Dave,
Can you describe a typical installation with Cambium? cnMaestro is an awesome ACS, and while testing all of the cambium wifi units, I find disparate mechanisms in the WiFi on the R-Series routers (which are neat enough themselves) and the E-400 series WiFi AP platform (great APs). So far I have been unable to "MESH/WDS" the R-Series routers to the E-series WAPs. Also the WAPs have advanced roaming features not supported in the router series. WiFi SSID's and Passphrases do not auto-propagate across the home, and a number of other small issues that make the platform less "Manageable" than I would like. Have you found ways around these issues or is just adding the WiFi enough for your clients? From: AF <af-boun...@af.afmug.com> On Behalf Of dave Sent: Thursday, December 27, 2018 9:22 AM To: af@af.afmug.com Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Managed whole house mesh wifi We are doing the pure cambium solution using the cnmaestro with all of it is AWESOME! Inventory track is easier with a simple hand scanner products come in and get scanned straight to cnmaestro where they wait to on boarded. On 12/21/18 5:01 PM, David Coudron wrote: We have been running into more and more situations where customers either have homes that are too large to effectively cover with a good router, or have so many devices at the far end of the house from where their router has to be positioned that we are looking for good options to provide better whole house coverage. We have worked with Powerline extenders, but consider them to be too inconsistent for wide spread use, and have worked with some wireless extenders. The wireless extenders have a pretty big impact on wireless speed that we aren't excited about them as a go forward solution. We also can't log into the powerline or wireless extenders without some port forwarding work in their main router. We have played around with some mesh options, particularly the Ubiquiti Amplifi product, which we really like, but feel like it is not an option since we cannot manage it remotely. Netgear Orbi certainly seems like a viable option, but kind of spendy if you need 3 nodes. Cost isn't necessarily an issue since customers will buy this equipment rather than us fund it, but we don't want the solution to be so expensive no one opts for it. I know there has been a few threads on managed routers, but this seems like a little bit different take since we are going to have customers buy the equipment, but would like to be able to manage remotely. I suppose one option would be to still provide an inexpensive managed router as we currently do and have them manage the mesh system on their own. Any thoughts on what has worked well for whole house mesh systems, especially in a remote management situation? Regards, David Coudron _____ Spam <https://emailfilteringservice.net/canit/b.php?c=s&i=09Xh3nAOx&m=caad5c4f72a 8&rlm=atcjet-net&t=20181227> Phish/Fraud <https://emailfilteringservice.net/canit/b.php?c=p&i=09Xh3nAOx&m=caad5c4f72a 8&rlm=atcjet-net&t=20181227> Not spam <https://emailfilteringservice.net/canit/b.php?c=n&i=09Xh3nAOx&m=caad5c4f72a 8&rlm=atcjet-net&t=20181227> Forget previous vote <https://emailfilteringservice.net/canit/b.php?c=f&i=09Xh3nAOx&m=caad5c4f72a 8&rlm=atcjet-net&t=20181227>
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