Avaya AP208 User Manual

Page of 10
Meru Networks WLAN Controllers with AP100, AP201, AP208 
Configuration Guide 
Field Verified 
 
Page 3 
Deployment Guidelines 
Virtual Cell 
Meru Virtual Cell technology allows for zero-handoff as the wireless IP telephones roam 
through the wireless environment. This dramatically improves the quality and consistency of 
client roam times. The bi-directional quality of service (QoS) provides a near toll-quality call 
experience regardless of the handsets’ security context. 
The Virtual Cell configuration does not provide a good configuration setting for dense wireless 
IP telephone deployment. This is because both Meru Networks and the wireless IP telephone 
system provide their own QoS schemes and are not centrally managed. For wireless IP 
telephones, the tolerance for packet retries is very low. Wireless handsets operate on a very 
tight delivery schedule and will often channel-scan elsewhere if those delivery expectations are 
not met.  
To maintain the benefits of Virtual Cell just mentioned and to maximize calls, we recommend 
using Virtual Cell zones. A Virtual Cell zone is a zone area on a single channel containing one 
or more access points. The diagrams below provide further illustration of Virtual Cell zones. 
Depending on how many calls you expect to utilize per zone, the deployment may consist of 
one Virtual Cell zone (one channel deployment) or multiple virtual zones (multiple non-
interfering channels 1,6,11) with each channel being a zone having one or more Virtual Cell 
access points.  
Avaya recommends that no more than eight concurrent calls should exist in a zone, and that 
the Avaya Voice Priority Processor should be set to eight calls per access point 
 
 
Virtual AP Zone with 
1 to many APs
CAC at 8 calls per 
zone
 
Single floor horizontal layout, non-interfering channels with overlap coverage