Skip to main content

103 posts tagged with "Helium"

View All Tags

Unusual Earnings On A Growing Network: Here's How

· 5 min read
Nik
Site Owner

Ok, so you've deployed your first hotspot or two, figured out how a wallet works and where to send your HNT to convert to local currency (or you're hodling.)

So far, so good. But...how do you make it better? What are ways you can deploy hotspots to provide maximum earnings and coverage?

Here's an example of a group of high earning hotspots deployed in a very specific pattern I call "The Dice Five."

This was a very effective gaming pattern until about June of 2021, when Helium Inc shut these kinds of gaming deployments down. I'll leave the post up for posterity, and to help you figure out both what to do and not to do. If you want to get the basics of Helium down, consider taking the Helium Basic Course.

These Hotspots are deployed very specifically to earn maximally, not to provide WUPU coverage. They're only 6-800 meters apart, and LoRa can reach tens of kilometers.

At the end of the day, the Helium network is most likely to succeed if we are all deploying with the dual goals of earnings and coverage. This is an earnings-only deployment.

Still, I know that most of you just want the HNT. So, here was one way to do it.

Let's lay out the 30 day earnings of this deployment:

  • Center Pip - 324.89 HNT
  • High Left - 322.17 HNT
  • High Right - 325.55 HNT
  • Low Left - 581.69 HNT
  • Low Right - 323.04

Total earnings over 30 days for 5 hotspots: 1,877.34. Impressive!

If you look at the res 8 and 7 hexes, these deployed hotspots fall within the density target/density max rules. This is a well thought out deployment.

Here it is on HeliumVision, where you can see res 8 & 7 hexes along with the shortest distance between hotspots, over 600 meters. You can also see all hotspots are earning at a 1.0, which is the highest possible scale value. Yep, falls within the rules.

So, there it is, a great way to earn maximally, though at the cost of significant coverage not being provided.

If you'd like help with durable strategies for growing the Helium Network and earning HNT, consider joining the Gristle Crüe. We're a group of Helium enthusiasts ranging from amateur to expert, and we work together to make sure we're all maximizing this (and other) opportunities at the intersection of blockchain and "the meatspace".

Here's to making the most out of the Helium network, rock on!

Archived Comments

Khan - 5/19/2021

Is this with outdoor hotspots with raised antennas or can this be achieved with indoor setups as well?


Nik - 5/19/2021

Probably most easily achieved with outdoor setups. That’s how I’d do it.


Manny - 5/20/2021

In the situation where you are a lone wolf and you are living on a very large property over 100 plus acres, is it possible to buy six hot spots and set them up in a hexagonal grid 350 meters apart. They would all function off solar. Is this ethical? Is this good for the network? In a situation where you are the sole person in a vast expanse, is it good to live to set up many hotspots talking to each other?


Saquib Saeed - 5/20/2021

thank you and is that with just each other as witnesses?


Nik - 5/20/2021

You could do that, although it's probably not the best thing for overall network coverage, and it looks like (check out the Dice 5 Strategy) you'd want to be more than 350m apart. You'd also have to figure out how to have 'em all on different IPs.


Trey - 5/25/2021

Hello, What if there were more hotspots around that would talk to each one? For example, if I lived in a relatively flat, rural area and I was about to set one hot spot at approximately 80ft tall with a 5.8 dbi antenna and then place another 4 around that Center Pip (not within the 600 meters) then scatter another 11 hot spots (again not within 600 meters) that all should have line of sight with each other and a chance to witness and challenge each other, is there a chance that this would mess up the potential earnings of the Dice 5 or would it only make them more HNT in theory? I still have several weeks before my miners arrive but I have been planning and calculating the best strategies to deploy all 17 I have ordered. These will be the only miners within 300 miles of each other.


Nik - 5/25/2021

Up to 25 hotspots should be fine, in theory. Overall, the best long term strategies will be those that provide WUPU coverage.


How To Place Your Hotspot On A Commercial Building

· 13 min read
Nik
Site Owner

Want to get your hotspot up on that tall commercial building, but you're not sure how to approach the building owner or manager? I'll walk you through how I do it, including templates and how to talk about Helium with non-crypto enthusiasts. I know, I know. You want to skip forward to right before you tilt up the tower, like this:

Relax, we'll get there. Let's go through how that can happen.

First, remember this: Make sure they win. You're going to win, we both know that. Set that aside and focus on them.

Second, know who you're dealing with. Is it an owner? A facilities manager? A corporate entity? You're engaging in business. Do your homework. Be professional.

Third, make sure your agreements are clear and clean. They don't have to be long 19 page documents detailing every last thing. They do have to be useful for all parties. Get the following in writing: What you're going to be doing, how much you're going to pay, and how often you'll pay out.

Fourth, see number one, above. Think about how this might benefit their business. If you can walk up to the building owner with some way for them to make more money or spend less, you're 80% of the way to a done deal. Whether they need to track vehicles or people, or weigh inventory, or get temperature alerts, or count how many cars are parked in their lot, there is almost always some way that a LoRa sensor can help out.

You don't have to have a perfect fit, but if you can show that you care about their business and bottom line, they'll be a lot more open to your proposal.

Fifth, keep it professional. Don't plan on setting up something that'll fall down when it's windy, or leak when it's rainy, or fall apart because you used cheap parts. This is a business. Be a professional.

Once you've thought about their life and how you can improve it, plan out your first contact with them. Ideally you'll have someone you both trust in common. It could be a family member or a friend, or it could be a tenant that both you and the building owner trust. If they're a total stranger, make sure you've done your homework on their building (how old is it, how high is it, how many tenants do they have, what's the average rent in the area, etc). Build up a mental map in your mind about how your placement proposal will benefit them.

Speaking of a proposal, have something written up and ready to hand over. Here's a short example. The template is here.


LoRa Gateway Proposal – Rooftop Placement

Gristle King Inc (GKI) provides LoRa radio (LOng RAnge) coverage via a small device and antenna installed on a 15’-20’ high mast anchored with a non-penetrating removable roof mount.

A LoRa gateway (Long Range radio and small computer) is used to provide coverage for Internet of Things (IoT) sensors.

IoT can range from remote weighing of ingredients to counting the number of people passing through a doorway to remote sensing of parking spots, temperature and humidity tracking, and more.

Each IoT sensor transmits encrypted information which is received by the gateway, then passed by the gateway to the internet for data processing and visualization. Sensors are typically cheap and long lasting, with life expectancy routinely in years.

A typical gateway installment involves providing a power source and internet connection to the gateway, then customizing a sensor deployment.

In this case, the initial sensors will be scales custom-built to remotely monitor ingredient stock levels.

The gateway provides “permissionless” coverage to anyone who wants to use it, so if other businesses within the coverage area of the gateway want to build or employ their own solutions using LoRa they can do so by buying data credits. Data credits run approximately $5-10/month per sensor.

Gateways typically use about as much power as a light bulb and as much data as a Netflix user.

More on LoRa technology can be found here: https://www.semtech.com/lora

GKI proposes a monthly hosting payment to XXXXXXXX of $XXX/month to use building internet & power. GKI will install the gateway and associated hardware. All installation costs and any damages resulting from the installation to be borne by GKI.


Here are the essentials of a proposal: It should quickly and clearly describe what you're doing. It should show the businesses owner how they and those around will receive a benefit. It should be low risk for them (no drilling holes in their roof). Finally, it should be boring.

That last one is where most of you stumble. You're excited about Helium. You want to share how cryptocurrency and the blockchain is changing the world and how much long range coverage you'll be providing for all these devices (that typically don't exist yet) and how this is the ground floor, and LET'S DO THIS!

I get it. I'm excited too, but business owners didn't get to own a building by listening to excited people talk about dreams and the future, and especially about Bitcoin or Doge or....what was this again, Helium?

Trust me. Keep it boring and practical. Point out where they'll win. Make sure they DO win. If a business owner can rent out 6 sq ft of their roof for $150/month, that's $25 a square foot. That's a win.

Ok, now that you've presented your proposal and they've signed off on it, you'll have to connect your Helium Hotspot to its lifeblood: Power, and the internet.

You can go off-grid, which is (depending on where you live) about 3 times as expensive as staying on a hardline. The enormous upside of being off grid is you don't have to convince the building owner to get into their router and open up port 44158, or plug in to their power, or make any holes in their building in order to run cable. All of those can complicate or upset a deal.

Still, off grid is hard, and expensive. If you can show the building owner that you know what you're doing, that you've terminated ethernet cable before and punched through building envelopes, and that opening up that port on their network is something you can do behind your back with a blindfold, they usually put you in the category of "technical geek who can do anything" and they'll give you the run of the shop. That opens up your grid-connected options.

What I'm saying in a roundabout way is to make sure you learn a little bit of the language of contracting and network installing. Don't go in there saying you're going to run "internet cable". Don't say, "I think I might have to drill a hole in your roof, let me go buy a drill." Don't ask them if you can "get on their WiFi for a sec".

Know what you're talking about. Be a professional. Have the right tools to do a good job. Here's my list of essential Helium deployment tools if you need some guidance.

This brings me to my last point, which is relationships. I know you want a magic piece of paper that you just throw at a building owner and they toss the roof key back at you and say, "Have at it." That doesn't happen. Building owners are just like you; they want to turn a profit and they want to work with people they like and trust. The profit part is straightforward. The next part comes from building relationships.

Show up on time. Be professional. Think about their needs before yours. Try and improve their life. Have fun and be joyful when you work. Always look for positive opportunities where all parties win. Always build the relationship.

That's the kind of person I'd want putting a [whatever it is you want] on top of my building. Wouldn't you?

Best of luck with your deployments, and if you need help I'm available for hire.

Rock on! ~Nik@GK

Archived Comments

Ryan - 5/16/2021

Great post and helpful! I find it interesting that around where I live and I'm sure in other locations across the world, residents are willing to have hotspots in their homes for really cheap by these "groups" that own 100 + hotspots. This one group charges $10/per month and easily making 300-500 HNT/month of 1.


Trip - 5/18/2021

Am I doing it wrong by offering commercial buildings a stake of the earnings? :-D I should be offering less....


Nik - 5/18/2021

There's not a "wrong" way to do it. If they take a stake in earnings that opens them up to all the tax implications of crypto. If they just pay a flat USD (or local currency fee) they don't have to deal with any of it. I'd rather keep the load on the pretty light when it comes to paperwork and tax liabilities.


Pete Danylewycz - 5/24/2021

Hey Nik, Great post! Thanks for sharing. Quick question? In your post, you talk about drilling holes and using an ethernet cable. Is that even necessary? You can hook up HNT miners wirelessly using WiFi instead of a direct connection to the router. Is there a reason you recommend or prefer using a hardwire connection? Thanks, Pete


Nik - 5/24/2021

Hi Pete, you can definitely use a WiFi connection, but I've found an ethernet connection far more stable.


