryan - 4/5/2021

Awesome, thank you Nik


Peter - 4/6/2021

Hi Nik, great read! I've looked at the helium map you linked to see hot spots around me, there is 1 hot spot in the red are around me, 1 on the verge of the red and green zone and 1 perfectly in the green zone, there are then a few outside it bit not by much. Does this sound okay? I have ordered an indoor miner last month but I'm considering ordering an outdoor one to put on my roof(no large buildings or mountains around me) Any advice would be greatly appreciated, thank you


Nik - 4/7/2021

Hi Peter, on Helium.place, the red zone is really the more useful of the two, as the potential green zone is far bigger than what is shown. As long as you're not sharing the red zone with another HS you're off to a good start.


Christopher - 4/7/2021

Hey there! I live in a desert basin. Most everything around me is same elevation for ~7-15 miles depending on the direction, so I’m considering attaching an antenna to my roof. Do you have a recommended antenna mast? Thank you in advance, and thank you for all of your posts. I’m learning a lot. Waiting on my bobcats to arrive.


Nik - 4/7/2021

Christopher, I've used 4130 .095 thickness 1 ¾" diameter pipe, often recommended by ham radio types and usually comes in 18-25' lengths. With your setup you won't need a fancy antenna, and the stock one should do fine depending on how close other hs are to you.


Peter - 4/8/2021

Hi Nik, sorry I think I explained incorrectly - there is 1 hot spot in the red zone, it keeps changing the place that It is within a few meters but it's 250~ meters from where I'd be putting mine up, does this mean my rewards would be greatly diminished? Thanks again


Christopher - 4/8/2021

There are 10 hs within 3-7 miles of me and ~100 hs in the major city 12 miles north (only one building in the way 3 miles out). So stock bobcat should be fine placed properly in my home? Is it also wise to put my second one in this helium.place green-ish area of my neighborhood at a family members house? They’re about 1200ft away (another is about 1500ft away). It’d be the closest hs to me. Otherwise I have a handful of other options throughout the northern area of my state.


Peter Thompson - 4/8/2021

Hi Nik, I apologise as I probably didn't make myself clear. There is 1 hotspot in my red zone already, it's 200-250 meters away but definitely there Would this greatly diminish my earnings?


Oliver Parkinson - 4/8/2021

Hi Nik, I am from the Uk and I am expecting to get my Nebra indoor miner this month. There are a few miners in my area but I am unsure of the range I am likely to achieve I have read the they can reach up to 10 miles depending on the topography of the area. I have put a range of 10km into helium vision and looked at the line of sight there seems to be a direct line of sight with about 8 other miners in the area. Does this sound feasible to you if there is a direct line of sight? I am thinking of placing my miner in the top room of the house next to the window which should be opened and connected to the internet router through an ethernet cable. I have read the article but it is a lot to take in so I bet I will read it a few more times. Can you offer anymore tips specifically to my circumstance? Thank you very much, Oliver


Nik - 4/8/2021

Hi Oliver, putting it inside your house will decrease the range you can reliably connect with others. Outdoors within 10 km is reasonable, indoors it’s a little more of a crapshoot, although direct line of sight is a very good thing. Best of luck with it!


Nik - 4/8/2021

Hi Peter, check the hex map to see if you'll be sharing a Res 8. If so, your earnings will be clipped due to overdensity. Even if you don't share a res 8 hex, you and that other HS won't be able to witness each other. If you can both provide unique coverage that doesn't overlap each other you'll make slightly more, or if you can provide significantly better coverage you'll earn more, but in general you shouldn't put another hotspot within that red zone.


Nik - 4/8/2021

Hi Christopher, a 12 mile shot is out at the edge of a stock antenna. Focus on the 10 that are closer to you. Double check the hex res 8 on Helium.place to see if you'll be sharing a res 8.


John - 4/8/2021

Hi Nik - I am new to Helium, and have been doing research, and thankful to have found you! So I just moved into a goldmine of all hotspots locations in NY. I now live on the top floor of the building and own a part of the rooftop where I plan to install my antenna. On the rooftop, there is definitely 360 coverage and you can see the manhattan skyline from where I am. I may have to extend the height for another 10 meters more to be safe. There are tons of hostpots all around me, but noone in my building has one except me. My question really is this - would you recommend me installing multiple hotspots on the same rooftop? Will I earn more if I do this or will it be shared between all the hostpots? I was thinking of maybe ordering 2 or 3 more, but not sure if it's worth spending for more hotspots if the earnings are the same. Super excited to get started. Thanks in advance.


Nik - 4/8/2021

Hi John, Pumped to see how excited you are, Helium is a pretty energizing thing to find! Installing multiple HS in the same location will not earn you more, it'll actually earn less because you'll clip your own earnings but won't make enough with the multiple hotspots to offset the difference. You'll earn more by finding other locations, preferably outside of NYC since it's saturated, and then work on optimal deployment strategies for those. One thing to think about is that since NYC is so saturated, it's likely that at some point in the next year (or less) Helium will further adjust the density chain vars on HIP17 to disincentivize those super-dense areas. I did get your other comment but deleted it just so you don't have a double-post. ;) ~Nik


The Top 5 Mistakes to avoid with your Helium Hotspot | One man's search - 4/8/2021

[…] Putting your hotspot in the same res 8 hex as anoth­er hotspot WITHOUT pro­vid­ing sig­nif­i­cant­ly bet­ter cov­er­age is a recipe for low earn­ings and wast­ed effort. I’ve gone into this in depth over in the Rough Guide. […]


Peter Thompson - 4/8/2021

Hi Nik, thanks again for your reply! There is no one sharing my hex 8, but also no one in the green area of that hex 8 that I'm in also So I won't get to witness his and vice versa, but with other hotspots in a few mile radius would this still be sufficient? I'm a kinesthetic learner so I've read everything on your site but struggling to absorb it completely, I'm going to give it a read again tomorrow morning and try and wrap my head around it more - thanks again a million


Nik - 4/8/2021

Don't sweat the green areas on Helium.place, those are confusing. The big thing is to not be in the red zones. You can witness anyone outside of your 300m radius as long as you can make radio contact with 'em. That comes down to placement (outside) elevation (up high) and then antenna (depends.)


John - 4/13/2021

Cool story, thanks, Nik! Soooo, I ordered my indoor Nebra miner on Saturday. The confirmation page offered this link. I soon began to panic which turned to suicidal! (not really, hehe) But I learned my location, here in the river valley surrounded by neighbors who like their trees, may not be ideal. Oh well, I may have to park it at my daughters house. I'll try it out and see what happens. Question about location and coverage: Suppose I have two miners with hi gain/directional antenna mounted so their coverage profile is perpendicular. Could that defeat the 'too close' problem? They would each have a different audience, so to speak. Another question, if I may. Did IoT devices expect to communicate just via WIFI before HNT? What motivates them to convert to LoRaWAN? Maybe that's for new devices, going forward. Hmmm.


Nik - 4/13/2021

Thanks John! The "too close" issue will be first determined by where you "assert", or set, the location of your miner. This will be confirmed/verified through the RSSI/SNR validation curve set by Helium. Putting two miners to close to each other on the assertion side will be a problem, even if they cover different areas. I'm not sure what the plan was for IoT as far as rapid expansion before Helium. Probably just on a business use case scenario. What Helium has done so far is an amazingly good job of aligning incentives in such a way that we're going to see IoT coverage followed by use grow in the kinds of patterns Silicon Valley types like to see. At least, that's my prediction.


Danny Maloney - 4/14/2021

Hi just wanted to say thank you for writing this Nik. Super informative and with all the mis-information that is now running rampant this truly cleared up a ton for me! I recently jumped the gun and was a dummy and purchased 12 dbi antennas for my units coming in June. I now will be returning them and getting 8 dbi ones! I unfortunately can’t get in there and tinker with it like you mentioned. Don’t want to chance me hurting the units! I’ll test for a couple weeks without the antennas first then see if the 8 dbi antennas help out! Again truly appreciate the great read!


Nik - 4/14/2021

Right on Danny, glad it helped you out!


