If it were me, this is what Id do.
1. Ensure we have good channel plan 5,10 or 20 on entire net
2. Ensure we have good GPS working on each AP on entire net
3. Ensure configs in radio tab are the same across the net(ie % of allocation,control slots and distance) this will affect proper timing
4. Do spectrum scan see whats out there.
5. Probably something I should do before any of the above. Ensure proper alignment and plum on the AP at the tower.
6. This is a given Know your sector of coverage.

This is extra PINE or FURN trees absorb like a sponge most signals


On 12/02/2014 09:18 AM, Ken Hohhof via Af wrote:
When you say you have had little success, what were you expecting it to do, that it didn't?

Regarding antenna, my recollection is that it's dual slant, and will automatically correct for swapped polarizations (e.g. if you use a reflector), but not for using dual slant at one end and V/H at the other (like ePMP can do because that magic is baked into the 802.11 chip).

I've had good luck with it, kind of midway between 2.4 and 5 GHz but with clean spectrum (especially if you use the upper 25 MHz where Ubiquiti doesn't play), somewhat different EIRP rules, and tough to use >10 MHz channels.

Are you using sectors, or an omni at the AP?


-----Original Message----- From: Craig House via Af
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2014 9:08 AM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: [AFMUG] 3.65 450

Had a discussion with one of my coworkers this morning regarding the 450 cambium 3.65 radios We have tried it in a couple of locations with little success he believes that the 3.65 is not a dual slant radio but rather just dual polarity. Can someone tell me who is right?

Sent from my iPhone


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