David Fant - 5/24/2021

Hi Nik, we want to offer an outdoor solution that doesn't require an ethernet connect should it not be readily available. Can you recommend a 4G LTE modem option that works well with the RAK hotspot? Thanks, David


Nik - 5/25/2021

David, I've used a IBR-650C for all my off grid deployments; industrial grade. I've heard good things about the RUT240. Full write up on off-grid over here.


Dustin - 6/2/2021

Hey Nik, As always, thank you for the super knowledgeable post! One quick question I have is: Did you use an ethernet surge protector? Thanks, Dustin


Nik - 6/2/2021

Hi Dustin, I didn't, nothing beyond a standard injector/splitter.


Nick - 6/3/2021

Hey Nik, great post here. May I ask if any hotspot miner can work with lora technology without the HNT data credits because one of your reasons in that post was the future usage of this product. Greetings Nick


Nik - 6/3/2021

It's not so much any hotspot miner as any device that can run the code. I've used Raspberry Pi4s with the RAK2287 hat & concentrator. You can build your own that won't earn credits but will provide coverage following Helium's instructions, here.


Matt - 6/18/2021

I just received this information from Bobcat today regarding temperatures and reduction of performance at higher temps. I’m currently waiting on my bobcat and had plans to mount the hotspot in my attic to reduce required Coax length. Located in Austin Texas I know attics can get up to 140 degrees if not more. You having put these out in direct sunlight I was wondering your take and experience so far with your outdoor units. Wondering if I need to rethink this. Any contributions you have will be appreciated thank you. Here is the link I received from Bobcat. There is an included study of this phenomenon that’s over my head. https://www.bobcatminer.com/post/handle-your-miner-with-care?postId=e78b8003-cfa3-4ca2-a5a9-54d6f620fe8d


Nik - 6/18/2021

Hi Matt, I've only deployed RAKs and DIYs outside, they're doing fine. Not sure about the Bobcat, though it's got to be the same basic components.


Brian - 9/1/2021

Do you attach guy wire anywhere when utilizing the 15-20ft masts. If so, is it possible to do so without drilling?


Nik - 9/1/2021

Hi Brian, yep, I use stainless steel guy wires and attach them to sets of CMUs (Concrete blocks).


Marco - 9/2/2021

Hey Nik, Can I ask what's the usual amount you offer to the owner?


Nik - 9/2/2021

Hi Marco, I've done anything from 20% to $150/month.


Brian Kenney - 9/6/2021

Are you connecting these to a building ground? It seems to be an isolated system. What are your thoughts specifically for solar powered (no wires) units that are on rooftops.


Nik - 9/6/2021

Hi Brian, yep, you should be connecting these to a building ground. Solar powered units on rooftops can be an excellent call, it's mainly a question of economics and maintenance. If the building owner is OK with you tapping into power & internet, usually far cheaper to do that.


Viktor - 10/27/2021

Do you build the mast? Do you have more detailed roof setup?


Nik - 10/27/2021

Yep, check out this post on that setup.


fotuisaac - 1/17/2022

Hey Nik, how do you pay your hosts? Crypto and Fiat? Do you use Stripe? Also is the proposal you have on here used as sort of a contract that your hosts sign?


Nik - 1/17/2022

USD or HNT split. I don't use Stripe. The proposal I use is just a general template; that's all the one commercial building owner needed to see.


Isaac - 1/18/2022

I guess a better way to word my initial question is what do you pay your hosts through? Is it via Venmo, Cash App or do write them checks?


Nik - 1/18/2022

The commercial building owner bills me, the split I do through Hotspotty and the Helium app.


How To Secure A Successful Helium Hotspot Placement

· 26 min read
Nik
Site Owner

Sometimes ya just gotta see it being done to learn it. Here's the best I can do to bring you on the journey of setting up a hotspot. This is the story of Thankful Caramel Quail. The full gear list for this install is here, including options & alternates.

I'd identified a commercial building as a potentially good location for placing a hotspot. It was high (40' or so), near a busy highway (the 5, an interstate freeway that connects Mexico to Canada along the West Coast of the US), and near a busy border. The San Ysidro border crossing is the fourth busiest land border crossing in the world, and well within the coverage range of this setup.

The surrounding area is mostly flat. To the east there's a slight rise which would block some RF waves, though they'd have plenty of distance to spread out and possibly bounce around it by the time they got there. I ran an RF simulation on Helium.Vision (preferred choice for pro deployments, learn how to use it here) and it looked pretty darn good with a 3 dBi HNtenna.

Nearby was mostly commercial and mixed use, not super dense residential. The area in general didn't have many hotspots in it. That density and type of real estate is good for providing needed coverage and not getting clipped by Transmit Reward Scaling.

All of those things (elevation, density, good lines of sight, lots of potential for IoT use) are important for a durably profitable deployment. You can probably get higher earnings *now* by going into a denser area, but you're not really improving the network. Constantly improving/expanding network coverage is how we'll all win. Keep it WUPU, yo.

I approached the building owner through a tenant in the building. I contract the tenant to do work for me on an ongoing basis, so it was a straightforward business to explain how having a LoRa gateway on the property would allow me to monitor inventory levels on the products I store there as well as offer coverage to the other tenants and the surrounding area. The building owner asked for a one pager explaining what I was doing so he could run it by his insurance company. I gave him a slightly modified version my standard template.

Then I went up on the roof to make sure I could do what I wanted to do, and we agreed on fair compensation.

I try to keep all my written agreements as simple and clear as possible. You may have different requirements or a different goal, and that is definitely NOT a legal document.

Now that I'd identified a location, confirmed it was clear for my preferred setup, and gotten permission, I had to order the parts and put it all together. For these flat roof installs, it's a pretty straightforward setup. You order what's called a "non-penetrating roof mount", assemble it on the roof, tilt it on it's side, slide in the longest pole you can find, stand the whole thing up and anchor the base with concrete blocks along with 3 separate guy points fastened to the pole and anchor those guy lines with concrete blocks. It's super simple and very sturdy.

The pole I used was a 21' foot tube of 4130 chromoly with a wall thickness of .095" and a diameter of 1.75" that I got from Competitive Metals over in El Cajon. You can find something like it at any metal shop near you. This is the same pole used by the old ham guys on top of their towers; it's light, strong, and tough. You can find cheaper poles, but I've found that cheaper usually is more expensive in the long run.

Of course, before we got to the roof there was some prep work to be done.

First, I had some LMR400 cable laying around which had the wrong connector on one end (from my early days of pushing the BUY button before double checking what connectors I'd need). Before we jump into cables and connectors, it is WAY easier & cheaper to just order the right cables & connection and not do it yourself. I recommend McGill Microwave for that.

Still, easy ain't always my game, and I love making things work.

Step one was to cut off the wrong connector. Here we go!

You can do all this stuff with a straight razor blade, but I'm a "right tool for the job" kind of guy. I picked up the proper cable cutters, strippers, prep tool, and crimpers for both this size (LMR400) and LMR240, just in case I need to do that as well.

After stripping the cable sheath and the inner core, it was ready for soldering the tip onto the copper inner wire. I blew one tip before I got it right. Yep, I ain't perfect, not by a long shot.

Here's what it looked like the second time. :)

From there you just slide on the connector, then crimp it. Easy enough with the right tools. Here it is before the crimp connection:

And here's what it looks like after I crimped it and slid the weather resistant strain boot over the whole thing.

Now, I've learned the hard way (having to make extra trips to a mountain install) to test everything in the garage, so out came the VNA (better versions exist now) and I tested the HNTenna with the cable. Here's what a loose connection will do to your VSWR (which should be well under 2):

And here's what it looks like when all your connections are tight and your cables are properly made. See how the VSWR went from 50 down to less than 2? Under 2 is what you're aiming for. That's golden.

Now that the cable was made, next up was making a quick bracket for the antenna. This is dead simple, requiring just a few holes, a u-bolt mount, and a vise to twist the aluminum bar.

Here's drilling the hole. This is where a drill press comes in super handy. Drilling large holes by hand just isn't as fun or easy. :) You can see I've already drilled the clamp holes on the end and the u-bolt is mounted so I don't lose it.

Once I had the holes drilled it was over to the vise to give it a 90 degree twist. Keep it simple, superman!

I also wanted to test everything in the backyard. As Paul over at Tourmaline Wireless had drilled into me from the Amateur Jade Hare install, test it at home first!

In the past I've carried out my old school drill press and mounted it on that eucalyptus stump, but I didn't want to fuss with carrying the 140 lb drill press out this time, so I just went with a corded hand drill and sharp 1/4" bits. It's not quite as easy with a hand drill, but hell, it ain't like it's impossible.

Now comes the cool part, rivnuts! These are a way to make a super clean install on a pole, or any metal. They can be a bit fiddly, but man do they look clean. Here you can see I've got one installed and one hole drilled, waiting for a rivnut. Once they're in, I just use 'em as mounting points for the enclosure. Rivnut kits for this kind of work are pretty cheap, usually under $50.

From there you just bolt on the enclosure and your mounting setup is finished! Those 2 small wires and the little black box coming off the RAK is a PoE splitter with a USB-C connector. We'll talk about that next.

My goal for any on-grid hotspot installation is to connect the hotspot to the router via an ethernet cable carrying PoE, or Power Over Ethernet. I don't trust WiFi to have a stable connection and WiFi generally won't punch through exterior walls well, especially when they're concrete and/or insulated. PoE means you can drop one cable from your requirements (the power cord), which is one less hole to drill in a wall. That's a good thing.

In this case, we needed a long ethernet cord. I think I used 249' of Direct Burial Cat6. That's overkill, 5e would be fine. Direct Burial just means you can drop it outside and it'll last longer. I buy 500-1,000' rolls for exactly this reason, and terminating your own ethernet cable is super easy. You can see on the enclosure picture above that the cables just run in through the bottom protected from the weather by foam guides. Yep, simple.

This PoE (Power Over Ethernet) thing confuses a lot of people. Thankful Caramel Quail is a RAK hotspot. It doesn't take PoE natively, so you need two things, a PoE *injector*, which "injects" power into the ethernet cable down by the router, and a PoE *splitter*, which splits out the power and the ethernet in the enclosure. Some Helium hotspots do PoE natively (like the Nebra Outdoor), so you don't need a splitter. For hotspots that need both, here's the diagram:

To make that a little more clear with a video, I shot this for ya:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHzBNQOHqrY

In any event, with an injector and a splitter and enclosure and all the rest of the tools bought, it was time to get on site and haul up the blocks I'd need to stabilize the pole.

You need 15 of these blocks to stabilize a 20-25' pole. 6 for the stand, then 3 each for the 3 guy anchor points. All of 'em have to go up. I've done this by myself with a ladder, but it's way easier with two people. Me & @coaxialtasko switched out so we'd both get some work in; here's me practicing my long unused bowline tying skills.

https://vimeo.com/544449056

With the kit hauled up and the cable ran (from the router inside through the building, out a hole where pipes were already punching through, then up onto the roof), all that was left was assembling the base, tilting it up, and wiring the guy lines.

These bases only go together one way, and it's not always obvious what way that is. Still, you'll end up with a nice looking and sturdy base using only a crescent wrench and a socket set. Love me some simple tool action.

I should've got video of the tilt up but we were busy GSD (Gettin' Shit Done), so here's the finished product. Yep, that's my $6k haircut by the artist Manrabbit, with all of Tijuana in clear Line of Sight to the south. You can't see it from here, but there's a Proxicast lightning arrestor with grounding lug attached to the antenna. Relax, grounding gods. Sheesh.

That's it. The hotspot isn't being relayed, so I'm not focusing (for now) on opening up port 44158. I'll watch it for a while to see how it does, then I may test different antennas.

My hope with this deployment (and all deployments) is to usefully expand coverage of the Helium network while earning a steady and reliable flow of HNT. If that's your goal as well and you'd like help doing it, I'm available for hire. Here's to the healthy and awesome growth of The People's Network!

Archived Comments

Mike - 5/3/2021

Great post and significant effort put into making it one of the best SD hotspots (96+ witnesses). Hopefully HNT earnings will increase from the current level, hard to judge without baseline with the stock antenna. My only suggestion (too late now) is to make cable from RAK to antenna shorter, as short as possible.


Nik - 5/3/2021

Thanks Mike, it's only about 5' of LMR400. I don't think making it shorter would make a difference. Am I missing something?


Stanley Lawton Mead - 5/3/2021

Is a 20 mast on a one story house using a 5,8 dbi make sense? Flat terrain.


Nik - 5/4/2021

Probably, though it depends on density as well.


Sebastian - 5/4/2021

Didn't see any mention of grounding the setup. Any worries about lightening strikes?


Keishon - 5/4/2021

Love the content and effort put into documentation. As you began this business how did you come up with your business model of compensating building owners?


Nik - 5/4/2021

Right on Keishon, thanks. Nothing fancy, just looked at what an attractive rental fee might look like and proposed it. :)


Nik - 5/4/2021

Hi Sebastian, you should always ground your setups, I'll get pictures of it next time I'm there. Standard lightning arrestor with grounding lug, find the building ground and lead to it. Nothing fancy.


Charlie - 5/4/2021

Is the lightning arrestor necessary? I would think only static electricity is the only real potential problem. Just grounding the mast will probably be sufficient? Agree?


Nik - 5/4/2021

Technically you'll use both. A good arrestor is $50-75 and can save all your electronics. Definitely wouldn't want to lose a hotspot at this point in the game due to static build up and discharge. :)


Rich - 5/4/2021

Amazing job! Shoot me a quote to set a couple up (already have in hand) in Phoenix. Cheers, Rich


Nik - 5/4/2021

Hi Rich, Thanks for reaching out, Tony B called me tonight about you! I can help with placement consulting and optimization to make sure you get the best result possible, but I don't do paid set ups (or I do, but not at a rate anyone would want to pay.) ;) If placement strategy is interesting head on over to the Consulting page.


Oliver - 5/5/2021

Awesome content on this blog. Planning to set up a few ones but on the top of the highest buildings in a very flat country with much more wind and rain so I have to figure out some better then the bricks to fixture that antenna's base. I really just wanted to put near the other antennas. I thought it is enough if it's on the top of a building but yeah.... the another antennas are recieving not sending so I should really evaluate this one... I hope they let me do still if it will be more visible :D


Nik - 5/5/2021

Right on, keep me posted with the mounting solution you come up with. Those bases with blocks are pretty darn sturdy, and if you put the guy-line mount points up high and move the guy anchors far away it'll take a hurricane to move 'em.


shawn - 5/8/2021

What is the that black/white cone-looking enclosure around the antenna called? Is it for better reception, weather proofing, etc? there's a 5.8 inside that? great info, I'm in SD, and now seriously considering doing one of these on my roof.


Nik - 5/8/2021

The cone-looking thing is a "radome", and all it does is protect the antenna inside from the weather, which is a 4.1 dBi.


andre - 5/12/2021

Hey Nik, what is that "radome" made out of, or can u buy it ready-made somewhere? thanks and great post!


Nik - 5/12/2021

I believe plastic. It came with the antenna, I'm sure you could shop around and pick up something like it.


Andy - 5/12/2021

Awesome post Nik, much appreciated for sharing, I've just discovered HNT and People's network and love it! I might need your consult when get my hands on one of miners. QUESTION: (if u know ofcourse) How simple is it to change miner's frequency from US(915MHz) to EU(868MHz)? Is it a matter of just replacing different antenna and power voltage adapter, or there's also some chips inside the machine that need to be replaced to match that antenna? (I have somebody here locally in UK offering me buy brand new miner, but it's a US version(915Mhz) and he's afraid he might run into problems with authorities thanks for your help, cheers


Nik - 5/12/2021

Right on. I'd say that's too difficult to be worth it. Far more involved than replacing antenna and power adapter. If they have brand new US miners for sale they should just ship 'em to the US. Send 'em my way if they want to sell.


Caleb Shuler - 5/13/2021

Thanks for all the helpful stuff Nik! I have been reading and sharing around discord for a couple weeks now. You really help take this stuff to the next level. Can’t wait to hear you on the uplink! I’m on discord @skidog12 I might hit you up for consulting someday!


Nik - 5/13/2021

Right on, standing by to help when you want to get deep & awesome. :)


martin - 5/20/2021

Nik- I am about to do my first one similar to this on top of my roof at home with a rak miner and and outdoor enclosure. I am confused about the grounding and the lightning arrestor. Where do you attach the grounding wires on a setup like this? Thank you


Nik - 5/20/2021

Martin, grounding wires from from the lightning arrestor to the metal mast, then from the base of the mast to the building ground.


Leon - 6/4/2021

Hello Nik, so I was wondering if you know how much Datavolume these Hotspots need. Because I was thinking about mounting it on the roof of a business and they obviously wanted it to use my own WiFi. I was thinking about getting an outdoor router with 4G Sim-Card since this would be cheaper and way simpler since we already have an electric plug on the roof and I could directly plug everything in from there and obviously I would need a way shorter cable. You think this would work out? Best from Berlin, Germany. Leon.


Nik - 6/4/2021

20-30 GB/month. Check out the ELI5 article for more info on hotspots.


Leo - 6/5/2021

If I wanted to build something like this at my house and instead did not purchase a separate enclosure for my Bobcat and my router (which are inside my house), do I have weatherproof the LMR cable?


Nik - 6/5/2021

LMR400 is weatherproof, just make sure you use a drip loop before bringing it inside. :)


Alisha - 6/15/2021

What is the box/ enclosure called? Trying to find it on Amazon, just not sure what words to use to look it up.


Nik - 6/15/2021

Hi Alisha, I think I used a Qilipsu enclosure for that install.


Mike - 6/17/2021

Hi Nik! Thanks for sharing so much knowledge on Helium, antennas and the works. I have found several types of non penetrating mast mounts online like the one you have in this article, but what did you use for the guy wire anchor points? Was looking at putting a 10' mast on a flat roof and wanted to emulate what you've done here.


Nik - 6/17/2021

3 CMUs (cinder blocks) connected via a loop of wire rope, swaged the ends together.


John - 8/27/2021

Hi Nik. How are anchoring your guy wires to the roof?


Nik - 8/27/2021

Hi John, I just anchor 'em to a couple CMUs (concrete blocks). Zero penetrations that way.


Brian - 9/1/2021

Hi Nik, Curious, when you go to change antennas, how do you ensure that the mast does not fall in wrong direction? How taught do the guy wires to cinder blocks need to be?


Brian - 9/1/2021

One more question. Are you concerned water is going to fill that mast tube? Or is it open on the bottom.


Nik - 9/1/2021

It's open on the bottom. :)


Nik - 9/1/2021

The mast isn't that heavy, two people can easily bring it down under control. The guy wires need to be taut enough to keep the mast stable; it's a "feel" thing.


What's The Best Antenna For Your Helium Hotspot? - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium - 9/5/2021

[…] 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 […]


Leo - 9/19/2021

Hey Nick thank you for the great Guide!! From do you get the tripod for the mast? I'm struggling to find a high quality one ?


Nik - 9/19/2021

Hi Leo, should be a parts list link on this page. If not, look for a "non-penetrating roof mount".


Mario - 9/30/2021

Hi Nik, thanks for all the knowledge-sharing. Kudos! When placing the small golden tip on, did you soldier it or just press-crimping it enough? Without the PS100 analyzer (cuz I just saw it for the first time and have to figure out how to get it fast) does seeing more witnesses prove that the LMR cable was well-made? Asking because we put our first bobcat outside on top of a building in Croatia (24m total with pole) 2 days ago and it went from 11 to 87 witnesses, but no change to the HNT earnings or consistency-of-earnings. Looking at the daily, it only received rewards at 5 hours of the max 24 so looking very "thin"... If it helps: Slow Hotpink Camel.


Nik - 9/30/2021

Hi Mario, I order the solder tips and solder 'em. There are two kinds; crimp & solder. Seeing (any) witnesses proves that the cable works. Having more witnesses isn't necessarily going to increase you earnings, as only 10 Witnesses are randomly selected to split the pot.


Mario - 10/1/2021

Thank you Nik! So far we crimped ours that we ordered from https://bit.ly/2Yj7nL3 (and now hoping they are the crimping ones). Will definitely continue to read all the posts for improvement and troubleshooting and will probably reach out when we put all the setups outside and need further assistance. If I may ask one more question that is a part of the last one... how come the top 10 in my city have an average of 19-20 hourly rewards and, well, our two ones have 5-6: that's a huge difference! (I know there is a bunch of factors, but if we have clear field of view with 360 vision with no hills around... there is room for the signal to spread and bounce... a stable cat.5 internet connection... a 5.8 dBi RAK antenna... not too long LMR400 cable. It just boggles me!? I think we need the PS100 analyzer, but what can I say, the bobcats were 2 months late and putting every effort to catch up...


Nik - 10/1/2021

Hi Mario, earnings is mostly a function of placement and line of sight to other Hotspots that are not scaled and on stable connections. There are many permutations that look good at first glance but that don't work well. ~75% of your earnings come from witnessing, so if you're witnessing lots of low scale Hotspots that's one reason your rewards could be lower than other Hotspots.


Ron - 11/16/2021

Hey Nik, As always, incredible information! Any thoughts on how to properly 'ground' a hotspot in a high-rise balcony 20 stories high?


Nik - 11/16/2021

There was recent talk on Discord about this, with one suggestion being to just ground the thing to a large piece of metal, which will at least help dissipate that static buildup.


Foundations of Relayed Hotspots (and how to fix 'em!) - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium - 11/17/2021

[…] your hotspot. Remem­ber Thank­ful Caramel Quail? You can read about its set­up over in the Anato­my of a Hotspot post. When you hit the Search but­ton, it’ll bring up a bunch of options. Choose yours, and this […]


Mihael - 11/22/2021

Did you have to calibrate your new RF Analyser? Or you just used it out of the box?


Nik - 11/22/2021

Yep, I bought a calibration kit and used it before attaching the analyzer to any antennas.


Yeah! - 12/7/2021

You are amazing my brother. Hats off for the hard work and many thanks for sharing so we can learn too!


Lateef - 12/9/2021

This is great.


Mark Beat - 12/11/2021

"YOU" are a great help! Presently, I have three residential locations to do the initial set up, sometime in January 2022. I hope you are still available for hire to advise me on setup, etc. Thanks for taking your time to share with all of us! Have a Merry Christmas!


Nik - 12/12/2021

Right on Mark, thanks a ton! Rock 'n roll into 2022, here we go!


Geo - 2/15/2022

For the guy wires, where they meet the blocks, are they on a sled or something, or do you just loop the cable thru the blocks? Do you feel the rivnuts are not strong enough to use for the eyelets or just easier with nuts...?


Nik - 2/15/2022

I just looped another wire through the blocks and then attached the guy wire to that loop via a carabiner.


How To Know Where To Place Your Hotspot For Max Earnings

· 14 min read
Nik
Site Owner

Ready to go deep on optimizing your hotspot? This leverages the fundamentals of WUPU and assumes you have more than a passing knowledge of Helium. I'll pull back the curtain a little bit and share examples of the strategies I use. The list of strategies covered in this post is at the bottom, under the Terms, Tools, and Strategies (TTS) section.

Why am I doing this? By sharing knowledge about how to best deploy a Helium Hotspot, we make the network overall more robust and likely to succeed. If, like many people, this is your first exposure to physical networks, or antenna placement, or just radio communications in general, you'll probably make mistakes that will cost you HNT and will cost the network good coverage.

If you'd like to take a course on using one of the most power tools, HeliumVision, check out the one I built here:

Ok, we'll start with WUPU. WUPU stands for Wide, Unique, Proveable, and Useful coverage. For a hotspot to earn maximum HNT rewards it has to meet all of those. We'll go through examples of each one.

First, let's do Wide. The more coverage you have, the more options you'll have for the Well Fit Belt strategy we'll go into later. Common mistakes when assessing a hotspot for whether or not it has Wide coverage are to look just at the pretty green dots on Explorer and not see topographical restrictions. Here's an example of a client showing me what they thought might be a great Edge strategy (defined in the TTS section at the bottom) for Wide coverage.

What's the kicker? In Explorer, this looks like it might be at the foot of that mountain range to the east, and that those mountains might even help focus your coverage to the north and west, potentially reaching all the way into the L.A. superclusters.

Here's what the RF simulation looks like in Helium.Vision:

You know how many hotspots that placement will connect with? Zero. Being buried in a valley will kill your coverage.

Yep, despite seeming like a potentially great Wide placement option for an Edge deployment, you've got to look at the total picture, and topography is a big deal. Oh, and ALWAYS pull an RF sim on any proposed placement. I use Helium.Vision for their RF sims as well as the multiple other data sources you can pull in, full video on how to use that tool here.

Ok, next in WUPU is the Unique aspect. This can be a confusing thing, as it doesn't mean that your hotspot needs to provide totally unique coverage. It's just that your coverage should not duplicate, or even come close to duplicating, another hotspots coverage.

Here's a great example of doing a terrible job at Unique placement. Behold the Great Taffy Boa in Puerto Rico, with what appears at first glance a Unique placement in the middle of the west half of the island. It might be Lone Wolf-ing it, but at least it's providing Unique coverage. Or is it?

This is an example of what happens when you order two hotspots to double your earnings, then just plonk your second hotspot down at Grandma Sallie's house who lives right next door. Let's zoom in on that placement that appeared to be Unique:

Those two hotspots are in the same Res 8 hex, providing duplicate coverage, with both earnings getting transmit reward clipped at a .50 Reward scale. Talk about leaving money on the table! You could move one of those to another location 300 meters away and double your earnings on BOTH hotspots, meeting at least 2 of the WUPU requirements (Unique and Proveable.

That brings us to Proveable. Your hotspot can (and should, if you want to earn!) overlap coverage with other hotspots, thus making your coverage Proveable through a distance and bearing reading of the radio waves being transmitted and received. Here's where the dance really begins, as the more locations you can "Prove" with, the generally better your earnings will be, up to a limit. What's that limit? Why, 25, of course. This brings us to the Well Fit Belt strategy.

The Well Fit Belt strategy is to find an area where your hotspot can witness 25 other hotspots within the range of your antenna. Any more than 25 and you're wasting effort. Less than 25 and you're leaving earnings on the table. The minimum you want witnessing your beacon for maxing out your earnings is 4, but why would you try and maximize with a minimum?

Typically, the "belt" around your hotspot (assuming clear LoS in all directions) goes from 300m (min distance to witness) to 8-10km, which is within the range of the stock antenna and therefore every hotspot. Here's a chart (from @para1 on Discord) showing the distances at which hotspots are witnessing.

What does that mean? You can draw a 10 km circle around your potential placement and be pretty sure that unless you've got something in the way (mountains, hills, buildings, etc), you'll hit the hotspots within your circle (unless you're in a Canyons & Crags situation, more on that later.)

Here's an example of a 10km belt with the 300m standoff around the HS:

You'd want to look for a placement like this, with lots of hotspots (at least 25) within that belt area. The 300m standoff in the inner circle is actually a little big as drawn, but it won't hurt you to treat that as a 400-500m area anyway, as you'll provide more network coverage with further spread apart hotspots without impacting your own earnings.

What should a well placed hotspot in a Well Fit Belt look like when it comes to witnesses? Let me show you:

This hotspot is nailing a ton of other hotspots all within that 10 km belt. Sure, it's hitting outsiders as well, but not as reliably or easily. Focus on your Well Fit Belt!

What about earnings? This is one of my fave example hotspots. I worked with the owner to make sure it was up as high as possible, and we're both pleased with the results.

Keep in mind those earnings will continue to drop across the board, this is just a snapshot in late April 2021 with only 28k hotspots on the network.

The final part of the WUPU acronym is Useful. Remember, the whole idea of the Helium network is to provide useful coverage to IoT devices. You can have a great setup, but if it's not actually transmitting data then you're not really contributing, you're just taking. This is a great reason to buy a least one sensor and put it up near your hotspot. It can be anything, from an LHT-65 that tells you the humidity and temperature (and is a very fast way to check if you're HS is still up and processing data) all the way out to custom built weight plates, horse counters, bomb sniffers, and and snow depth measurements.

Sign up for a Console account, provision the device, connect to Datacake or MyDevices Cayenne and get just a little deeper into how the Helium network operates. I believe, without any evidence, that having a sensor pass data through your hotspot improves your earnings. Again, no evidence for that, just my experience and hunch.

I'll finish out by talking about looking for a "unicorn" opportunity, one I call Canyons & Crags. This is a hotspot that placed in such a way that it's able to witness and beacon to many other hotspots that can't see each other, just as if it was up above a bunch of canyons and crags all filled with hotspots.

This mostly happens in cities, where the buildings form canyons & crags that block RF signals between low hotspots and allow high, well placed spots, to communicate with all the lower ones. This focuses earnings on the high hotspots. Finding those Canyons & Crags opportunities is one of the things I help my clients consider and identify for their deployments, as a well done C&C placement will put you amongst the top HNT earners world wide.

Ok, that's a walk through WUPU and some advanced strategies. If you'd like me to customize a strategy for you and walk you through exactly how to make the most of your particular opportunity, head over to my Helium Consulting page and sign up for a session. I'd love to help YOU make the most out of Helium!

Rock on!

-Nik


Tools, Terms, Strategies

  • Edge Strategy - Placing your hotspot on the edge of one or more clusters, usually with the intent to connect 2 unrelated clusters
  • WUPU - Wide, Unique, Proveable, Useful coverage
  • Canyons & Crags - Placing a hotspot where it can "see" many other hotspots that can't see each other, focusing earnings on the high hotstpot
  • Well Fit Belt - Using the 25 witness limit for Helium to find a placement within the average contact distance of 25 or more hotspots within LoS
  • Helium.Vision - This is THE tool for power users. There are other excellent tools for one-off placements, like Helium.Place and HotspotRF, but for those of you looking for a top 1% placement HV is the go-to tool.

Archived Comments

Michael - 4/27/2021

A lot of this content went over my head but I am very interested in learning more about this stuff! Thanks for being transparent and upfront about what you recommend. You're the only person online that's truly talking about these HS for what they are, and not just creating blog posts that try to sell your readers on products that won't benefit them :) I really appreciate your knowledge!!


Tommy - 4/29/2021

Great information and research. Questions if you have some time to answer. 1. Could one add a extension cord to this unit to power it. If putting on the roof how would it get powered if we don't have an outlet near us. Does the RAK unit have anyway to power by ethernet cable? I saw the nebra outdoor had it but that is not coming til October from what they say. 2. What is the max length of cord you would use from the unit itself to the antenna. Would 10 feet high quality cord be ok or effect it much. I need to keep unit inside house but want to put on roof for max height. Thanks Tommy


Nick - 5/1/2021

Tommy, look into an enclosure big enough for your hotspot that is at least rated IP66, and buy yourself an ethernet POE to USB-C splitter. Make sure you have a POE injector inside on the other end.


Nik - 5/1/2021

Sure, you can add an extension cord to power it. You could power it with an ethernet cable using PoE, or Power over Ethernet. This involves a PoE injector and a PoE splitter. For PoE, max length is 100m. For antennas, depending on the gain and your goals, you can use up to 60' of LMR400 without any major issues.


Tommy - 5/2/2021

Thanks Nik, Could the poe splitter be done on the RAK 2 unit? Nebra has it built in on outside unit. One less cable to worry about. Thanks


Nik - 5/2/2021

Pretty sure you'll need an injector at the far end for the RAK 2. Does that make sense?


Nick - 5/2/2021

I"ve got about a 100' run of CA400 cable for my run to the antenna, do I need any amplification for this run?


Nik - 5/2/2021

Seems a little on the long side to me. Not sure about amplification, I've always focused on getting shorter antenna cable runs.


Anatomy of a Hotspot Placement - One Man's Search - 5/3/2021

[…] the net­work. Con­stant­ly improving/expanding net­work cov­er­age is how we’ll all win. Keep it WUPU, […]


Thomas - 5/4/2021

Hi Nik, you mention the placement and that it is better in a hill. I was wondering what height you enter in the app for the antenna if your house is on a hill? Great blog by the way. Thanks


Nik - 5/4/2021

Hi Thomas, HeliumVision takes into account the ground elevation, so you just enter the elevation above ground.


Noah - 5/26/2021

In your 10km San Diego example above, there are more than 25 witnesses. How does this work? Do they are show as witnesses, but you only get paid for 25 of them? I have a location in mind on top of a mountain that I believe can see well over 100 hotspots LOS - given the 25 limit, is there any advantage to a location like this?