Doug - 4/17/2021

Great stuff Nik! I just pre-ordered/purchased my first HNT miner. I live in a small ski resort town in Colorado. Some enterprising person has 4 miners set up on their side of town, set up in a square about 400m apart. My place is about 500ft in elevation higher and 3km away. I'm thinking I should orient towards his grid as best I can. The other choice would be to orient towards the downtown corridor of town, but there are no miners there, yet. of course this could all change in 4 months when I get my Nebra. What do you think?


Nik - 4/17/2021

Hi Doug, you're probably best off with an omni antenna unless there's nothing but mountain behind you. Even then, the directionals can cost you coverage. I'd start with the stock and see how it goes. As of today (4/17) there are a few new antennas about to come on the market that might change the game, so stock for now is a good call. :)


Juan Vicente - 4/18/2021

Hi Nik. I purchased my miner (a bit impulsively I admit) and now discovered that have 2 other miners in the red zone! One active, and one inactive. I went on a walk in the neighborhood and didn't see any exterior antenas. Does this mean that I can improve my earning odds increasing the hight of mine? I think my location is ideal. On a hill (over 150 feet) and across the river from a big city (2 miles) I'm all in now!


Nik - 4/18/2021

Increasing the height is almost never a bad idea, but putting 2 miners in one res 8 hex usually is. Can you find another placement? Check out the Helium.Vision post I just put up, that may help with figuring out where you might be better off placing it.


Juan Vicente - 4/18/2021

I wish I could find another placement, but I live in suburbia. I doubt that somebody will lend me their house. Pity. Seems that all res 8 hexes have a miner already.


Nik - 4/18/2021

I get it, though it's not like they have to lend you their entire house. :) All you need is a connection to their router and you can *probably* pay their entire cable bill in exchange. No guarantees on that, but it might be a good place to start.


Juan Vicente - 4/19/2021

Hi Nik, In searching for a better placement I have noticed that all three of the maps show active hotspots in the middle of the Hudson river! How is that possible? Thank you for your time and patience with me! https://explorer.helium.com/coverage https://helium.place/ https://app.helium.vision/ show active hotspots in the middle of the Hudson river!


Nik - 4/19/2021

No prob. Those are most likely either gamers or folks who are falsely asserting their location to maintain privacy.


Mahaney - 4/20/2021

Thank you, for this article very well written; and extremely helpful!!! I ordered a few hotspots which who knows when they'll actually arrive. There are currently none showing in my city, I imagine in short time that'll change. I plan to place the few I ordered approx 1.5 mi apart from one another. Can you advise if this is a good plan, or should they be closer/further away? Thanks in advance for your insight.


Nik - 4/20/2021

Hi Maheny, check the Helium.Vision video I posted, that'll help with planning. I also do custom consulting on this, more info on that here.


Brien - 4/22/2021

Nik, As an application developer, What is the cost to use the Hotspots for the transmission of collected data. I'm in agricultural area that I believe is ripe for the exploitation of this model for "Smart Agriculture" applications. Thanks for writing a great piece on this interesting technology. BH


Nik - 4/22/2021

Brien, DC (data credit) cost is fixed at $0.00001 per 1 DC. Check how much data/data credit you might be using here.


Jasper - 4/22/2021

Hi Nik, Really good stuff here. I also ordered my first indoor miner thats due to arrive in July 2021. My town only has 2 miners thus far and I live at least several miles away from them. This may be a silly question but when I use helium place to determine best placement I find that my own address is in RED zone. I tried some other places around me and getting the same result? Is this user error or have you gotten questions like these before? Thanks in advance for your feedback sir!


Nik - 4/22/2021

Hi Jasper, your placement on Helium.Place will always be surrounded by red; that's where you want to make sure other hotspots are not. Does that make sense?


Kashif - 4/25/2021

Hi Nik, how are you buddy? First of all, I found your post very helpful. I am really thankful to you, may GOD bless you!!! My question is, do you think this will be okay if I use 20 meters extension cable for placing the default antenna (of Nebra indoor miner) on a pole? I mean using an extension cable doesn't affect the performance of Nebra hotspot indoor miner. And can I do the same with an outdoor miner? I will be very thankful to you :) Best Regards.


Nik - 4/25/2021

Hi Kashif, glad you found this helpful. Check over on my Antennas post, but a 20 meter extension cord for *power* won't be a problem. A 20m antenna cable is workable as long as it's low loss, say LMR400. You can use those indoor or outdoor.


woody - 4/25/2021

Hi Nik, great info by the way. I live in the UK and intend to do either of the following with my internal nebra. 1. Place it next to a window with a patch lead through the frame to take the antenna outside. (very high quality cable, no more than 500mm) 2. Suspend it high in the roof eaves in the loft (concrete tiles) and use (if needed a good quality higher db aerial) I am taking advice from a radio specialist shop near me) What would you suggest please thanks


Nik - 4/25/2021

Hi Woody, sounds like #1 will get it outside. Depends as well on the "view" each placement has. Sounds like the loft with concrete tiles will attenuate the signal more than you'd want. Let me know what the radio specialist shop comes back with, always keep to hear other opinions!


woody - 4/25/2021

Thanks for quick reply. I will post info I get from radio guy. He had not heard of these miners, save someone asking for an upgrade and mentioning mining without going into details. I have promised to send him a brief description and some links for him to get his head around it. He says he has better quality cable than lm400. I think first off, I will use the stock aerial inside the window for a few days, then try same aerial with up to a metre of h/q cable attached to gutter line & running back through bedroom window to device. Not sure about putting a dirty great mast up because lightning grounding.


Greg - 4/27/2021

Hi, I have a question ,cannot find it myself so i am living in small country Latvia town Riga and i see that in my town are 4 hot spot distance 5-6 kilometers away from me for example i live in street named Bukaisu iela and other HS are on Matisa iela and Lejas iela and Juglas iela would it be possible for me to reach them ? is it a good investment ?


Nik - 4/28/2021

As long as you have a clear line of sight to the other locations, 5-6 km is an easy shot. Whether or not it's a good investment is up to you. Check what the other hotspots are earning to get an idea of what you might earn.


Greg - 4/28/2021

in that case is 4 dbi antena will be strong enough or should i get stronger 5 or 8?


Greg - 4/28/2021

ill checked and 2 of them earning approximately 50-60 HNT every 30 days which is fine for me ,my question is if you will be so kind just confirm for me if i can earn about the same those 2 hotspot are located in Latvia Riga and addresses are Mat?sa iela, R?ga and Br?v?bas iela, R?ga or the hot spot names Short Hazelnut Raccoon and Strong Holographic Mink . I live in the same town street name is Bukaisu iela i checked on website https://www.scadacore.com/tools/rf-path/rf-line-of-sight/ and its showing kind of green ,can yo have a look and thank you for your time .


Nik - 4/28/2021

Hi Greg, I'd be happy to go through a Standard Consult with you and dive deeper into miner earnings, strategy, and placement. You can book that here.


Greg - 4/28/2021

i will think about it ,just before i decide to do that can you at list tell me knowing my position and the distance from me to other 2 hot spot to earn as much they do 50-60 HNT how much i would have to invest excluding your price ?


Nik - 4/28/2021

Typical costs for an outdoor setup run $800-1,200. You can get away with cheaper, it's all dependent on how high you want to go. After placement, height is everything.


Ed - 4/29/2021

You mention mention docile bone pony’s setup on top of a 16 story building. Are they just using the stock antenna or something else. I live on the 10th floor of a building with a balcony. If antenna is on balcony, would it only receive signals away from building? Would my own building prevent signals reaching antenna from opposite direction? Thanks


Nik - 4/29/2021

They're using an antenna bought off of eBay, I thought I put a link to it. Will go back and check. Your own building will certainly dampen the signals, but LoRa can punch through a wall or two.


kat - 5/4/2021

I am very close to a hotspot that is at 600 m of my house. that hotspot is on the 1st floor, I am on the 3th floor and in between there are no houses but there is about 100 m of forest in between (with leaves). Is it worth to place a hotspot or will the trees prevent good coverage. both hotspots will have a 5dbi antenna.


Nik - 5/4/2021

Kat, you should be fine at that distance. Keep me posted when you get it up!


bsap - 5/4/2021

So there's one other active node not far from me, but that's it for my city. I need to look into this over the weekend, but in my situation is it possible to profit? Or is this something an area really has to have a few people participating in to see any returns?


Nik - 5/4/2021

You'll want at least 4 for a shot at max profits, but going from 1 to 2 is the single biggest jump.


