Thank you guys. This is exactly as I suspected, but was never 100% sure.
On Feb 6, 2015, at 3:07 PM, Josh Luthman j...@imaginenetworksllc.com wrote:
The frequency you select is the center frequency. If it's 20, it's 10 above
and 10 below. IE 5840 actually uses 5830-5850. Note that it
It actually bleeds the same way any other wifi product does without any
sort of specialized filtering (including airprism).
Take the size of the channel * 1.5 and that will roughly give you the
size of the channel plus the mask. A 20Mhz channel for instance will
have a noticeable bleed that
The frequency you select is the center frequency. If it's 20, it's 10
above and 10 below. IE 5840 actually uses 5830-5850. Note that it isn't a
finite cut off and obviously that doesn't add exactly to 20. Cheaper
(Ubnt) stuff also bleeds way more than many other products which means it
goes
The latest firmware actually shows what exact frequency range you're using
(from start to end):
[image: Inline image 1]
On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 2:04 PM, Brett A Mansfield
br...@silverlakeinternet.com wrote:
I've been using UBNT equipment for a few years now and one thing has
always confused
I'm using the latest firmware version 5.5.10 and it doesn't show me that. The
AC firmware running 7.1-rc shows me the full range though.
Thank you,
Brett A Mansfield
On Feb 6, 2015, at 7:30 PM, Matt Hardy m...@ubnt.com wrote:
The latest firmware actually shows what exact frequency range
Is that in airOS 5.6? I remembered seeing it, but I was thinking it was on
the AC radios.
On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 8:30 PM, Matt Hardy m...@ubnt.com wrote:
The latest firmware actually shows what exact frequency range you're using
(from start to end):
[image: Inline image 1]
On Fri, Feb 6,