Nik - 5/26/2021

Yep, you'll max out any given reward at 25 witnesses. Being able to see more than 25 isn't useful on any given reward, but over time can be useful as you'll have different witnesses for most beacons. WUPU coverage is king.


Nadim - 5/31/2021

Hi Nik, I wanted to thank you for all the articles you have written so far. My knowledge and understanding in Helium has greatly improved since I found your page. There is one uncertainty I tried clarifying with CalChip Connect which they were not able to help me with, so I am hoping you might. I have ordered a Rak V2 miner and a RAK 5,85dBl_Fiberglass Antenna. I am now searching for LMR-400 cables, I have found a provider which states I can use an LMR-400 cable with N Female - RP SMA connectors. However I would expect to use an N Female RP SMA Female cable. The reason is the Antenna has a N Male connector hence I need a N female to couple with this. In the RAK Miner spec sheet it also shows and states an N-Type Male connector so I would assume that I need an RP SMA Female. Would you know the answer ? Thanks in advance.


Noah - 6/5/2021

Thanks for the answer. Excuse me for being dense, but if you only get rewarded from 25 witnesses, how does having more witnesses that see beacons help revenue? If I had two options: A. easy/ Place a hotspot halfway up a mountain that sees exactly 25 witnesses, or B) hard / place it at the top of a mountain that sees 100 witnesses. Given a more difficult install, would B make any monetary sense over the long run?


Nik - 6/5/2021

Probably, as you won't always see the same 25 witnesses. Plus, doing the hard thing is usually the most rad option. :)


What's The Best Antenna For Your Helium Hotspot? - Gristle King - A Guide to DePIN - 12/28/2023

[…] 9 the pat­tern gen­er­al­ly gets too pre­cise to pro­vide the Wide cov­er­age (the W in WUPU) that […]


How To Estimate Your HNT Earnings With HotspotRF

· 12 min read
Nik
Site Owner

The constant question with Helium is, "How much will my hotspot earn?" While I've covered the strategy for maximizing that in other posts, it sure is nice when you have a tool that helps dial in your accuracy. HotspotRF aims to be one of those tools, and when it first came out I sat down with the owner, Aidan Curry, to walk through how to use it. That interview is at the bottom of this post, but I thought I'd check in on the tool and see what's new. As it turns out, a TON!

Like Helium.Vision (walkthrough here), HotspotRF's main offering is RF (for Radio Frequency) simulation.

Let's say you just moved to Vegas, up in the nice part of town just north west of Summerlin. You want to know if putting a 21' pole on top of your two story house will help pay the mortgage, right?

One of the best ways to see if your location *might* work is to run an RF simulation to see how far those little LoRa packets will fly. You plug in some details, like your specific frequency (915 for us North American types), antenna gain, cable loss, height of antenna, and type of terrain, and HotspotRF will spit out an image of what your radio coverage should look like.

Now, you've got to sign up first, so even though you get free credits, you'll need to pay for a plan in order to get full value. For a test run, I picked a place just south of the US border. The greater Tijuana area has been rocking lately, and I've been eyeing some of those mountain placements. So, I picked a promising looking spot, dropped a pin, and hit the "Simulate Location" button.

Sims take a while to run on any platform, whether it's HeliumVision, Hotspotty, or HotspotRF. You're asking for an extraordinary amount of information to be crunched.

If this is your first time using it and you haven't signed up yet, you'll get the "Active Subscription Required" prompt.

I chose a Hobbyist plan. I don't have a huge need for ETL stats (I get those from another project I'm part of), but if you're getting deep into the weeds those start to become useful.

After running the sim, HotspotRF predicts that this will earn 21% above local average, woohoo!

As with all simulations, it's not a guarantee. For off grid hotspots (which is what I enjoy the most), these estimations will be further off; in the view of the prediction algorithm, off grids are outliers.

HotspotRF makes it pretty easy to get a good idea of the coverage you have. In this case, the spot I (without much map study) picked looks like it has a significant block directly to the west all the way up to the NNW sector. It's possible I dropped the pin in a small local valley or dip, but I hadn't seen the Terrain layer in Settings, so wasn't able to zoom in and get a feel for terrain.

I thought I'd do a quick check on the earning estimates and drop another placement near a known high performing Hotspot. I'd expect this placement to more or less match Amateur Jade Hare, one of the highest local earners here in San Diego (and probably the install I've had the most fun with).

To be VERY clear here, the location I'm simulating is on public land and is NOT one you should consider actually deploying a Hotspot to.

This time I turned the Terrain layer on. You'll notice it's "sharper" than the real terrain (they do this on purpose). I fly my paraglider in this area all the time, so the difference was noticeable to me. Here's a quick clip from a flight in Feb 2022 to show what it actually looks like. As I turn right here, about 4 seconds in, you can see the length of the El Cajon mountain. That beeping, by the way, is an instrument called a "vario", and beeping means we're going up (in a thermal). This was a lovely day to fly.

In contrast, here's the Terrain on HotspotRF, from a perspective further to the south and probably a few thousand feet higher.

https://vimeo.com/687198184

We intentionally exaggerate the terrain by 150% to make it easier for users to see the contours of the land and better place hotspots. A lot of users were saying it's hard to see the terrain before we updated this.

-HotspotRF team

That's pretty cool in my book; they saw that users were having a problem and came up with a friction-reducing fix unnoticeable to most that solved the problem. That's the sign of a team dedicated to user experience - very cool!

Ok, so how did the prediction line up with real life? Well, let's start with a caveat: This is an off grid, and off grids are much harder to predict for a variety of reasons. In this case, the prediction came in at lower than the actual earnings, 19 HNT vs the approx 25 HNT the nearby Hotspot has actually earned over the past 30 days. That's a good thing; you probably don't want to over-predict what you'll make. Here's the estimate and predicted coverage:

The HRF team dove in to why this happens for off grids, which I thought was pretty cool. It demonstrates to me they have a deep understanding of the field of play, who their main customers are, and how the whole system generally works. That is exactly what you want in a tool like this. I'll let 'em take it from here:

For crazy off-grid setups like the ones you do, our tool is always going to underestimate the earnings. Off-grid setups are fairly uncommon and more of an edge case compared to the average deployment. Why?

Our algorithm filters out and discounts rewards from hotspots with very few witnesses compared to how many hotspots are in the area.

For example, if you run a simulation and should be able to reach 200 hotspots, but some of those hotspots only have a couple witnesses, we assume those hotspots are "un-reachable" due to poor placement/setup so we ignore them in the calculation.

This is the only way to give the majority accurate estimates, but for off-grid setups, the reality is you can probably witness those hotspots, which is why for those "edge case" deployments our tool tends to underestimate.

-HotspotRF team

For "normal" setups, the estimates are much closer. Keep in mind that for ALL deployments, the amount of HNT you earn per Hotspot will only decrease as the amount of Hotspots on the network grows.

On the rest of the tool, the color coding of hotspots is super simple to understand, and there are a bunch of layers you can use to see Helium coverage and opportunities in different ways. You can hover over a hotspot to see its earnings, which saves you from opening up a window over in Explorer to do the same thing.

HotspotRF also allows you to click on a Hotspot and get quick stats on it; this is a fast way to see if a port is open, how much it's earning, who its witnessing, etc.

In general, HotspotRF appears pretty darn useful for folks pressed for time and who aren't looking to manage a fleet, just make assessments.

Here's the walkthrough with Aidan from back in April of 2021. We had some tech difficulties right in the middle of it, so you'll see a jump from a day to a night call. Enjoy this new tool!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHOzaiOkvTc&t=121s

Want to try HotspotRF out for yourself? Use code gristleking for a little discount, and take HotspotRF for a spin!

If you'd like to join up with a crew of like-minded folks passionate about Helium and discuss HotspotRF (or anything else Helium-related), take a look at the Gristle Crüe, my community of rad folks in pursuit of Helium excellence!

Archived Comments

Eri - 4/20/2021

Best explanation till now and still a lot of questions in my mind :) ,but you clarified most of them,one thing i need you to ask,i live in a very small country where till now there is no helium hotspot,it means that there is a small number of Iot devices,does it mean that my hotspots in case i have 2-3 will mine few coins,will i generate less then if i were in a big country??thank you


Nik - 4/20/2021

Thanks Eri! It's not the size of the country, it's the number of hotspots that connect to each other while providing the best/most coverage. 2-3 should do well. In the long term the processing of data will start to matter more, but for now, most of the rewards are related to proof of coverage.


Hunter - 4/20/2021

Just wondering if I have 4 miners in proximity to each other with none around so far will I still be earning enough or should I get more?


Nik - 4/21/2021

Depends how you set them up. 4 is the minimum for starting to earn well, but no guarantee. 25 is the top end. You'd want to provide WUPU coverage for max earnings. Wide, Unique, Proveable, Useful.


Devan Sohni - 4/23/2021

Nik i was going through few examples. Came across this Glamorous Chiffon Trout https://explorer.helium.com/hotspots/11ybntCpx66cCH6zjfxttwfP1ekJB7zrwG4NGPYCaJSnm9xp2ZK He is based out of GA USA. His witness are from Denver, Chicago, NJ, even London where we have different frequency. I am wondering how is this possible. Also he mined 1071 rewards in just 2 days. Thats amazing. What is this guy doing.


Devan Sohni - 4/23/2021

Got the answer The Helium Consensus Protocol


Nik - 4/23/2021

Sounds like you found out. Consensus Group (CG) rewards are pretty exciting, but random and rare. They'll go away once the Validators come online, but for now it's like winning the lotto; nice, but not reliable. ;)


shawn l reuland - 5/9/2021

Hello Nik, do you use any LoraWan field test devices? I.e for measuring signal strengths either against a deployed Helium miner post-installation or a pre-deployment simulation? Or are these sites like HotSpotRF and HeliumVision basically good enough to replace? Would be great to hear any insights on either approach. I see the Adeunis field tester mentioned, looks pricey. I'm assuming any type of site survey for pre-miner installation, would just be done with a regular LoraWan GW on the pole and then you use one of these field test mobile tools and wander around, measuring the RSSI's perhaps?


Nik - 5/9/2021

Hi Shawn, I've bought and used the Adeunis. If you're in San Diego hit me up and you can borrow it. It's fun to map things out, but I didn't find it ultra useful. LoRa goes such a long way that coverage is usually amazing from any given antenna. You can build your own mapper for much cheaper, which is a cool way to get into some code and support Helium.


shawn - 5/10/2021

Hello Nik, I'm in SD, thanks for offer on that. I'm grokking the Helium Mappers on that project, definitely cool, I like the Dragino tracker as option for having a live Helium node to verify network traffic also. I think the cloud mapper usage requires having the Gateway already joined to Helium network via the Console? I was thinking initially of options for field testing just the LoraWan coverage on a deployment prior to being on Helium network, as relocating Helium gateway to each potential place I'd wanna check is not trivial. I see the WisGateway D0, is relatively cheap Lora GW dev board and If I pair that with the cheapest hand held field analyzer seen on ebay, am looking at about $300 for some nice toys. Unfortunately, no U.S. distributors carry the WisGateway D0, so, to get that would require ordering from RakWireless.com, which is hits you with like a $50 shipping fee at min. I'm blown away by the Helium eco-system going on here, trying to catch-up to be relevant. I'm sw engineer in iot field, have worked on a few platforms, mostly pattern of proximal sensors(wired or 802.15.4) and then always a separate gw which does wan backhaul over wifi/lte, so can see where the Helium network becomes compelling enabler for iot apps as it removes the need for gateways, which is a huge cost/consideration for any iot product. once this nation-wide network of helium miners really gets rolling..


Nik - 5/10/2021

Cool, I'll email you to coordinate a pickup of the Adeunis.


Helium Tools, Part 1: Helium.Vision - For Power Users

· 4 min read
Nik
Site Owner

Let's start with the basics: When it comes to Helium, most people radically underestimate the importance of Placement and get distracted by antennas and cables. If that's you, read the Rough Guide to set you straight.

Trust me, I've been there. The first hotspot I put up was successful, and while I'm very pleased with its success, it was an accident of geography, not a determined, strategic effort to maximize the most important aspect of any deployment: Location.

Let me break it down this way. When I think of earning power split out between location, elevation, antenna, and cables, the pie chart looks like this:

Are you still thinking you really need that fancy antenna?

Location is king. If you're in the right place, and if you can find that golden scenario I call "Canyons and Crags", you stand to have the highest earning hotspots in the world. All the elevation, the fanciest antennas, and the lowest loss cables won't make a twig of difference if you're not in the right location.

That's where Helium.Vision comes in. One of a few services that have sprung up to help hotspot owners max out their deployments, this one is aimed at "power users", hotspots owners with multiple hotspots who have the energy and resources to find the best locations and secure them.

I sat down with Helium.Vision owner Nick Hough to have him walk me through how to use this powerful tool. If you're the "just tell me what to do type", this is not for you (I can help you with that, just not in this post.)

If, on the other hand, you've got 10+ hotspots coming in the mail and want to make sure each one of 'em is a top earner, well, this 40 minute video deep dive on how to use Helium.Vision will probably be the difference between having high earning hotspots and just sprinkling 'em around Auntie Irma's and Grandma Betty's.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PM\_diqfr\_Lk&t=6s

HV combines topography, hotspot locations, Cloud RF, and buildings to help pick the absolute best placement for your hotspots. We cover how and why you'd use the different layers, the use of Placement Query (the heart of the tool), how you can track hotspots both in and out of your stable, and how to keep an eye on what's going on in your region. This last one has been interesting; 2 hotspots have been brought to my attention in the last 24 hours here in San Diego.

This is the first in a series of posts I'm doing on Helium tools you can use to improve your deployments. From other software offerings to how to make your own cables to how to run your signal through a coax-lined house, I'm pumped to share ways that you can optimize your Helium hotspots deployments. Let's build this network!

p.s. I don't do affiliate links or referral programs. If I'm given something by a manufacturer (like that Bobcat hotspot), you'll know about it. These reviews are intended to help YOU optimize your deployments and learn about Helium. Rock on!

Where to find:

Helium.Vision

Helium Consulting

The Rough Guide to Hotspot Optimization

How to Choose A Helium Antenna

Archived Comments

How Do You Find The Best Site For Your Hotspot? - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium - 9/5/2021

[…] an alti­tude lay­er to make sure you’re only look­ing at islands in the sky, or you re-watch the demo I did on Helium.Vision and make sure you know how to use all aspects of that super […]


Unusual: Using Helium to Track Paragliders

· 11 min read
Nik
Site Owner

It's a warm sunny day just west of and about 1,600 feet above Lake Elsinore, at a paragliding launch site unimaginatively called "The E". A few of us are getting ready to launch off the steep face of the hill to ride thermals and the wind. Our "plan A" today is to see if we can fly a giant triangle in the sky, at least 50 km. Plan A doesn't happen.

Our plan B, however, is to test small trackers on the Helium network and see just how well they work. Plan B works splendidly.

First, what the heck is paragliding? It's not parasailing (that's where you get towed up behind a speedboat in Cancun. You're basically a sack of suspended meat in the air.

It's not hang gliding (although that's equally rad). Paragliding is using something that looks like a parachute to launch off a mountain, hook a thermal going up, ride it to the top, then take off on glide. You repeat the thermal climb and glide cycle as many times as you can find a thermal until you get tired or run out of daylight. The US distance record is over 250 miles. Yep, without an engine. Here's what paragliders and hang gliders look like. Hang gliders are the triangle shape.

https://vimeo.com/535733441

Ok, so what does that have to do with Helium?

Simple: Back up trackers. Most of the time, we free flight pilots (that's what we call ourselves, whether paragliders or hang gliders) fly in places where we don't need tracking; places near cities, places where we can pop out at 4 in the afternoon, fly for an hour, and be home in time for dinner.

Sometimes we go a little further, a little deeper in the mountains, where cell coverage is less reliable.

Sometimes we go way out back of beyond, places it's so empty they don't even build cell towers (looking at you, Nevada.)

In those empty places, our first option is a GPS tracker, which works well most of the time. Our second option is a cell phone, which works great as long as we're around cell towers. Which we aren't always. Our third option is...nothing.

Or at least, it was. That's where Helium comes in. With a small tracker, something about the size of a handheld radio, we can set up Helium gateways ourselves and track where we're going over huge distances. That's important, because some of us (not me) fly huge distances in remote places.

Back in August of 2020, a paraglider I didn't know named Kiwi flew out into a clear Nevada sky and disappeared.

The free flight community rallied all our resources, and when your community is a combination of ultra-geeky engineers and thrill seekers, you end up calling in global satellite imagery companies, 3 letter government agencies, drone operators, an army of ground-pounding searchers on ATVs, side by sides, mountain bikes, on foot, and a small air force of helicopters, bush planes, sail planes, and stunt planes.

I flew up from San Diego in a friend's small plane (an RV8 if you must know) to join the search for a couple days. Despite multiple rock 'n roll flights in mid-day mid-summer low-level thermic conditions, we didn't find him.

It took us (the paragliding community) 30 days to find him. We were far too late; he was dead when he hit the ground.

He had been using GPS and a cell phone for tracking. With very few cell towers in the area of Nevada he was flying, cell reception wasn't good. When he hit the ground, he smashed his GPS, which was on his front side. He didn't have a "tertiary geolocation option." None of us did. We all thought two was enough. Kiwi's disappearance taught us it wasn't.

So that brings us to how I found Helium. I wanted a tracker that would work as a backup option. Something you could throw in the back of your harness and forget about. I stumbled on LoRa, got side tracked into this whole cryptocurrency application, and set out to see if I could use Helium to track paragliders.

The short version? You can.

Using a company out of Texas to provide the trackers and the visualization, I bought a few Oyster trackers and handed them out to local paragliders. I had set up a Helium gateway at one of our local sites, so I was pretty sure it would work there, and it did.

What I was curious about was the next step: Would it work where I hadn't set up a gateway optimized for tracking pilots? Yep, it does. In the image above, that's my flight on March 21st, 2021, taking off at The E and landing about 5 miles down range to the south east. Not an exceptional flight by paragliding standards, but enough to show that with a few local Helium hotspots scattered around, you can track paragliders.

I don't own or control any of the stations providing coverage around that area. They're all set up, run, and maintained by other people. That's one of the many very cool aspects of the Helium network. You don't HAVE to set up your own gateway in order to use trackers (or any other sensor.)

What does the tracker look like? Here's a picture of it on my gear, right before I unpacked and took off to fly the other day. Yep, it's that little white plastic thing.

Now, what happens when you don't have any hotspots close by, and you're flying over a valley surrounded by hills and mountains. Can you still be tracked?

Yep. That one is an even shorter flight, but it's from a different launch site (Palomar) where no hotspots are nearby. Doesn't matter. LoRa takes small packets of information LONG distances (the Lo in LoRa). The nearest active hotspot is almost 40 km away, and on the far side of a mountain range!

Update to this: The Palomar mountain range now has many Hotspots deployed on it, and turned out to be a profit-generating machine when it came to Helium deployments in 2021.

In the picture below, the green spots are active Helium hotspots, also known as "gateways". Those are the things that are receiving information from sensors, then pass it on to the Helium Network where it's processed by companies like Lonestar.

Ok, ok, enough hype. What are the limitations?

  • As you can see in the LoneStar tracking image, tracking stops when I go below the line of the mountain range, at point 5. Radio waves don't go through mountains. Sometimes around, never through.
  • The tracking wasn't set up for a fast time interval, so the track is jagged.
  • As of right now, you can't turn the trackers off, so when I drive home, everyone with my tracking link can see where my house is.
  • If you don't have cell coverage, you can't connect to the internet, so you need to put the gateways where they'll have cell coverage.

None of those are insurmountable. It's pretty easy to fit an on/off switch to the thing (Travis Teague could do it at 3 AM with his eyes closed in between polyphasic sleep cycles). You can set a faster interval, although you'll drive battery life down from years to months, and maybe days if you set it to 1 second intervals. You can set up a geofence around a "do not track" area. Finally, even in out-back-of-beyond Nevada you can find cell towers in odd places and create tracking coverage. That's going down the rabbit hole of link budget and bandwidth a little, and it's not absolutely perfect, but it sure is nice to have that tertiary tracking option.

What about placing hotspots?

Here's an image from the aforementioned Teague of a remote-deployable temporary hotspot (aka gateway aka miner). Let's say you're setting up an adventure race, or a way-out-there mountain bike 200 mile loop where you want to see where all your riders are. Hell, maybe you want another crack at the Nevada state distance record on a paraglider.

It's not as easy as pushing a button; you'll have to go place that little hotspot on a mountain top somewhere, but it ain't that hard, either. You could bring a hotspot up to launch and leave it there until everyone is landed and accounted for. Find a few high mountains with trails up to 'em and you've got a fun project for the part of your team that likes that kind of Type II fun.

The thing will run for a few days on a battery, so you don't have to come back right away. Add a solar panel and you could leave it up there for a season.

Helium, both hotspots and trackers, provides that tertiary geolocation option I was wishing Kiwi had back in August.

In this case, the application isn't a super sexy fancy tracker that will link to Twitter and your old Myspace account plus your new TikTok account (although I bet someone will figure that out).

It IS, on the other hand, a rugged little long-lifed sucker that'll cost you less than satellite tracking stations or cell towers to set up (by a LOT), will be fun to deploy (depending on your idea of fun) and may be the difference between you being found by nightfall or found at month's end when you're out at the limits of human performance.

So, what will YOU do with Helium?

See ya in the sky! Yeah, that's me in the orange wing on a lovely Sunday afternoon out at Palomar.