JR - 5/5/2021

I live in the UK and have 3 indoor Nebra miners on the way. I have locations ready for setup. They will all be within a 2.5 mile radius but not in the sweet spot (just outside 300m). Would this drastically affect profits or should the radius suffice? I have also ordered 8dbi glass fiber antennas for two of them. Would this optimise profits or would it be better to keep the stock antennas (3dbi)? Really appreciate your advice and I found this article incredibly informative.


Jacob Coody - 5/5/2021

So, how much do you know about the privacy of the hotspots? If I were a company wanting to utilize the network, how worried should I be that someone could hack my IoT devices?


Nik - 5/5/2021

Hi Jacob, from a home network perspective they're considered about as safe as a wireless printer, so if you use one of those there's no reason to not use this. As far as hacking the device to get to the data, let's put it this way: If you could do that you'd be working for the NSA, not cracking IoT devices. :)


Nik - 5/5/2021

JR, don't worry about that "sweet spot" on HeliumPlace, that's misleading. Even a 4dBi antenna can reach over 100 miles, although generally you can assume that a stock antenna with clear line of sight will routinely hit gateways 8-10km away. Try switching out the antennas to see what happens, usually the RAK 8 is overkill and has too narrow of a pattern, but they can also work really well. RF is weird. :)


Pete - 5/6/2021

Hi Nik, Great info. I live in the Bonita area 91902. I went through my HAAT calculations and got a number of about -126 using a 6 meter pole on my one story house. There are two other home in Bonita that I calculated have about a -90. They are about 1.5 miles away in two different directions. I have a few questions if you don't mind answering. 1. I would expect I need a low dbi antenna considering my location. Is that about right? Any specific one you can recommend? 2. Is having a -126 HAAT considered bad or does the type of antenna compensate for that? Thanks, Pete


Nik - 5/6/2021

Hi Pete, HAAT is a little deeper than most go with calcs, nice work! Check it with LoS on HeliumVision, that'll probably be way easier. :). Low dBi is usually fine, especially with a 6 meter pole. Rock on!


Helium Nieuws #3 - 8 mei 2021 - Helium Nederland Community - 5/8/2021

[…] voor een uitgebreider antwoord deze ‘rough guide to helium hotspot placement‘ (in het Engels) van Nik Hawks, waarin hij voorbeelden geeft wat een optimale setup is voor […]


Trey - 5/8/2021

I ordered a bobcat that should be here in 12 weeks or so (hopefully). I plan on mounting my bobcat in a nema4x enclosure on the side of my chimney and then running 10-20ft of cable from that up a pole to my antenna. Your article says 5’ is ideal. I guess my question is without testing it which is more ideal, the height of my antenna or the length of my cable?


Nik - 5/8/2021

I don't quite understand the question, but in general the elevation of the antenna is far more important than the length of the antenna cable.


David - 5/9/2021

Hey Nick, my home is within 300 meters of a neighboring hotspot. As you mentioned my earnings will really suffer by 50%? That sounds like my home wouldn't be a viable place to put it at this time, although there are about 10 hotspots within a few kilometers of my address.


Nik - 5/9/2021

Not all your earnings, but the transmit rewards would definitely get cut.


Kate York - 5/9/2021

Awesome article! Thank you for the clarity!


Nik - 5/9/2021

No prob Kate, always cool to help people understand this whole complicated beast a little better.


mark - 5/10/2021

What about security? Can the hotspot be hacked? Or router and home network a s a result of setting up a node?


Nik - 5/10/2021

Hi Mark, a hotspot poses about the same threat surface as a wireless printer to your home network.


Helium Hotspot Miners Antennes - Wat is dBi? - Helium Nederland Community - 5/13/2021

[…] voor een uitgebreider antwoord deze ‘rough guide to helium hotspot placement‘ (in het Engels) van Nik Hawks, waarin hij voorbeelden geeft wat een optimale setup is voor […]


stan - 5/13/2021

Hi, how will be the signal if I am at the first floor in downtown part of the city and around me are only high buildings? Is it worth to invest in case like this?


Nik - 5/13/2021

Hi Stan, depends on whether or not other hotspots are close by and have some kind of Line of Sight to yours. Definitely not the best case scenario.


Pantelis Ambatzis - 5/13/2021

Can I serial double or multiple the units


Nik - 5/14/2021

Nope, that won't provide any benefit to the network or your spots. Get 'em at least 300m apart.


Nick - 5/14/2021

Hi Nik, I've purchased a RAK Hotspot and it'll be placed in the UK which is 868 Mhz. I have also purchased an 8 dbi antenna which is a RAK 8dBi Fiberglass Antenna Kit (For 915 MHz Gateways). Have I purchased the wrong antenna dbi for the UK and so must I swap it for an 868 Mhz antenna ? Thanks


Nik - 5/14/2021

Should be fine, those are close enough to not be an issue.


JM - 5/14/2021

What type of connectors should I get? I have a rak miner now and will be getting a nebra soon. I am trying to order the LMR400 cable. I an in NY, live on the first floor of a 2 story building, pretty good clear line of sight as it is residential and most of the houses are only 2-3 floors high. I will be putting a 5dbi antenna on top of the second floor, maybe a few feet higher if I am able to. Thanks in advanced.


Nik - 5/15/2021

Always check with the manufacturers to see what connectors you need. Typically that'll be an N-male to RP-SMA male for most antennas and miners, but again: ALWAYS check your specs first.


Kashif - 5/17/2021

Hi Nik, hope you are doing best :) I have a question: Do you think there will be any difference in HNT earning if I place a miner on my roof directly, or I just place antenna on my roof with 20 meter extension cable (LMR 400) and miner placed inside my home ground floor? Hope you got my question, sorry for my weak English :) Thanks in advance.


Nik - 5/17/2021

Depends on the antenna. A low gain antenna will probably be pushing it at a 20 meter cable run. If you're using anything above 6 dB gain you'll be find.


Rodolfo Reyes - 5/19/2021

Hi Nik, if i use the original antenna from my hotspot do i need to ground it? Or just connected directly.


Nik - 5/20/2021

If it's plugged directly into the unit I wouldn't worry about it, but if you're using an antenna cable and getting the antenna up high, I'd ground it.


Chase - 5/26/2021

Hi Nik, great beard combined with great info. I'm browsing the miners available and leaning toward the Bobcat + included 4dbi antenna, but depending on your feedback, I might land on another and upgrading the antenna. I live on the 2nd floor (14 ft from the ground) of a hollow, rectangular apartment building with a balcony that faces inward. The building has a public balcony on the 4th floor facing outward with room to diffract. However, unless there's a way to lock the cables, the miner's fate would be left to chance that the apartment staff overlook it AND no one steals it. Considering that there is already one other hotspot within 81m of my address and 6 others roughly between 500m - 1km away, would it be reasonable to expect significantly different results if it faced the inside of my building vs. the 4th floor facing outward?


Nik - 5/26/2021

Thanks Chase! The Bobcat should be fine.


Adam - 5/27/2021

Hey Nik - amazing article, very informative - thank you :-) I am in the UK and live in a town which is very hilly. I have looked and the best place to put my BOBCAT 300 miner will be in the loft. I am looking to run a cable for my antenna from the miner to the chimney where I intend to attached the antenna. The houses are very close knit so putting it on my chimney would be best. I was wondering if you could help me with a few questions to maximize the potential of the miner? 1. Which Antenna (UK) would you recommend and the dbi? 2. which cable is the best to connect the miner to the antenna externally? 2. I have a Bobcat 300 & will be getting a Kerlink Helium Compatible Wirnet. Will the antenna, cable etc work for both or would I need different ones? Thank you in advance.


Nik - 5/27/2021

Hi Adam! 1) Any antenna should be fine. 2) I use LMR400, I believe McGill Microwave sells those in the UK but you'd have to double check. 3) Hard to say re compatibility. Kerlink lists both RP-SMA & SMA on their Wirnet listing. Bobcat uses RP-SMA, at least in the US.


Francois Lapierre - 5/27/2021

Thanks for the Great article, very instructive ! When the antenna and the cable are hook up is the signal lost change the angle of coverage of the antenna, or just reduce the power ? I think its the second But just want to confirm my thought. Found a 6 dbi and will need around 30 ft of cable. I live in the suburb and plan to put a 10'-15' mast to my chimney (The oil furnace is remove so it will be my pipe to the Roof ;0) I am not in a dense Helium But hoppefully I cand reatch those close some in the Montréal city like some in my town... I will fallow your Post!


Nik - 5/27/2021

Right on Francois. Yep, you're correct, the pattern doesn't change, the power just goes down. Keep me posted on your deployment!


Matthew - 5/30/2021

Thank you Nik for this great information. I have 2 bobcats and 3 Syncrob.it ordered, the bobcats should be getting here first. I live in a typical suburb, 2 story houses and trees, in northwest Ohio. It’s flat here and no other miners close by (nothing within miles). I was going to go with the antenna that they come with, but they’re indoor antennas. I think a setup of an antenna mounted to my chimney would work best. For the 2 bobcats that arrive first, would you recommend just using the included antenna by a 2nd story window (no screen) with them placed in houses about 850m away from each other? Doing that would obviously give me an answer to see if I need to upgrade, but I’m just trying to plan ahead. Thank you again for all the great information.


Nik - 5/30/2021

Matthew, yep, that's how I'd start if nothing else is nearby. Once you start seeing the area fill in, then you can work on getting your antenna outdoors and up higher so you can reach those other spots.


Anna Romanov - 5/31/2021

Hello! Please please please help me: there was an option "set up location later" - NO THANKS, I'LL SET UP LOCATION LATER - i decided to go on that as first i wanted to sync and then decide where to place it. Now i cannot find a way to fix it and to set up the location. I'm sure you know everything - let me know please please please)))) My best, Anna


Nik - 5/31/2021

Tap on your hotspot in the app, look for the gear icon in the top right corner, then set location. ;)


Jose - 5/31/2021

Thank you Nik for this great article. On the reward aspect, As the network grows, is there any kind of seniority for the hotspots already in place?


Nik - 5/31/2021

Nope, every hotspot is evaluated on its own with no regard for seniority.


C. Biggums - 6/1/2021

Hi Nik, I checked my metro area and a 7km area. The 5 within 6-7km are earning less than 3 per month. Found others in town the same, then some around 23 per mo and then one out of the entire metro area was earning almost 100 per mo. Is placement most likely the difference? Is it possible they're connecting to every hs within a 10mi radius? Thanks.


Nik - 6/1/2021

Yep, WUPU placement and antenna elevation.


When [Bobcat]? - One Man's Search - 6/2/2021

[…] months ago, Ann at Bob­cat reached out to see if I’d like a hotspot for review. She’d read the Rough Guide To Hotspot Opti­miza­tion arti­cle and liked it. She thought it might be use­ful to get a Bob­cat hotspot into my hands ahead of the […]


Kerry Prudhomme - 6/11/2021

Hi Nik, Thanks for the information in this article. I've ordered a few Bobcat miners and even after reading your article have questions on antenna placement. The following facts may impact my placement of the antenna. Flat elevation - No more than 50' change in elevation for 20 miles Lots of tall trees surround my house. My roof is 22' tall. I plan to install a 40' pole to mount the antenna. (From ground level) Should I consider the outdoor enclosure for the bobcat therefore reducing the length of antenna wire? Which antenna would be best for this situation?


Nik - 6/11/2021

Any of the outdoor ones will be fine. Try and keep antenna cable runs as short as possible. Scroll to the bottom on this page.


Rocco Monteleone - 6/12/2021

Hi Nik, AWESEOME post thank you. If I am the first to deploy 10 correctly positioned hotspots in a town that had none to begin with, will that earn good income ?


Nik - 6/12/2021

Hi Rocco, thanks! Being the first in an area doesn't do anything extra for you. Having 10 correctly positioned hotspots is the main thing. Get 'em!


corey huguley - 6/15/2021

I would like more information about your setup on outside helium miner. I I own 66 aces of land and I would like to use my land. I would like to create my own network. Also, currently its none located in my area.


Nik - 6/15/2021

Sure, cruise over to the "Helium Off Grid" blog post. ;)


Chris reid - 6/17/2021

Dude Nik you sir are a god ole brother, I didn't realize until I read this whole article and went to the bottom and recognized your face and realized I just read up on your whole adventure off grid and up the mountain, if I ever cross your path brother i"d like to buy you a beer or two if that's alright. And your right there's far more things that these hotspots can utilize, practically endless opportunity if you read up on it, sadly not enough people take up that opportunity, but hopefully with your words of wisdom people will!! I do have a question for ya that i have yet to find info on, one of my HS are in a ruralish area, closest one to it is roughly 4 miles then about 14 others ranging from 6-12 miles that I pick up, but i have a 280' commercial radio tower 1/4' mile from me, would this creat any kind of signal decrease or loss trying to "compete" across the waves or am I thinking all wrong? I know a few cell company's have antennas there, along with a few railroad companies, a water company and a few "not listed" antennas there aswell. Didn't know if something like that this close would cause any type of interference. Thanks again brother for all you do, keep it up, look forward to reading more, hopefully hear from ya soon.


Nik - 6/17/2021

Hey Chris, thanks! Shouldn't be issues with interference at that range. Mostly the problem is that you're too far away from other hotspots. While they *can* communicate over long distances, they *like* to communicate right around the 600-1,200m mark.


Chris - 6/18/2021

347.5 HNT per month WTH?! 36.076849452137076, -115.28299816633508 is my location and my neighbor (Polite Shadow Chimpanzee) is making over 300 HNT monthly! BUT it looks like many others in the area are only making about 10-30HNT monthly. The terrain is pretty flat, and I'm about 1/2 mile away from them, Using the RFhotspot estimation tool it predicts about 240 HNT monthly for me, which sounds too good to be true at HALF that amount. I have a Bobcat enroute from china (due here tuesday 22nd june) Do they make an enclosure to allow me to put it on a pole on the roof?? or should i stick it in the window and hope for the best? LAST question, Can I move my miner once it's been set up (like put in the window first then later raise on a pole outside after buying proper wire and possibly enclosure) I'll drop you some HNT if you can get back to me to help, thanks!


Teodora - 6/19/2021

Hi Nick, I purchased a RAK miner and I am planning to place it on a roof. I'm also thinking about buying a RAK outdoor enclosure from store.rakwireless to be able to fix the miner as close as possible to the antenna as you advised. I have doubts about how extreme temperatures can damage the miner. In the area I live in temperature can vary in the range 5 to 105 F. The enclosure will be exposed to direct sunlight without any shade and that makes me nervous with summer approaching :). Do you have any advice as to do we need to provide additional protection to the enclosure to avoid overheating or freezing or it should be good to go as it is? Many thanks in advance :)


Nik - 6/19/2021

Hi Chris, sounds like you'd benefit from a consulting session; I go into all of that in detail. In general, 300 HNT is totally achievable but depends heavily on location and antenna elevation. You can put any indoor miner in an enclosure, lots of enclosures are available for different setups. You can move your miner once you've set it up; you do that through the Helium app and it costs ~$10 to do each time.


Nik - 6/19/2021

Check with RAK about the miner & enclosure; both should be fine. I've heard of hotspots in sealed enclosures live through the summer in Texas. I'd provide some kind of shade for the box if I could, as every little bit will help. I wouldn't worry about the cold; computers love being chilly. :)


Teodora - 6/19/2021

Thank you so much! That was very helpful! :)


Bryan - 6/19/2021

I’ve seen that building a hotspot is no longer allowed because people were taking advantage of the system. What were they doing? Just putting a bunch in one spot and say they were other places? Doesn’t seem very smart. Seems like the same IP address would give them away pretty quickly. Plus wouldn’t the signal be really strong and throw up res flags?


Rabih - 6/20/2021

Hello Nik thank you for this very helpful informations. I live in a village in the mountain with high population but a lot of hills up and down. Does this matter for the hotspots? I mean if i put one on the top of a hill will the one down the hill connect to the one on top? Thank you a lot for your reply?


Pascal - 6/20/2021

Hey Nik! Great post and thank you for sharing your knowledge. I just received my RAK HNT miner and I am trying to find where to place it. I have 2 other miners coming hopefully anytime soon (Nebra & SyncronB.it) I have two options: 1. I place the miner in my apartment in Manhattan. Based on helium.place I have 6 other hotspots (orange and red color coding) in my "invalid witness zone" and 15+ hotspots in my "sweetspot" (green area) - I checked some of their rewards and its not more than like 20-30 a month. 2. I can place the miner at my in-laws outside the city. Based on helium.place I would be the only hotspot. I only see two hotspots around me but 1.2-1.4 miles (2KM) away. Not sure if they would see each other. Would love to get your opinion. Thank you very much for your help.


Nik - 6/20/2021

Hi Bryan, basically a slightly more sophisticated version of that. If you look way back in Discord for "Modesto" you'll see the discussion on it. In one case a gamer made 70k HNT in a day; it was a real problem.


Nik - 6/20/2021

Hi Rabih, If they have a clear line of sight they'll be able to communicate. Does that make sense?


Nik - 6/20/2021

Hi Pascal, Definitely don't put any more in Manhattan; that place is way overcrowded. Try looking for a third option, where you have at least 4 miners within a sweet spot of 6-1,200 meters away.


Pascal - 6/20/2021

Thank you Nik. I really appreciate the quick reply. Unfortunately, I don't have a third option at the moment. I checked the addresses of all my in-laws (LOL) and no one has other miners in their sweet spot. At least for now. I will keep looking but I think I will place the miner at my in-laws. There are only two around me but not within the 1,2km range you recommend. Once I get my second miner I would place it near my first one in a sweet spot area. What do you think?


Nik - 6/20/2021

That sounds OK; do you have any friends, co-workers, or know any business owners in better locations? Location is king in this game, so it's important to get that right.


Pascal - 6/20/2021

I need to check but my entire life is in Manhattan - LOL. I checked the location of my friend in D.C.. He has 3 miners within the red zone but based helium.place they have all a 0.5 to 0.8 reward scale. There are 15+ miners in the sweet spot zoon. Does that sound better than placing it at my in-laws outside the city?


Nik - 6/20/2021

Time for a road trip and making new friends. If you're going to move it, move it to a great spot, not just one step up from yours.


Alex - 6/21/2021

Can you do an article on antenna transmission patterns? I have an antenna that is a dipole with the joint in the center, would be curious to see how this fares in the city.


Nik - 6/21/2021

Sure, check this out.


John James - 6/21/2021

Hey Nik - not sure if this is a good idea, but I would like your opinion on it. What if I set up 2 nebra miners in the same building (top floor). One from my apartment, and another one from a neighbor. Each will have it's own wifi connection, but here's the difference - one will have the stock 3 dbi antenna, and the other will have a 5dbi antenna. This way the 5dbi overshoots the 3 dbi preventing them from competing with each other. I live about 20 miles from NYC, and both of my miners are facing West. The 3dbi miner should be able to reach Manhattan, while the 5 dbi should reach New Jersey with plenty of miners for both to witness and challenge. Because I live on the top floor, I have no issues with line of sight, and should be able to reach as far as the antennas can reach. Do you think this will work? Thanks in advance.


Nik - 6/21/2021

Hi John, Depends on what you mean by "will this work?" By having 2 miners in the same res 8 hex, you'll clip your earnings for each one by 50% in most cases. They'll still earn, but at less capacity than they otherwise would.


Kashif - 6/22/2021

Hi Nik, Thank you very much for your continued support of us. I have a question, How much long extension cable I can attach with a stock antenna of bobcat miner? Do you think this will work fine with up to 15-20 meters extension cable? May God Bless You !!!


Nik - 6/22/2021

Hi Kashif, there are two (well, 3) types of cables. First is the power cord; standard rules apply there. Second is the ethernet between your router and the hotspot -- max is 100m. 3rd is the antenna cable. That's the one we really want to keep as short as possible, but has a few variables to it. Check over here for more.


Jerome Nadeau - 6/27/2021

Hi Nik, Here is my problem with finding businesses to accept having one on their property. They all want rental $$ for space and a lease. My question is, what is normal in your opinion to entice a property owner to accept. Most I run across want $400.00 a month plus a year commitment. Total cost at this site would be $500.00 per. $100.00 for internet access.


Nik - 6/27/2021

That's more than I'd pay, for sure. Check out the Getting Your Hotspot On A Commercial Building post for more on this.


Ernestoxx - 6/28/2021

can you make a post about the connectors for the LMR400 for each miner. For example i have a bobcat miner ordered. and i want to use it outdoors by putting a cover. so i will have an lmr400 instead of the one that comes with the Antenna. But what connectors should i put on the lmr?


Nik - 6/28/2021

Will this help?


Todd Eide - 6/28/2021

What if I life on a farm and i can run lora cable 1000-1200 feet in multiple directions and leave the actual box in my house connected to ethernet. Would this work?


Nik - 6/28/2021

Nope. You don't want to have multiple hotspots on the same IP (looks like gaming to Helium), nor do you want long antenna cable runs.


JT - 7/1/2021

Any advice for non-penetrating roof mounts for atennas on an normal residential roof? Haven't found a great solution that doesn't require drilling holes in the wall or throwing cinderblocks up on a roof which probably would work well for a commercial grade roof but probably not all that safe for a standard home


Nik - 7/1/2021

Hey JT, you can skip a few of the cinderblocks if you're not going to add a 20' pole to the non-pen roof mount. You might also look into clamping options like chimney straps.


Tyler - 7/1/2021

Hey NIK, I appreciate the thorough information you presented! I was wondering what your opinion was for those looking to start now? Knowing that the earning amount is going to take a sharp decline in August, and that I wouldn’t be getting my hotspot for 3-6 months.


Nik - 7/2/2021

Tyler, it depends on your goals & expectations as well as the placements you have available. IF you have a great placement, it's worth watching eBay for miners in hand. Prices will continue to drop there, and you'll get it faster than one ordered from the factory. If you want to play the long game and have an actual use case, that would be the driver for a "purchase from mfr" decision.


Tyler - 7/2/2021

Thank you for the reply! I honestly don’t have a great placement. I’m in a city with only a few, and the nearest one is a few miles away.


Kashif - 7/9/2021

Hi Nik, how are you buddy? I come again with another question, hope you won't mind ;) Can you please, is there any option to hide the privacy of the helium miner location? I mean on the helium coverage map when I see my hotspot then this should not show the exact home location. Like it should show it's on the next street or so, although it's planted on my home. Hope you got my point. Because I don't want that my neighbours or relatives should not know what I am doing at the moment. Best Regards.


Devon - 7/9/2021

Hi Kashif it seems your issue will be resolved with https://explorer-beta.helium.com/ which we will be transferring to shortly, currently it is in BETA getting ready for it's full release. This will only show amounts of hotspots in a given hex, rather than showing exactly where you are. Hope this helps you out with your question.


Nik - 7/9/2021

Sure, I think it's reasonable to assert your location anywhere within 100m of where it actually is. I usually tell clients to assert it in the middle of the nearest intersection that's within that distance. In time, that strategy and tolerance may change, but for now that's the best option.


Kashif - 7/9/2021

Hey Nik, you are awesome. You helped me a lot by saying I can assert my hotspot location around 100 meters away from the actual location to hide my privacy. Tell me if I have two locations for two hotspots, and the distance between these two locations is 200 meters. As you know we should place hotspots away at least 300 meters away from each other. So, in this case, if I assert my first location 100 meters away from the actual location and in this case both hotspots now show 300 meters distance, then will it fulfill the minimum 300 meters target to get proof of coverage. I am sorry if this is a silly question, but maybe someone also has the same question in their mind :) Best Regards.


Nik - 7/9/2021

Hi Kashif, you *should* assert your miner where it is. Now, with that said, I think it's OK to assert it within about 100m just to retain privacy. As of July 2021, Helium doesn't have a great way to protect your privacy. Asserting a miner in a location it isn't actually in for reasons other than privacy is frowned upon (although I'm sure plenty of people do it). If you have 2 locations that are 200m apart, you really only have one location. At least, that's how I see it. Think about it this way: 2 miners that are actually close together but are asserted 300m apart aren't really providing the network any benefit. They're more of a gaming setup. You're better off finding a new and completely different location.


Helium Hotspots & EMF - One Man's Search - 7/12/2021

[…] go back to the Heli­um Hotspot one last time and just think about where it’s placed. While I rec­om­mend always plac­ing it out­side (NOT for RF expo­sure rea­sons, but to pro­vide the best cov­er­age), some peo­ple can’ t […]


Nojeem Bakare - 7/23/2021

What a great write-up!


