Cisco Cisco WAP551 Wireless-N Single Radio Selectable Band Access Point Manual De Mantenimiento

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Wireless
Radio
Cisco Small Business WAP551 and WAP561 Wireless-N Access Point
60
5
By default, when the radio mode includes 802.11n, the channel bandwidth is 
set to 20/40 MHz to enable both channel widths. Set the field to 20 MHz to 
restrict the use of the channel bandwidth to a 20 MHz channel.
Primary Channel (802.11n modes with 20/40 MHz bandwidth only)—A 
40 MHz channel can be considered to consist of two 20 MHz channels that 
are contiguous in the frequency domain. These two 20 MHz channels are 
often referred to as the Primary and Secondary channels. The Primary 
Channel is used for 802.11n clients that support only a 20 MHz channel 
bandwidth and for legacy clients.
Select one of these options:
-
Upper—Sets the Primary Channel as the upper 20 MHz channel in the 
40 MHz band.
-
Lower—Sets the Primary Channel as the lower 20 MHz channel in the 
40 MHz band. Lower is the default selection.
Channel—The portion of the radio spectrum the radio uses for transmitting 
and receiving. 
The range of available channels is determined by the mode of the radio 
interface and the country code setting. If you select Auto for the channel 
setting, the WAP device scans available channels and selects a channel 
where the least amount of traffic is detected.
Each mode offers a number of channels, depending on how the spectrum is 
licensed by national and transnational authorities such as the Federal 
Communications Commission (FCC) or the International Telecommunication 
Union (ITU-R).
STEP  5
In the Advanced Settings area, configure these settings:
Short Guard Interval Supported—This field is available only if the selected 
radio mode includes 802.11n. 
The guard interval is the dead time, in nanoseconds, between OFDM 
symbols. The guard interval prevents Inter-Symbol and Inter-Carrier 
Interference (ISI, ICI). The 802.11n mode allows for a reduction in this guard 
interval from the a and g definition of 800 nanoseconds to 400 nanoseconds. 
Reducing the guard interval can yield a 10 percent improvement in data 
throughput. 
The client with which the WAP device is communicating must also support 
the short guard interval.
Select one of these options: