using channel 11 off main unit with other sapido ap's running channel 3 and 6
Thanks to the forum and to Jeff Keenan
Why are you running channel 3? It dramatically overlaps 6. You should be using 1.
using channel 11 off main unit with other sapido ap's running channel 3 and 6
Thanks to the forum and to Jeff Keenan
Why are you running channel 3? It dramatically overlaps 6. You should be using 1.
Howdy,
oops, they are at channels 1 and 6. The 2 farthest ones are direct opposite directions, so they are both using channel 1 since they do not interfere with each other since they are about 5000ft apart
Howdy,
UPDATE
all is working really good. I have added and UPS at each location to keep things up and running smoothly.
Howdy,
Total setup for large wifi setup.
500 acre farm, next door farms are 190 acres and 850 acres and 310 acres. So, I do not have any channel interference issues. Main location is high mound over property. Requirements would be outdoor POE access point omnidirectional for omni coverage. barn due south 2300' down hill (approx 4 degree angle) clear shot for outdoor poe bridge(1 computer 1 camera), and another stable due east 1240' down hill (approx 6 degree angle) clear shot for outdoor poe bridge (2 wired powered cameras)
Since the whole setup is new, I would like to stay with the same vendor for compatabilty sake. Sharing resources (main internet access, main server, main printers all at main house with router and 16 port gig switch)
I am open to vendors (engenius, amped, trendnet,etc...) I am not looking at high$$$$$ cisco kind of prices either
Okay that makes a lot more sense. The ONLY channel plans that should ever be used for 2.4GHz Wi-Fi are either 1,6,11 or 1,5,9,13 (which are non-overlapping for 802.11g and 802.11n modes). It's actually better to have two APs on the same channel than to have them on overlapping channels, even "minimally overlapping channels." I've seen large-scale, professional networks on 1,4,7,11 and 1,4,8,11 - the idea being having 4 channels is better as long as they only minimally overlap. Actual testing, by many sources, has proved even that untrue. Two APs beside each other both on channel 1 will actually get better performance than say, one on 1 and one on 4. On the same channel they can avoid each other to some extent, on overlapping channels, they're pure noise.
Honestly - 802.11 and 802.11b should never have existed (OFDM was done in the form of 802.11a in the 5GHz band from the start and could've easily - though a bit more expensively at first - have been done at 2.4GHz). 1,5,9,13 should have been the *ONLY* channels available (1,5,9 for US/CANADA). But hindsight is 20/20 and there were other 2.4GHz users smaller channel separation allowed one to avoid.
The triangle at the top is a distance of 3768ft from the Omni antennae. The picture cut off the bottom location.1. EOC2611P, with a 2ft pigtail connector to the AIR802 12dBi omni mounted on the NPR6B roof mount (2 ½ story building). Set as the main access point
2. EOC2611P CB mode is mounted on a J-hook 18ft off ground (506ft away) with cat5e back to a RB-1732 in access point mode.
3. EOC2611P CB mode is mounted on a pole 7ft off ground (1205ft away) with cat5e back to a RB-1732 in access point mode.
4. EOC2611P CB mode is mounted on a J-hook 18ft off ground (3768ft away) with cat5e back to a RB-1732 in access point mode.
Roof mounted eoc2611P configured in B only, access point, wds client mode clicked,
all other eoc2611P units are configured in B only, client bridge.
B.S.Farm Area Networks vis the White Space. Best coverage.
Folks, the new technology is white space. It propagates better than Wi-Fi 2.4GHz, 900MHz, etc. Fewer devices, longer distances, non line of sight covergae and lower cost. No repeaters necessary. amancone@ktswireless.com. We are the world's only FCC Certified white space radio manufacturer.
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