Nik - 7/23/2021

Thanks Nojeem!


Jim - 7/30/2021

I live in a sparsely populated area 3k and next town is 25k but I am willing to move to Eugene OR to do this hot spot gig. and on a waiting list for equiptment. And will get your help. when time gets closer. Am I correct in my assumptions ?


Nik - 7/30/2021

Hi Jim, that sounds reasonable. Keep an eye on average rewards to make sure it'll be worth it. Any time you can set up a miner that provides Wide, Unique, Proveable, and Useful coverage you're getting the fundamentals correct.


Trevor - 7/30/2021

So glad to have found your site! Seems like getting the antenna up high, def in my location, is a theme here! So how does one do that? Any special requirements for a pole? Can it sway in the wind? If higher is more important than antenna ( usually). Id like to get 20’ past my roof- Is that too far to cable from my bobcat? Hope thats not too many ?’s. Thanks for a great blog Nik!!!


Nik - 7/30/2021

Hi Trevor, check what height will do on Helium.Vision; sometimes just a few feet makes a difference, sometimes 100' makes no difference (radio shadow from hill). It *can* sway in the wind, but definitely better not to. Make that pole sturdy! I've used 20-25' of 4130 steel, .095" thick, 1 ¾" diameter. That's a good, albeit expensive, way to do it. More on antenna gain & cabling here. Rock on!


Darcy - 7/30/2021

Great write up! You mentioned putting the miner on the pole close to the antenna (unless I misread?) but what if you live in a cold climate where temps go below the Operating Temperature (e.g. 0 C on a bobcat)? Any advice for keeping the miner safe while close to the antenna to minimize cable length?


Nik - 7/31/2021

Hi Darcy, thanks! Hmm, you could insulate the box or just keep the miner inside and run longer antenna cable, keeping it low loss. More on that here.


Marco Martins - 7/31/2021

Thank you so much for providing this useful content! Question: can I use the default antenna outside?


Nik - 8/1/2021

Hi Marco, I don't think so; the stock antennas are probably only rated for indoor use. With that said, they'll probably work fine for a few days to a few months, depending on weather. :)


Marco Martins - 8/1/2021

That's what I thought :D Mine is currently under light rain but I've put some plastic film protecting the connections while I do not order an outdoor one. BTW, just to confirm what you are saying, my 2.8dB stock antenna can have a witness that is 19.2Km away, because it has line of sight. I'm on a hilly zone, and I'm up the hill, I have as witness 80% of city HS. My goal is to put the antenna higher and I'll probably order a 3dB outdoor antenna or would you recommend 5dB?


Nik - 8/1/2021

Yep, with Line of Sight you've got pretty long range. 20 km no prob. I'd go with an HNTenna (that's what I'm using on all my installs going forward.)


Jim - 8/1/2021

Is there a place to see the miners or hot spots in OR. ? web-site with maps


Nik - 8/1/2021

Hi Jim, they should show up on Explorer at the res 8 hex level. If you want to see exact assert locations you'll need to use a paid app. I recommend Helium.Vision.


Lorenz - 8/3/2021

Hey Nik, Love your Blogs! One question left for me though, for now at least. I also have been trying to get information on that in the past weeks, but didn't really find anything valuable: What do I need to look out for, when trying to maximize the RF of my antenna? Is the multi-polarization really that much better for receiving signals? Any other parameters or values to look out for? Cheers Lorenz


Nik - 8/4/2021

Hi Lorenz, try this post on Helium antenna choice, it should lay out what you're looking for. :)


Jim - 8/7/2021

Helpfull suport, Is it better to be the first hot spot in a town of 25k or move to a bigger one with 4 or 5 already, ( Grants Pass) ? Thanks Jim


Nik - 8/7/2021

No advantage to being a "lone wolf". You need at least 4 other hotspots to be able to earn maximally, though you probably want more, just to give your hotspot(s) more chances at witnessing beacons.


Harold - 8/8/2021

Your posts have been fantastic and very informational, so thank you for that. Back in the late 60s and 70s, I built a lot of ham radios. I basically remember NOTHING from when I actually knew anything. Could you bifurcate the coax with a splitter and use multiple antennas for these hotspots or would that make it worse? Thanks again.


Nik - 8/8/2021

Hi Harold, from everything I've read, there's no good way to do that; you just lose too much energy when you're splitting the signal in half. Better off getting one antenna high with clear lines of sight to lots of other hotspots.


Thomas - 8/15/2021

Nik: We discussed this once before, and I wanted you to share it for everyone’s understanding: do the enclosures protect the miners from the elements of winter, rain and snow? Or should we add something to the enclosure for the miner’s protection? Please advise.


Nik - 8/15/2021

Hi Thomas, yes, enclosures protect the miners from the elements. You can use a vented or sealed enclosure. Considerable discussion around which one is better. If you go sealed, make sure to include dessicant, and from what I've seen be careful of overheating, especially with the Bobcats. If you go vented keep in mind that dust is an enemy of electronics, so have some kind of mitigation for that.


Marco Martins - 8/15/2021

And moisture!


Nik - 8/15/2021

indeed, and moisture. :)


Marco Martins - 8/16/2021

Putting the miners into this enclosures with them generating heat I wonder if they won't create condensation when humidity rises outside if we have a hole for ventilation. What's your experience Nik?


Nik - 8/16/2021

I've got a couple that have been up for months (through the "winter" in San Diego, complete with rain, fog, clouds, etc) and they're still doing fine. My guess is you'll have to replace the electronics every 1-2 years anyway, just like you do with almost every electronic thing.


Thomas - 8/16/2021

The Bobcat miner has an overheating issue? My roof is all sun. No shade. And it cooks like an oven during the summer months. My aim is for all my miners to be on rooftops near the antenna.


Nik - 8/16/2021

Yep, that's what I've seen in the forums; Bobcats seem to be more sensitive to overheating than, say, the RAKs.


Thomas - 8/16/2021

Wow. That’s not good. How would you suggest elevating the Bobcat during the summer?


Nik - 8/16/2021

I'd keep it in a shaded and well ventilated spot if I had to put it outside. Bobcat has made a point recently of saying not to put the things outside in the heat.


Thomas - 8/16/2021

The attached articles are very helpful. It does change my approach. I wanted all my miners to be airborne (20 feet) above the roof. I will need a longer cable instead— slight signal loss.


Easy Helium Outdoor Antenna Upgrade – Tea and Tech Time - 8/19/2021

[…] What’s The Best Antenna For Your Helium Hotspot? A Rough Guide To Helium Hotspot Placement […]


Reggy - 8/22/2021

HI, i bought (5) Bobcat hotspots not realizing that I can't have more than 1 in my home. I live in California, I have a spot for 3 of them around my city and work, but I was thinking about putting 2 in Canada, can I do that? I know they just have to be 300 meters apart, but is there any restriction to how far? They would all be connected to my app that I would set up and monitor them with so it shouldn't matter right? I just purchased today and can't find any info on this, and i'm sure I can cancel a few of them if I can't pull this off. If you have any info on my situation, it would be soo helpful!


Nik - 8/22/2021

Hi Reggy, Keep reading through the site for more info on how to optimally deploy 'em. 5 is manageable. No restrictions on how far apart they are. Yes, they'll all be connected to the "wallet" in your Helium app, so you can monitor them from there. If you'd like to just skip to the front of the line when it comes to understanding what you've gotten yourself into, I offer consulting for Helium, more on that here.


Don - 8/24/2021

Looking to possibly hire you, if affordable, for an opinion on my location.


Nik - 8/24/2021

Right on, check over here for rates. Thanks Don!


Benji - 8/24/2021

Awesome content Nik. I appreciate you sharing! My setup will be going on my roof with great visibility and elevation relative to the rest of my city. Is there a hotspot you would recommend? Does the hotspot need to be placed on the roof as well, close to the antenna? Thanks!


