Wireless
Wireless Reviews
MetaGeek Wi-Spy 2.4x Review: Better, but Bigger Bucks | MetaGeek Wi-Spy 2.4x Review: Better, but Bigger Bucks |
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| Tim Higgins | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| June 24, 2007 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Introduction6/27/2007 - Updated Table 2 with WiSpy resolution bandwidth
It's been almost a year and a half since MetaGeek's original Wi-Spy 2.4 GHz spectrum analyzer hit the street. I thought it was one of the coolest and most useful products I'd seen in a long time, especially for the $99 price. And I urged anyone who had been needing or thinking about 2.4 GHz spectrum analysis to buy one. Since that review, MetaGeek doubled the price to $199, which caused much tooth-gnashing and garment-rending among its fan base. But the increase corrected a price that was probably way too low to begin with to support a viable business and further development. Well, it looks like the Geeks put the extra money to good use to develop the Wi-Spy 2.4x, with better performance and the ability to use higher-gain antennas. But they also have once again done the price-doubling trick and set the 2.4x' price at $399. So let's see if it's worth it, shall we? What it isThe 2.4x maintains its USB flash-key size, but now sports an RP-SMA antenna connector onto which you screw the small, swiveling 2 dBi dipole that comes with the module. The original Wi-Spy was a JUNO-USB dongle, manufactured by Unigen, that used a Cypress Semi radio and USB microcontroller. Figure 1: Wi-Spy 2.4x boardThe 2.4x' board shown in Figure 1 is a home-grown design using a Chipcon CC2500 2.4 GHz tranceiver and Silicon Labs C8051F326 (PDF link) USB microcontroller with 16K of flash built in. The design is so integrated that there are components on only one side of the board and nary a switch or even an LED in sight. A summary of the key differences between the original and 2.4x are shown in Table 1 below, which I copied from the MetaGeek website.
Table 1: Wi-Spy vs Wi-Spy 2.4xWhile there are significant improvements in frequency resolution (3X), amplitude range (> 2X) and amplitude resolution (3X), I found the most noticeable and useful improvement to be the frequency resolution. The next most useful is the extension of the lower end of the amplitude range, which helps to sniff out low-level signals. There is significant range extension on the high-signal side, too. But since through-the-air signals rarely top -40 dBm or so, the high-side extra range isn't very useful. Table 2 has been updated from the original review and compares the original and 2.4x Wi-Spies against the AirMagnet Spectrum Analyzer, which is essentially a rebranded Cognio Spectrum Expert.
Table 2: Cognio vs. Wi-Spy vs. Wi-Spy 2.4x Specs and Features
Tags: MetaGeek, Spectrum Analyzer, WiFi, Related Articles:MetaGeek announces next-gen low cost Wi-Fi spectrum analyzerMetaGeek Wi-Spy 2.4 GHz Spectrum Analyzer MetaGeek previewing 5 GHz version of low-cost Wi-Fi Spectrum Analyzer MetaGeek Brings Back $99 Wi-Fi Spectrum Analyzer AirMagnet Spectrum Analyzer |
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