Cisco Cisco Aironet 1250 Series Access Point Guía De Instalación
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Cisco Aironet 1250 Series Radio Upgrade Instructions
Overview
This guide is designed to help you replace or change a radio module in both
the autonomous and lightweight models of the Cisco Aironet 1250 Series
Access Point (hereafter referred to as the access point). You can replace or
change a radio module on your site without special tools. The procedure is
simple; however, we recommend that you become familiar with the contents
of this guide before you attempt to replace or change a radio module.
the autonomous and lightweight models of the Cisco Aironet 1250 Series
Access Point (hereafter referred to as the access point). You can replace or
change a radio module on your site without special tools. The procedure is
simple; however, we recommend that you become familiar with the contents
of this guide before you attempt to replace or change a radio module.
The autonomous access points can support standalone network
configurations with all configuration settings maintained within the access
points. The lightweight access points operate in conjunction with a Cisco
wireless LAN controller with all configuration information maintained
within the controller.
configurations with all configuration settings maintained within the access
points. The lightweight access points operate in conjunction with a Cisco
wireless LAN controller with all configuration information maintained
within the controller.
The 1250 series access point is a Wi-Fi certified, wireless LAN transceiver.
The access point supports two radio modules: a 2.4-GHz radio, and a 5-GHz
radio (draft 802.11n, version 2.0). You can configure the radios separately,
using different settings on each. The access point connects wireless and wired
networks or is the center point of a stand-alone wireless network. In large
installations, wireless users within radio range of an access point can roam
throughout a facility while maintaining uninterrupted access to the network.
The access point supports two radio modules: a 2.4-GHz radio, and a 5-GHz
radio (draft 802.11n, version 2.0). You can configure the radios separately,
using different settings on each. The access point connects wireless and wired
networks or is the center point of a stand-alone wireless network. In large
installations, wireless users within radio range of an access point can roam
throughout a facility while maintaining uninterrupted access to the network.