Nik - 8/24/2021

Hi Benji, thanks, happy to share. The RAK V2 seems to work best if you're putting an "indoor" hotspot outdoors. Check out more on the Anatomy of a Hotspot post, here.


jjlomar - 9/5/2021

Hola , se habla de 120 pies de altura , yo dispongo de un lugar con 350 pies de altura , la pregunta es , puede perjudicar tanta altura , gracias


Nik - 9/5/2021

Depends on what you're running. Ethernet cable going 300' shouldn't be a problem, but going anymore than 60' on LMR400 (ANTENNA cable) can significantly reduce power transmitted. Check this post for more on EIRP and cable loss.


LaRoc2121 - 9/7/2021

What if you're in line of sight of a cell tower


Nik - 9/8/2021

Usually a good thing, though if you're too close you can be subject to interference.


Winning At Helium: The Right Way To Get Started - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium - 9/8/2021

[…] whole train. The bet­ter the cov­er­age you pro­vide (pages and pages have been writ­ten on how to pro­vide excel­lent cov­er­age), the more HNT you earn. HNT is a cryp­tocur­ren­cy and can be trad­ed for many oth­er […]


Andrew - 9/16/2021

Hey Nik, thanks for the awesome write ups. It helped me learn so much. I just had a few questions. I read one of your earlier comments that we would need to be replacing electronics every 1-2 years? So the miners would only last around that amount of time? Would the same go for the antennas? Also, I am currently deciding between the HNTenna 3dbi MP or the McGill 6dbi Tune Antenna or the Diamond Antenna 9.3dbi. I am wedged in around some mountains and the max elevation I can place the antenna would be around 27 feet. My stock 4dbi antenna is currently reaching witnesses as far as 20 km but that is only within the line of sight. I am missing out on a big cluster of witnesses due to a mountain that is about 80-90 feet taller than my elevation, blocking my line of sight. I am leaning towards the HNTenna 3dbi MP but I would have to keep my miner indoors and dbi loss would be around 1.5 dbi. So I am deciding the McGill 6dbi is my best option. Are there higher gain MP antennas you could recommend? I know they are the best for hilly situations and I have quite a bit of hills around my area. Thank you so much for all that you do!


Nik - 9/17/2021

Hi Andrew, the most bang for your buck will be getting extra line of sight, though that sounds very difficult for you with the mountains. If you're stuck with an indoor placement, the 6 dBi will probably work better just to punch out through the walls. I don't think HNTenna has a higher gain antenna on the market yet.


How To Use Hotspotty To Crush - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium - 9/18/2021

[…] talked a bunch about opti­miz­ing your hotspot place­ment (see my Rough Guide for a deep dive), but it can be com­pli­cat­ed to run all the num­bers hotspot by […]


Flavio - 9/19/2021

with a 10 meter long lmr 400 cable I lose a lot of power?


Nik - 9/19/2021

Depends on frequency. Loss at 915 will be ~1.5 dB at 10 meters


Arun Manjila Purushothaman - 10/3/2021

Thanks a Ton, Nik! Glad your friend Nick from Helium Vision recommended you and read a lot of your blogs which are extremely useful. So far I am struggling to find a 'Subscribe forever' button but hope one day will click the 'Hire me' button for large-scale implementation. Great write-up, one which is more entertaining than a video! Thanks, Arun


Nik - 10/4/2021

Right on Arun, glad you've found it all useful. Keep charging!


ali - 11/3/2021

thank you, great insighting points.


William C Calderon - 11/14/2021

Good stuff. Thank you very much. I wish I had an antenna expert to mount an 8 dBi antenna on my roof, and also guide me how to get out of my Bobcat 300 miner with RELAYED STATUS. Can you recommend a person in the Chicago Suburbs area? Thanks a million


Nik - 11/14/2021

Hi William, Any local electrician or satellite dish installer will be able to mount your antenna. As far as getting out of relay, it's more a question of doing it right and then not relying on Helium Explorer to check your work, but rather Helium.Status.


Lessons Learned From A Year Of Helium Deployments - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium - 11/15/2021

[…] 6 months into this, after writ­ing the first few arti­cles (the Rough Guide and the one on choos­ing an anten­na specif­i­cal­ly), I start­ed get­ting phone calls from […]


Richard - 12/17/2021

Do you have any concern a large antennae like that on the top of your roof makes you a target by potentially broadcasting to the passerby you're miner?


Nik - 12/17/2021

Sure, it's definitely an identifiable thing. Not sure what to do about that; I just leave mine up high and let 'er rip.


Francisco Costa - 12/28/2021

Hello first I want to congratulate on such a good video. I recently got into helium mining and there is a couple things I cant seam to wrap my head around. I live in a small town and there is already around 8 helium miners set up, but fairly spread out. The ones in the central area are mining around 2HNT monthly, then there are 2 that are placed almost in the middle of nowhere and are mining 15+HNT monthly. This is really making me question where I should chose a urban area with plenty condos or just plain suburbs. Could use or opinion on this one!


Nik - 12/28/2021

Thanks Francisco. I'd recommend using HeliumVision for assessing locations and making those kinds of decisions. I've built a Master Class for using HV; it's powerful but can be complicated. Rock on!


Dino Patel - 1/1/2022

Hey Nic thanks for this. Super helpful! My question is more about devices. I’m in Africa and curious about how to know if you’re getting a legit device or not. Can I build my own? Or buy from anyone building raspberry Pis and just configure it to connect to HNT? Or does HNT only allow approved devices to connect to its network? There are a lot of resellers entering the market and trying to figure out how not to get scammed. Thanks!


Nik - 1/2/2022

Helium only allows approved devices to mine HNT; you can't build your own. I'd start on Helium's page about approved hotspots/makers.


Alvaro - 1/11/2022

Hi Nic, Thank you for all the information you are sharing with us. I have one question, in a few days I´ll receive a new device (Pisces P100) and I want to locate it as good as possible. I´m living in a 7th floor flat (from 8, 20m aprox. from the floor) with a balcony, where I´ll instale the antenna. My question is, in a balcony you don´t have 360º view (maybe 180º-220º), do you think it can be a big disadvantage? Thank you


Nik - 1/11/2022

Not a huge disadvantage. Just get the antenna outside and you'll usually do much better than if it's inside.


Al Wormininski - 1/11/2022

I must have read this article a hundred times and it's spot on with exception to recommending Parley Labs. After this last Nebra update I really hope you all take your business elsewhere. I didn't think Nebra could be beat for poor service but Parley holding my funds for 10 months and then offering a consolation prize is a slap in the face. I'm sure this will get deleted but this is still a comment for the Helium Network and a red flag posted for future miner purchasers. Good luck all!


Antenna Selection Guide For Your Helium Hotspot | SEKOSD Wireless - 1/15/2022

[…] as high as reasonably possible. How high? as Nik Hawks quoted from the American Radio Relay League’s document on antenna placement: “To a distant […]


Lars - 1/27/2022

Hi nik, Im in a area with very few hnt hotspots at the moment. Theres 1 at approx 3 hexagons away, others are even further away. Im have also on 2 sides big cities at 25km away. How important is it to connect yo those cities with plenty of hotspots in comparisation 2 close coverage in my own Town with only 2 other hotspots in the Town it self. As i understood, coverage is more important than distance, but its hard to change the mind thinking i could ezrn more by being able to connect to the big cities, instead of coverage where not a lot people use allready helium. Do to specify more. Im located in a hexagon without other miners, closest miner is at 1km approx to connect with, 1 big city in the north of me at 20km, 1 even bigger city in the South of me. Could you please give some advice on how to upgrade my situation. Im not connected yet, but im looking first to get all the boxes correct. Kind regards Lars


Darius - 2/15/2022

Hi Nik, is the loss you experience when using long cables really that much of an issue? I don't have electricity in my Attic, so I am planning getting like 5m long cable(lmr 400) from my window to the top of my roof. Do you have a better solution? Thanks :)


Nik - 2/15/2022

Hi Darius, you can just calculate it using any online calculator. In general, 5m of LMR400 is not a big deal.


jean-francois - 3/2/2022

Hi, Where you buy and what is the model of this 23 feets pole. i would!!


Nik - 3/2/2022

Local metal shop, 23' of .095 4130 steel IIRC.


Hayden B - 3/4/2022

Do you have any cable recommendations for a flat cable to run through my window so I can get my antenna outside? I am aware of losses but I believe the benefit of having it outside outweighs losses in the cable. And I am in an apartment so my options otherwise are limited (i.e. non-existant). I've been researching but I haven't found any YouTuber who sounds remotely intelligent who has covered this and I struggle to trust any random source.


