Psiber Data Systems RF3D manual Planning Wireless Networks, Access Point Tab, Advanced Settings

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manual

3.5 The Access Point Tab

The Access Points tab lists all the access points currently planned, and allows you to modify their properties. The properties of each access point include a name and a description, the transmitter power, the channel setting, and the antenna orientation. The orientation is expressed in terms of rotation in the horizontal plane and inclina- tion from the vertical. The rotation is entered in degrees, as on a compass, measured clockwise from the top of the plan: 0° indicates that the antenna is aimed “north”, or towards the top of the plan; 90° is to the right, 180° towards the bottom, etc. In the Tilt field, a positive value indicates that the antenna is tilted upwards, and a negative value indicates the inclination downwards. 0° means that the antenna is in its normal orientation with respect to the horizontal plane.

3.6 Advanced Settings

In addition to walls and floors,enclosed spaces also contain many movable obstacles, such as people in offices and merchandise in warehouses, and objects that would be too difficult to draw in individually, such as furniture, shelves etc. For this reason, the Advanced tab allows you to set a global average attenuation factor to account for such objects in different kinds of spaces.

Select Free Space if there is no additional loss to be anticipated, as in outdoor areas such as parking lots or campus yards.

The default setting, Factory/Warehouse, factors in low to moderate loss for low-density spaces such as warehouses.

The Office setting adds moderate to high attenuation to account for the furniture and persons present in typical office environments.

4 Planning Wireless Networks

4.1 What Application Is Intended?

To plan a wireless network, start by determining which applications will eventually be transported over the projected network.There are critical differences between applica- tions that require greater redundancy, but only low data traffic, such as warehousing and logistics, and applications that require high bandwidth, such as voice-over-WLAN.

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Contents Manual Contents Introduction Installation and Activation PC 1.1PC Hardware RequirementsManual Standardization in Wireless Networking Fundamentals of Wireless Network PlanningProduct Updates Ieee 802.11b SpecificationIeee 802.11h Specification Ieee 802.11g SpecificationIeee 802.11a Specification Frequencies and ChannelsManual Cellular Structure of a Wireless Network Antennas Attenuation Theoretical Throughput RatesRF3D User Interface Redundancy1Importing Building Plans Manual Manual Toolbox Drawing and Selecting Elements Simulation TabManual Advanced Settings Planning Wireless NetworksAccess Point Tab What Application Is Intended?Entering Environmental Factors Positioning Access Points Manual Optimizing Wireless Networks Advanced Settings Editing Wall and Floor LibrariesEditing the Access Point/Antenna Library IsZIsotropic24GHztrue/IsZIsotropic24GHz Manual All other lines in the file must remain unchanged Options and Settings Floors with OpeningsSplit-Level Buildings Appendix a The Antenna Library Antenna LibraryManual Horizontal section of a/h Net Vertical section of a/h Net Manual Manual Manual Appendix B The Wall and Floor Library List of wall & floor materials measurement unit feetMetallic Drop Ceiling 30/45dB Floor 24,0 36,0 List of wall & floor materials measurement unit meter Appendix C Table of Colors Color KnownColorManual Anhang D Eula If YOU do not AGREE, do not USE this SoftwareDefinitions END User Rights and USELimitations on END User Rights COPYRIGHT, Intellectual Property Ownership Commencement & TerminationNo Other Obligations Limitation of LiabilityTechnical Support Export ControlGermany Applicable LAW & General ProvisionsPsiber USA