Want to know more about trackers and Helium and the magic of blockchain + radio?

Resources

Archived Comments

Steve Niebauer - 4/12/2021

This is awesome! Did these trackers work out of the box with Helium or did you have to configure them to somehow?


Nik - 4/12/2021

Hi Steve, These were set up by Lonestar Tracking; way easier for non-tech folks to handle, which has been part of what I'm testing. Any geek can solder and 3D print, but it takes a genius to make things simple. ;)


Gristle King Brings Paragliding to The People’s Network – Helium 5G - 5/29/2021

[…] long after that first use case, Nik learned that involvement with The People’s Network often precedes questions from friends and […]


Is Helium A Better "Last Chance"? - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium - 9/20/2021

[…] hand­ed out the devices to local paraglid­ers, and we test­ed them. They worked (I’ve writ­ten about these tests over […]


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!


How to take your Helium Hotspot Off Grid

· 26 min read
Nik
Site Owner

It seems pretty straightforward; generate power and a connection to the internet, and you've got an off grid Helium Hotspot setup. Still, you'll have a few minor details to sort out, like what type of enclosure, how to mount it, how to make sure it stays weatherproof if you use an external antenna, and how to vent it.

Actually, those aren't minor, and they're typically not cheap.

For an off-grid install plan on spending US$1-2k and you'll be pleasantly surprised. If you want to experience the anguish of cheapness (as I have), try and spend less than $1k. That may cost you $4k as you realize you skimped so you'll have to double-buy, and you end up with extra almost-good-enough-for-a-serious-remote-install gear laying around the shop. Your choice. ;)

If you want to just buy an off grid setup from someone, I'd start with IoT Off Grid. If you want to see how I built my own, well, keep reading.

Let's start with a drawing to give the big picture.

You may see that and say, "Nik, why don't you just use an outdoor hotspot, like the Nebra?" Well, the outdoor Nebra is perfect for a PoE connection when you've got access to power & hardline internet, but:

If you're going to go off grid you'll need to protect your battery, charge controller, and cell modem. You're going to have to buy an enclosure for all that. Might as well put everything in one box (enclosure) and save a little on the hotspot.

There is an updated version of my thinking on off-grid miners, that blog post is here. Much of the below information is outdated, but I'm leaving it up as a record. Enjoy!

Ok, let's lay out some numbers:

Ok, so that adds up to 5 watts but when it comes to solar, you should always plan for more. 7.5 watts continuous is pretty safe. Let's use 8 watts just to give ourselves even more cushion. As it turns out, that's what my remote setup (a DIY, from way back when that program was open. It's NOT anymore) is using, as measured via BarkinSpider's SolarShed directions but using Influx instead of Grafana:

I know that's a cute picture and pictures can be persuasive, so: --> Before you just take my word for it <--

MAKE SURE YOU MEASURE ALL YOUR POWER DRAWS!

Calculate your panel & battery sizes off of YOUR situation, not mine.

Now you'll have to figure out 2 things. First, how big a battery will you need? Second, how much solar wattage will you need?

In Southern California I can use a 100 watt panel and a 50 Ah battery. That's for a remote install that is 6 miles down a rugged trail winding up (and down, and up, and down, and finally up) a mountain. While I don't mind working hard in pursuit of a worthy goal, I don't really love *extra* work. Oversizing the panel & battery makes it less likely I'll need to do extra work.

How do you figure out your battery size?

  • Step 1: Add up all your power draws for a 24 hour cycle
  • Step 2: Figure out how many cloudy/overcast days a year you'll have.
  • Step 3: Multiple the result from Step 1 x Step 2 x at least 1.5. The larger you make that last number the more expensive you battery will be, but the longer it will last. Do NOT skimp on this.
  • Step 4: Shop for batteries. This is my go-to source for batteries. I like nice things, and they make 'em.

What about solar panels? In conjunction with calculating battery requirements, you'll need to figure out how much solar wattage you'll need to keep your batteries charged. Use the worst case scenarios: The longest cloudy weather stretch your region encounters in the bitter depths of winter. You'll thank me when it comes, even though you may not be psyched with the up front cost.

Now that you've got all your kit, what will you put it in, and how will you connect it?

Start by measuring the dimensions of everything, then order an enclosure. I get mine from Allied Moulded. They make professional quality outdoor enclosures. They ain't cheap, but they're the ones that Helium Inc used when running their first off-grid test, way back in April of 2020. You can DEFINITELY find cheaper versions. My general approach is "buy the best stuff you can afford, then you won't have to worry about it." When I've gone against that, it usually costs me even more as I have to replace cheap shit.

Measure twice, then measure again, then double check by placing everything in the enclosure before you drill any holes. Then take a day off to think about it. Make a list of the hole sizes you'll need, plus the cable glands, exhaust vents, fan mount holes, etc.

You'll notice in that list and on my shared sheet a call out for a Dragino LHT65. By the way, that sheet is outdated, so use it to give you a *sense* of what you need, but don't just go buying everything on the list.

Back to the Dragino! That's a sensor that gives you temp and humidity, but more importantly it's a way to check if your remote hotspot is actually working. On Helium Console, you can see what hotspot is processing the packets from that sensor. It's faster and more accurate than checking Explorer, at least in my experience.

Back to setup. Once you've measured and listed all your parts and holes, lay it all out.

DO NOT BE CONFUSED BY THE PICTURES BELOW, this is for a DIY setup, which is why you're seeing a Pi and not a hotspot at the top right. The DIY program is closed due to security concerns from fucking gamers who ruined it for everyone. Ok, moving on.

I found it super useful to just write on the backplate where I would put everything. I still made a few mistakes, and the final fit was much tighter than I'd like, but it works. This is the guts of Amateur Jade Hare.

Here's what it looks like from the back; you can get an idea of the fittings & connections to the pole.

From experience, most people want to use that same antenna. Trust me, you don't. First, they're a PITA to hump in.

https://youtube.com/shorts/3CWjXhy4OTc

Second, they're a PITA to mount. Third, they're so powerful you have to ask your geeky tech friends for help to dial back the transmission power. Finally, they're huge wind catchers, so you need to mount guy wires to keep 'em steady. Fun to set up once, but not so amazing that I can recommend 'em.

Learn 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, but trust me, that's a hook-up piece of advice.

Ok, that should wrap up both the big picture and a few details on installing a remote Helium hotspot. If you want help putting one up and this post isn't enough, you can hire me for consulting, more on that here.

If you'd like to see the results of someone who's done a consult with me, check out this blog post of an off grid commercial roof install.

Post questions in the comments if you have 'em.

RESOURCES

  • Solar calcs sheet This is for a DIY hotspot running a Raspberry Pi4 & 2287, not a full fat miner. This just gives you an idea. DO YOUR OWN CALCS! YPDMV
  • Olivia Wireless - Only appropriate for DIY miners or Light Hotspots, as they data plan size is tiny.
  • 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.
  • Gear List - This'll give you an idea of what you'll need to get. It's definitely NOT the only way to do it.

Archived Comments

Derek Coleman - 4/6/2021

Amazing article. Thanks for all the valuable information! This is something that I plan on doing with at least 1 hotspot this year and I'd like to know a bit more about your services - we can discuss via email. One initial question I have is about the land that you placed the hotspot on. From the photo it looks like public land? Do you also provide consulting on how to find remote locations and how to legally go about placing a hotspot there?


Nik - 4/6/2021

Hi Derek, that placement required coordinating with multiple agencies and entities; it was not a simple or easy process. :) I can definitely help identify optimal remote locations and help with guiding you through how to legally place a hotspot. Glad the article was useful!


Sacha - 4/7/2021

Hi Nik, Indeed interesting article. Sure going to build one of these. (with some modifications). Thanks for that... Question: such a pool on the top of a mountain... How are your thoughts about lighning. How do you handle that?


Nik - 4/22/2021

Hi Sacha, Add in a lightning arrestor and a ground wire to any deployment and you'll be as safe as you can. I mean, it's a pole up high on a mountain, so it's more likely to get hit than if you're down in the valley, but that's the risks you take, right? :)


Mathias - 5/1/2021

Hey Nik, amazing setup. I only wonder: does the antenna have a lightning arrester? If not, why don't you think it's necessary? Isn't there a good chance of the hospot getting "roasted" during a thunderstorm? Regards from Berlin!


Nik - 5/1/2021

Hi Mathias, Wie gehts! Good catch, I didn't have one on in this photo, whoops! You should always add a lightning arrestor to your antennas, although it doesn't actually stop lightning, it just diverts the charge around the electronics and to the ground. I've added in the one I've used in my installs to the gear list.


Trip - 5/2/2021

Thank you. This is a great resource. I am in Southern California and am seriously considering using your "Off Grid Helium Hotspot Parts List" to build my own remote hotspot. I should be receiving several Rak Miners in June and would like to have one remote rig ready to go. Is the gear list posted still the best equipment you recommend? The remote location I choose is on the side of a mountain, so I will go with the 900 MHz 9 dBi Heavy Duty Flat Panel Antenna you have listed.


Nik - 5/2/2021

Hi Trip, Right on, it's a fun project! That gear list is an excellent start. I recommend going through it and making sure you understand what each thing is for and how connects with the others. You'll need to figure out how you're going to mount it. For example, the gear list assumes a pole mount but doesn't include a mast or pole. I usually draw out what I'm going to do. Doesn't have to be a work of art, it just helps you understand how it'll all go together. Also, you'll have different power and data requirements than this one, as that gear list is for a DIY miner, a program that has long since closed. Make sure you factor those in to your calculations.


Trip - 5/2/2021

Ah ok. Appreciate you’re quick response :-) I am still learning what everything is for. I assumed the gear list sheet was for the Jade Hare location, using a Rak miner. Did you place a more powerful solar unit/battery for that? Also the two antennas for the cell modem, in the picture you drew you have those attached to the enclosure box. Did you use some kind of enclosure antenna attachment to protect those? I figure the rig I need will be very similar, with the exception of a directional antenna and I will likely attach the components to some rocks rather than a pole.


Nik - 5/2/2021

Well, it was built from the initial Jade Hare gear list, but AJH is a DIY. It gets complicated, but with a DIY you can basically use much less power & data by offloading most of the work to a cloud miner, which I did. You can't do that with the RAK, so you'll probably need a larger battery. I've attached the cell antennas directly to the box for some installs and for others ran them up a pole just to give them more elevation. You'll need to use a gland to weatherproof the seal from inside to outside the enclosure. If you'd like a step-by-step walkthrough I'm available for hire, choose the Strategy & Placement option. :)


Trip - 5/2/2021

Thanks, I may hire you for that! I would rather get things right the first time than have to rebuy stuff because it's wrong. I'm still in the early stages.


Herbert - 5/18/2021

Hi Nik, great article and thank you for all that you do. I had a quick question about the battery an the charge controller - did you plug the charge cable from the battery into anywhere or does the charge controller allow charging and discharge through the discharge port of the battery? Thank you!