Nik - 3/4/2022

Sure, try this one.


Jeffrey Addison - 3/8/2022

I have watched many of your video and read this tutorial multiple times. I will be mounting both of my Nebras this weekend using a 30' pole on one of my peaks (27'). After the 2' loss for the bracket, I should reach about 55'. I will be using 3'of LMR400 and mount both Hotspots in an outdoor weatherproof box 52' in the air. The boxes will have 2 fans each with a thermostat and an IOT thermostat and humidity reader that will use the network for monitoring. My area is awesome and HotpotRF says I should be in the 12-14 HNT per month range. While there are more Hotspots being added in my area, it is rural and I hope to reach into the city with my 8.5 dbi antennas. My question is this... Should I have one fan blowing in and one fan blowing out, or both fans blowing out? They will have vent covers. I have seen arguments on both sides. Also, I will have silicon packs inside of the boxes to catch any humidity that will find its way inside. Thanks for your time and awesome teachings.


Nik - 3/9/2022

Don't need both fans & dessicant packs; they dessicant packs will quickly saturate and be useless. 1 fan blowing is fine, either in or out.


Dave Steele - 3/24/2022

Hello Mr Nik , I really appreciate the info here . I just started mining helium. My location is excellent in all resolutions except 1 the " too many devices" resolution 4 . If I move my placement 600 meters I will gain 1.00 on that too but will that be too much I read here and there the most is 300 meters. Thank you


Will - 3/29/2022

First of all, love your site and your knowledge. Far superior than most sites out there. Question - with these metal poles so high up, what do you do to protect against lightning strikes?


Nik - 3/29/2022

Hi Will, you can't really protect against a direct strike, but you can add a "lightning arrestor" that'll dissipate the static charge before it hits your expensive equipment. I cover that over here. Rock on!


Will - 3/30/2022

I live in MN and am wanting to put my Bobcat 300 in an outdoor enclosure. I'm looking to get it 20-30' above my roof. I'm wondering what kind of enclosure to use based on weather. Our Summers can be hot (90s for 2-3 weeks) & more so very humid. Our winters get cold, below 0 Fahrenheit. Do I build an enclosure with a fan & vent to circulate air in/out OR should I keep it sealed to keep the humid & cold out?


Nik - 3/30/2022

Hi Will, Great question! I'd add heat sinks to the Bobcat, put it in a sealed enclosure in the shade, use dessicant packs and monitor temp & humidity with an LHT65.


Will - 3/30/2022

Thanks NIK! One more question. I'm in the northern suburbs of Minneapolis. Downtown is 10 miles away, with a pretty straight line of site once you get over the trees. I'm working on getting my miner up 25'. I saw a diagram somewhere that a 3Dbi antenna will reach out 20 miles with a straight line of sight, is that accurate? I'm going with your advice and just going to try the stock Bobcat antenna and see what my results are before plunking down big $$ for an antenna.


Nik - 3/30/2022

Yep, clear line of sight & 20 miles with a 3 dBi is totally doable.


rio - 3/31/2022

hello, very informative set of blogs. i recently got my miner (sensecap) and am following your suggestions. it earned some small amounts 24 hours back but nothing since. it has gone online only 2 days back and helium explorer says its still syncing. the sensecap dashboard says its 100% synced. i guess there is some delay on helium explorer but is there any effect on earnings? is there some delay in when the hotspot starts to earn?


Nik - 3/31/2022

Yep, Helium Explorer can be delayed by a day or so. Use HeliumStatus.io to get up to date info.


Helium's People-Powered Network with Nik Hawk - The Bad Crypto Podcast - 4/13/2022

[…] A rough guide to Helium placement:  https://gristleking.com/a-rough-guide-to-helium-hotspot-placement/ […]


Dave - 5/15/2022

hello, https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/hex/882c2026d7fffff in this hex is two person and both have 1.00 transmit scale, in my hex two person too but I have 0.50 why, is this normal? about distance in first hex they have distance 205meter and have 1.00 about my hex we have distance 260meter and I have 0.50 please tell me why


Nik - 5/15/2022

Hi Dave, check this post to learn how scaling works.


Bill - 8/13/2022

Hi Nik, I hope you don’t mind a couple more questions…. I have researched myself but am getting conflicting information… a while back you were very helpful to set up a miner with a friend in a potentially better location. We managed to get the miner running but in the 6 weeks or so it’s online it has not witnessed any hotspots at all although it is earning…. Though in 30 days 16 days did not earn… the surrounding area has plenty of good hex with mainly 1 transmit scale ( as have I ) I have clicked on hotspots and I found my hotspot had been witnessed by a few. Sorry for long message I suppose I would like to know how much impact my zero witnessing has on earnings and maybe a link to read more on optimal placement and also maybe you can send me information about the paid support you offer to see if it is a possible option for me. Thanks and apologies again for length of message ( I really mean it when I said that your information is the best I have come across) Cheers Bill


Nik - 8/13/2022

Bill, it's hard to say why your hotspot isn't earning. The Network has been pretty spiky for the past few months as far as earnings, so you can have everything right and still not get the rewards you think you should. I wouldn't do the paid support for that; as long as your Hotspot is plugged in to power and connected to the internet you're doing everything you can do. Take a look at this in the meantime if you haven't seen it: https://gristleking.com/hip-17-why-are-you-getting-scaled/


Bill - 8/17/2022

Thanks Nik, it’s more for my mate I’d like to see a bit more earnings. To be honest I’m more interested in the tech and the future possibilities. I have been really getting a lot from your YouTube videos. I’m also interested in the possibilities for using the technology and am keen to find out more about sensors. I watched a video last night with you and some others. Am I right in thinking the lady from Bobcat was talking about a way to chat to others in your area and would that be a way of helping people get their hotspots back online etc…. Do you think that if you are near too many relayed or inactive hotspots it will effect people in the area. Before i moved my hotspot from London in a hex with 9 hotspots 6 needed attention and I thought if you could communicate with them and help them it could help everyone. Is that what she was talking about… love your positive attitude keep it up


Sid - 8/29/2022

Thanks Nik, very helpful. No doubt ill be in touch when my miner arrives as I'm 45kn from the next spot.


José - 3/11/2023

Hy Nik, I just begun with a merryloT. Should I open the port 44158 now a days? Thanks! José


Nik - 3/11/2023

Nope, leave it alone. We're past that particular requirement. Rock on!


José - 3/12/2023

Thanks nick!


A Rough Guide to Wingbits - Gristle King - A Guide to DePIN - 11/9/2023

[…] parts of the project remind me of the ear­ly days of Heli­um, back when I wrote the orig­i­nal Rough Guide for Heli­um. Wing­bits is a project that allows you to choose your hard­ware and that rewards you for […]


John - 11/15/2024

Awesome, thanks for the info. One request: please change "Open up an account on Binance." to "Open up an account on a reputable exchange that Helium trades on." Binance does some shady things IMHO, and frankly the quality of exchanges continues to change over time, so recommending one that may work well in one geography may not play well in another geography, etc. Also, "Hotspots record all transactions on a blockchain..." might be tweaks to say "Hotspots record a record of all the HNT transactions on a blockchain..." as it reads one might misinterpret this to mean traffic is somehow getting written to the chain, and of course this isn't feasible. Appreciate the helpful links as well -- I'm in rural territory outside of Tokyo, but plan to throw up a hotspot even though it likely won't make money... just nice to share our 2GB fiber connections with the world when we can. Cheers: -J


Nik - 11/16/2024

Got it, updated those. Thanks John! This was written in late 2020/early 2021, so it's about 3 and a half years out of date now. I'm surprised it's aged this well!


John - 11/18/2024

I saw the original date -- and wondered if you would respond. I guess good information has a way of continuing to provide value. :-) Thanks for the tweaks. Cheers: -John


Edward Schmitt - 9/15/2025

How do I hire you for help? I have three Helium outdoor miners up now. They are located in a location above my warehouse and about 40 feet above the ground level. I am getting about 1.5 tokens each day. I have a new location that has about 65 to 80 thousand people walking past my new location. My Helium unit is 65 feet above the ground level. My problem is that I seem to have problems getting this one setup. I even had my out internet installed just for my new unit. Do you think that it’s worth moving forward. The closest miner is about one mile away.