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Hi, Iamp;#39;m Thomas with RF elements and welcome to another episode of Inside Wireless - today about path loss. Path loss is attenuation of RF wave as it travels away from the transmitter antenna. It is a measure of dilution of the waves energy as it expands in the space. While the signal strength is decreasing with distance, path loss is growing and corresponds to the inverse of the signal strength. Path loss is part of the link budget equation and it not only increases with distance, but also frequency. Moreover, it grows exponentially, due to the power of 2. WISPs often use 2.4 GHz spectrum, because it is license free and the RF wave travels further than higher frequency signals. The 5 GHz spectrum which is unlicensed as well has somewhat higher path loss which can result in more hardware needed to cover the same area as with 2.4 GHz gear. The 60 GHz spectrum shows a great promise for future networks with gigabit speeds, but has a much higher path loss, which enables around 2 km