Lennox Hearth 9470 user manual Dealing with Density Issues, english

Models: 9470

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8.15 Dealing with Density Issues

DECT technology uses low-power radio technology for wireless transmission. Because DECT uses a dedicated radio-frequency band, it is relatively immune to interference from other products using radio technologies commonly used in offices such as wireless routers or wireless networks. Likewise, DECT will not interfere with WiFi networks.

You might, however, experience some performance degradation if you install many Jabra PRO headsets in one area – the limits are explained below. DECT has a built-in automatic channel-allocation which attempts to allocate channels in a way which minimizes the likelihood of interference. The number of channels is always limited, which may have some implications for large scale deployment.

Performance issues manifest themselves as audible clicks and pops. In the most severe cases, they manifest themselves as the inability for some headsets to establish the wireless link.

The basic limit you should be aware of is the number of headsets in one area before DECT channels are re-used:

-80 headsets for EU DECT (normal audio), or 40 headsets for EU DECT (wideband audio)

-45 headsets for US DECT (normal audio), or 22 headsets for US DECT (wideband audio)

The use of wideband audio gives an additional constraint as wideband audio reduces the number of headsets by a factor of 2.

If the number of headsets in any one area is below the limit indicated above, there should be no performance issues. Even in those lower density situations, you are advised to separate bases from each other by at least 2 - 4m.

If you exceed the density limits, you should configure the products to operate in low-power mode. You must plan using the following conservative average areas per headset and base-to-base distances:

-25m2 – 49m2 for EU DECT (i.e 5 – 7m between bases).

-49m2 – 100m2 for US DECT (i.e. 7 – 10m between bases).

Be aware of the fact that large metal objects or large glass windows, especially those covered with a metallic layer, create many radio reflections. This forces you to plan even more conservatively. The average areas are valid for an average headset-to-base distance of < 5m — otherwise more conservative planning is needed.

The area referred to above depends on the building layout. It could be an open space office, or a set of collocated offices separated by lightweight walls. Offices far apart, say >100m apart, or shielded by heavy concrete walls should not be considered one area. The above planning figures are valid if most users are near their bases

(< 3m distance). If most users are > 5m away from their bases, you should roughly double the recommended area.

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Jabra PRO 9460, 9460-Duo and 9470 User manual

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Lennox Hearth 9470 user manual Dealing with Density Issues, english