Besides Cambium, Mikrotik, Ubnt and other WiFi products, is anyone
successfully deploying something else to service both residential and
business customers?
Thanks,
- Matt
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RADWin point to multipoint? What exactly are you trying to do?
Matt Hoppes
Director of Information Technology
Indigo Wireless
+1 (570) 723-7312
On 1/25/13 6:36 PM, Matt Jenkins wrote:
Besides Cambium, Mikrotik, Ubnt and other WiFi products, is anyone
successfully deploying something else to
What are the advantages / disadvantages of RADWin PtmP products? We have had
horrible luck with OFDM AP's from Cambium and have lost multiple business
customers that were demanding 5x5 or 10x10 connections that we cant deliver on
FSK. In a few cases we have put up their own backhauls for them
Ubiquiti will service multiple high bandwidth customers if setup
properly. We are able to push upwards of 35-40 meg through our UBNT APs.
The RADWin PtMP products allow you to assign a set number of TDMA chunks
to each client to assure them bandwidth on the sector.
Note.. SECTOR. You'll
what sort of problems have you had with cambium OFDM PMP?
we did find that with the 430APs the Omni (laird 12db) is only good for 2-4
mile shots. over 4 miles and you really need the 17db sector on the AP.
just curious because for us cambium's OFDM products saved our business.
-sean
On Fri,
Alvarion, Proxim, PureWave, Radwin, Redline, all have great case studies.
-drew
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 25, 2013, at 5:36 PM, Matt Jenkins m...@smarterbroadband.net wrote:
Besides Cambium, Mikrotik, Ubnt and other WiFi products, is anyone
successfully deploying something else to service
Do yourself a favor and throw away the omnis. ;-)
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
- Original Message -
From: Craig House cr...@totalhighspeed.net
To: WISPA General List wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Friday, January 25, 2013 6:02:21 PM
Subject: Re:
There's Cambium, WiFi, LTE and WiMAX that I can think of.
Alvarion has recently come out with a higher capacity AP (LTE?), but I'd
consider it to be at the new bar for average. Otherwise, WiMAX and LTE are
generally too low of throughput to be useful.
I don't think anyone has really enough of
Huawei? Canadian WISP is doing 3.5 GHz with their stuff.
Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373
On Jan 26, 2013 12:31 AM, Mike Hammett wispawirel...@ics-il.net wrote:
There's Cambium, WiFi, LTE and WiMAX that I can think of.
Alvarion