Nik - 5/18/2021

That battery has two cables. One is a giant grey one that I don't use, the other is a smaller black/red Anderson powerpole that you use to connect to the solar charge controller.


Ryan - 5/20/2021

Hey Nik - This is really awesome! Thank you for being such a great resource to the community. Quick question on the cellular side - What kind of monthly data costs do you incur using the Cradlepoint and Olivia Wireless?


Nik - 5/20/2021

Thanks Ryan! My costs won't be your costs; I'm just running a packet forwarder as part of the DIY, so my data requirements are under 200MB/miner. Cradlepoint has some 3 year plan that's included with the $500 purchase, so that's basically a $0 cost. Olivia for mine is under $10/month for 2 active miners. Look at the UltraMobile plans for a full fat miner, they have unlimited for around $50 and they're always running "sales". ;)


Ryan - 5/20/2021

Thanks, Nik! I’m still learning about all of this. I have some miners on order and I’m reading and researching as much as I can. I figured since the miner is going to use 20-30gb of data a month I should consider that as part of my plans if deployment makes sense in an off-grid situation.


Bill - 5/27/2021

Nik, I'm in Orange County so my non-sun days would be similar to yours. So would a 200 wt. - 12 v solar panel be sufficient? I've got access to three commercial buildings but I think the owner would be more convinced if I didn't have to penetrate the roof.


Nik - 5/27/2021

Bill, that's double what I've got, that should be plenty. :)


Bill King - 5/27/2021

Hmmm. I guess I misread your Excel Spreadsheet. I want to take your advice and not go bare minimum, but I also don't want to overspend for obvious reasons. Anyway, thanks for the reply. I believe I will have the ability to put one on a cell tower next to the building (tower came with the building). So I'm pretty sure I'll be engaging your paid services to consult. Hopefully by the end of July or early August.


Bill - 6/2/2021

So my building owner said I can use the outlet on the roof. But the cable is in the underground parking closet so that's a lot of cable to reach the miner. I was thinking of using a Cradlepoint in an off-grid format but using the outlet instead of solar. This would seem to be better than tapping into the building wi-fi which I suspect may kick me off a lot and which occasionally needs a reboot on the weekend with me having no access to the modem. Thoughts?


Nik - 6/2/2021

Interesting. May be time to use the RUT240 there, especially if it's easy to check up on. Last I saw the Cradlepoint was out of stock :)


Kelly - 6/3/2021

You mentioned a ground wire in an earlier comment. Would you (did you) add a ground rod as well? I couldn't tell from that previous answer answer whether you just risked it or took those extra steps.


Nik - 6/3/2021

Technically, you should always ground everything and use a ground rod. :)


AMS - 6/7/2021

Even though you don't recommend it, I still would like to know which antenna is that in the picture, the one that looks like a big rectangular panel. Great Job! Thank you.


greg - 7/3/2021

Getting close to putting up my enclosure and about to order a few LHT65 for each deployment. I see you were mainly using it to assess connectivity but how do we get temp and humidity info about it? Is there any resource you could point to that talks more about using these sensors? Do we pay for data transfer from the sensor or did the manufacturer? It all just seems like pages of code. thank you so much for everything you do!


Nik - 7/3/2021

Hi Greg, check out this post on using the LHT65. :)


Marcus Makabenta - 7/15/2021

Hey Nik I am confused and need help about how to setup the 4g modem from cradle point. Basically I already bought all the list except for the internet portion. I hope you get back to me. Thank you


Nik - 7/15/2021

Sure, what are you confused about?


gekko - 7/26/2021

I don't like solar powered systems because they suck. Not just they cost you tons of money (way more than you would spend over the years for grid electricity), but you need to oversize them waaaaaaaaaaay more than the actual usage is. You can run an RPI4 from 2x12Ah batterys in parallel for about 6 hours on idle at new age. You may say does the PI drain 4A constantly? Nope battery manufacturers always lie about the site of these crappy lead acid batteries and this is at new age of the battery. Give it a year or more and it's about 4 hours. So in his case he used 50Ah batt which is going to provide enough for approx 8 hours of darkness, now that is nice except... if your circuit draining them down to 100% where the batt voltage is approx 13.60V (considered depleted) these batteries need about 48 hours to fully charge so you may never want to go down that much. Then you have to also calculate that on the winters there can be as less as 1-2 hours of sunlight or cloudy all day long. I don't know whats the date of this article but I doubt his running it since 1 year. I simply think that this system is way under designed, I would recommend at least 100Ah in batteries unless that location is some real sunny all day long and even then batteries will always degrade. You will eventually have to replace them after 4-5 years.


Nik - 7/26/2021

Hi Gekko, that unit has been running since, oh, November of 2020. It's made it through the winter months and a cloudy streak. I don't think you're getting your math right on the "approx enough for 8 hours of darkness", I've designed the system to last for over 3 days without significant energy input (cloudy winter days.)


Michael - 8/11/2021

I'm not sure this is the right place to ask but... when you install a hotspot off-grid, do you need to pay for that land? If so, how does someone go about doing that?


Nik - 8/11/2021

Depends on the landowner. I've seen 90/10 splits, I've seen ones where the land owner doesn't care, and ones where they want $500/month or a 50/50 split. Totally dependent on what they want.


Michael - 8/11/2021

Ahh, okay. Makes sense. Thanks for clarifying, Nik!


Paul Novak - 8/16/2021

Hello Nik, A couple months ago I set up my hotspot on the flat roof of an apartment building. The internet is through AT&T prepaid using an LTE modem. However, port 44158 is closed and I am “relayed” since day one, because AT&T (as a cgnat) does not provide a public IP address. I checked Verizon and T-Mobile and they also use cgnat… Can you please tell me what carrier you are using and how you managed to get a public IP address? Thank you!!!


Nik - 8/16/2021

Hi Paul, I'm using Olivia Wireless, which is fine for packet forwarders (future Light Hotspots) but not set up for "full fat" miners. T-Mobile was offering a plan of 100GB for $55/month, but they've since closed that down. Have you checked in on the Discord #off-grid-and-enclosures thread?


Adrian - 8/16/2021

Hello Paul, If you are in the Southern California area I may be able to help you figure out the connectivity issue.


Nik - 8/16/2021

Hey Adrian, if you've got a good solution please let me know, would love to share that info with the Helium community!


Cherrieh Pittman - 8/16/2021

A company from Portugal is starting to manufacture these: https://store.bevotech.com/product/stand-alone-hotspot-outdoor/ A bit pricy, especially when you throw in their 4G modem.


Nik - 8/16/2021

Rad, off grids are the most fun ones!


Pom - 8/23/2021

Any suggestions how to make sure it works during cold and snowy winter? It gets to - 25 - 30 sometimes in my region...


Nik - 8/23/2021

To mitigate snow you've got some options; larger batteries, larger panels, or snow removal. It's not all complicated (like automated snow removal) but it will probably get expensive. I've heard of folks insulating their enclosures for winter, but I haven't done that myself.


Alex - 9/15/2021

Hi Nik! If you're using a outdoor helium miner, ex. Kerlink outdoor miner, how you will go for the power supply? Thanks


Nik - 9/15/2021

You’ll need power, usually from a solar panel with a battery and charge controller.


Packable Off Grid Helium Miners - Gristle King - A Guide to Helium - 9/19/2021

[…] you will even­tu­al­ly get over the idea of car­ry­ing in heavy equip­ment. I did that on my first off-grid, car­ry­ing in awk­ward­ly loaded 60+ lb rucks over 6 miles of rugged ter­rain with 3k’ […]


Bryce - 10/23/2021

Hi Nik and community - Has anyone found an LTE modem/carrier option for full fat miners that allows port forwarding? I'm also concerned about most unlimited plans that throttle speeds down to 128kbps after 40-60GB of data as my miners are already using close to 150GB of data per month which will just continue to go up as the network grows and usage increases. And I don't know how mining performance will behave at the throttled speeds as I see my miners using up to 600kbps or more multiple times a day. Please share any ideas or suggestions, thanks!


Nik - 10/23/2021

Hi Bryce, try this post for the port forwarding setup. As far as data, there are no good options as far as I know right now for full fat miners.


Brock Gonsoulin - 12/11/2021

So are you able to open port 44158 on the mifi unit your using for internet on this setup or is it relayed?


Nik - 12/11/2021

Hi Brock, Just for clarity, a "MiFi" and a cell router like the 240 are different things. On a router like the 240, you can generally open the port, although that can depend on your carrier. On a typical MiFi device, you probably can't.


Ramiro Doporto - 12/30/2021

Your the man, I just drew this schematic in my head and it looked very much like yours except my box was hidden in a fake bird house lol.


Kashif - 3/4/2022

Hi Nik, My miner is using around 5-6 GB data per day, any thought how can I reduce it because I have metered connection (100GB per month). Please guide me if any solution you know. Thanks in advance :)


Nik - 3/4/2022

Not really. Wait for Light Hotspots. That seems like a lot; how long has it been on, and what type of miner is it?


Mike - 4/6/2022

The real question I have is, how do I get rights to setup my antenna in the hills? Is there some special use permit or license I need to use?


Nik - 4/6/2022

Hi Mike, find the landowner and ask 'em permission. Procedures vary across public/private lands, but that's the basic two-step.


Kanoa Cook - 4/16/2022

I noticed that 10ft 12AWG charge controller adapter you linked says its good up till 30A of current, but the Renogy solar panel can provide 31-41Ah. I was just curious if this may have been a mistake or if this exact gauge worked for you? I'm definitely not trying to over-engineer anything haha


Kanoa Cook - 4/16/2022

Disregard my last question, I actually saw some grounding wire tables that showed 10AWG is plenty, so I think 12AWG must've been for redundancy. Appreciate the guide!


Rob Wood - 8/22/2022

I need help with data plan and SIM card for a MNTD miner that is off grid. I had an AT&T plan but that SIM card is not working any longer and need to find replacement. MNTD is using 30 gigs a month of data. Any suggedtions? I contacted Olivia and look forward to talking to them.


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.


How These Accessories Can Impact Your Helium Network Coverage – Parley Labs - 8/20/2021

[…]  Antennashttps://gristleking.com/antennas-for-helium/https://unsealed4x4.com.au/picking-the-right-uhf-antenna-for-your-4×4/ Cables and Connectorshttps://www.spo-comm.de/en/blog/know-how/what-is-the-difference-between-sma-and-rp-smahttps://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/cable/coaxperf.html FCC Regulationshttps://transition.fcc.gov/oet/ea/presentations/files/oct07/Oct_07-Basics_of_Unlicensed_Trans-JD.pdfhttps://www.multitech.com/support/resolutionid/5086522 https://afar.net/tutorials/fcc-rules/   Tagged Accessories, Antenna, Coverage, Helium, Improvements, LoRaWAN […]


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

[…] Here is a link from a guy, that shares more specific information about helium antena placement . […]


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 […]