I don't know. I saw your graph, but I know that from my own extended experience with wap 11's that the problem is more likely in your AP's. I've been up and down with wap11's and distance links and the only good conclusion is that if you need a reliable link over distance, don't buy linksys. I suffered through one and a half years of broadcasting across my neighborhood (about 1 mile) and that link wen't down for all sorts of reasons. temperature, firmware, user traffic (one guy knocked me offline evertime he would try and update his Tivo across my network), 2.4 ghz phones, neighboring AP's and again firware.
it's been a while since I saw the original post, can you refresh my memory: 2 wap11's, what mode are they in? I'd start with a little science project and replace one radio with a wet11. perhaps both. anyone had any experience with distance links and using two wet11's? with the right firmware I've found they can restore a failing link on their own better than the wap11's. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Brian Lloyd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Jeff King" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: "Greg DesBrisay" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Andy Barlak" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Saturday, November 01, 2003 2:15 AM Subject: Re: [BAWUG] wireless tidal outages over water > Perhaps it is just the fresnel zone changing as the height of the water changes. > -- > > Brian Lloyd 6501 Red Hook Plaza, Suite 201 > [EMAIL PROTECTED] St. Thomas, VI 00802 > +1.340.998.9447 - voice +1.360.838.9669 - fax > GMT-4 > > -- > general wireless list, a bawug thing <http://www.bawug.org/> > [un]subscribe: http://lists.bawug.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless -- general wireless list, a bawug thing <http://www.bawug.org/> [un]subscribe: http://lists.bawug.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless
