Not only that, but Canon already has WiFi on a DSLR (6D).... they know how to do it. The only question is in finding a source of an antenna..... They could use the same one as in the 6D (I presume it is internal but really don't know), or they could go buy an OM-D, open it up, locate the antenna, write down the part number, and order a few from the manufacturer.... Remember, we are just talking about something that will work for 10 meters or so.... this is not about designing the optimal antenna to link up from 100 meters away...privatebydesign said:Don Haines said:Yes, and I would appreciate it if you were a bit more polite.....rfdesigner said:Don Haines said:And yes, it is easy to do with a "bulletproof" magnesium body....
ever designed an antenna?
I have... many of them, this problem is solvable but it isn't straight forward. Otherwise good RF engineers wouldn't earn north of $100k per annum.
Please Try talking out of a different orafice.
I would have answered you earlier, but I was busy all day characterizing a steerable array in the anecolic chamber where I work as a member of the Radio Networks group at the Communications Research Centre..... I normally don't work on small antennas, but I have several "real" ones (6 Meter and 9 Meter dishes spread over the colder half of North America, plus a number of 120M and 240M wide HF antennas.... Obviously none of those can be mounted to a camera, but yes, I have designed antennas....
And yes, you CAN build an antenna that works on a "solid" magnesium body.... the fact that the 7D2 has GPS proves the point. The fact that the Olympus OM-D E-M1 has both a "solid" magnesium body and has WiFi proves that it can be done. The fact that the Olympus TG4 P/S camera, with a very solid metal shell has WiFi in a very small package proves that you can have WiFi on a metal body with very little real estate.
Designing a WiFi antenna for a Canon DSLR is NOT groundbreaking research.
Most times this comes up I point out that the wildly compromised WiFi inside the EyeFi SD card works absolutely fine even when in a 1 series camera.
Anybody that believes putting WiFi/Bluetooth/NFC in a metal camera is difficult has bought in to too much marketing crap.
This is a small incremental improvement (or simply another iteration) over existing products..... nothing new here....
P.S. just so you readers know how far a WiFi signal can travel with the right antenna, I have a WiFi link at work that goes 5K to one of the huts in the back end of the firing range... just slap on a pair of 32dB gain antennas and away you go....
Upvote
0