FCC Part 15 forbids intentional interference. Jammers are NOT legal.since 5Ghz is unlicensed a jammer is totally legal if it is only on 5Ghz and not on DFS
Devices operating in DFS channels must CONTINUOUSLY monitor for radar. This function is done partly in the radio MAC/PHY with some host processing required.I wonder in the area of DFS, has there been any benchmarks measuring how much of an impact on throughput it has due to the frequent checks it has to do (especially if there is no dedicated radio to check for radar)?
i know but DFS is mainly to do with location, only a moving object with radar would trigger DFS on a router so DFS channels are actually something that many can use.Devices operating in DFS channels must CONTINUOUSLY monitor for radar. This function is done partly in the radio MAC/PHY with some host processing required.
Since the main purpose of LTE-U is cellular offload, I'd think the carriers want to do that anywhere they can.Considering the low penetration capability of 5 GHz radio waves when hitting strong obstacles, is it possible that the idea is to mostly cover the outdoor, and that a brick wall would attenuate their signal to a point where your wifi router won't have any problem dealing with it?
time to make a jammer on the same frequency that the companies use and give them hell. since 5Ghz is unlicensed a jammer is totally legal if it is only on 5Ghz and not on DFS.
Since the main purpose of LTE-U is cellular offload, I'd think the carriers want to do that anywhere they can.
Considering the low penetration capability of 5 GHz radio waves when hitting strong obstacles, is it possible that the idea is to mostly cover the outdoor, and that a brick wall would attenuate their signal to a point where your wifi router won't have any problem dealing with it?
Sure. And that won't interfere with you neighbors' use of the channels either, right. And hike up the power to 1M Watts too while you're at it.If they begin using the 5GHz on channels used by the 5GHz access points, would it be possible for routers to add a function to keep LTE-U out, e.g., grab a 160MHz wide chunk of the spectrum, then spit out random frames at 1 watt transmit power whenever no other AP or client is doing anything? ....
In circles about what?I wonder if we're stuck talking in circles here...
In circles about what?
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