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I have a network covering a fairly wide area. the central node is a BR352 with BR352s and AP352s and AP342s operating as repeaters. All have 12.04 firmware. Normally all "home" on the central BR352 node. "Occasionally" the (one) AP352 repeater uni...
I have a network covering a fairly wide area. the central node is a BR352 with BR352s and AP352s and AP342s operating as repeaters. All have 12.04 firmware. Normally all "home" on the central BR352 node. "Occasionally" the (one) AP352 repeater uni...
I have a system with a BR352 at a central node and a remote BR352 set up in repeater mode 3 miles away. If I have a client station 4 miles away from the repeater, what is the optimum setup for the range parameter in a) the central node BR352, and b...
I have a multi bridge/AP system with considerable "in and out" traffic. Please see: http://www.gpsinformation.org/joe/misc/cicsounknownunassigned.jpgNotice that there are a lot of "unknown/unassigned" entries which have been in the association list...
I have eight Cisco 352/342 bridges and access points in a network. These see a lot of transient traffic and connections and as a result, there are a lot of "unassigned" listings in the table that stay there for a long time.Is there some way to "dump...
I am not sure what you mean precisely by repeaters should have a 50% coverage overlap. But if you mean that ideally, repeaters should not be able to hear each other, then that is desirable, but not always possible. In this case, both repeaters can...
Hello GP,The topology is like this in the failure case:AP352(rpt) >>>>> AP342(rpt) >>>>>>>BR352(root)Normally the AP352 homes directly to the root.When the problem happens, I can reach the AP342 from the root just fine, but cannot reach the AP352 and...
No. Restore Current Defaults did not clear the "stale" items from the association table. I guess that capability is one that escaped the Cisco AP designers.Thanks anyway.Joe Mehaffey
A two way power splitter (nominally) splits the power in two equal parts. -3db means the signal is half the power level and this is the loss you should (nominally) see on signals out each port. This also implies that if the voltage input was 1 vol...