Cisco Cisco WAP561 Wireless-N Dual Radio Selectable Band Access Point Manual De Mantenimiento

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Wireless
Radio
Cisco Small Business WAP551 and WAP561 Wireless-N Access Point
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5
STEP 1
Select Wireless > Radio in the navigation pane.
STEP  2
In the Global Settings area, configure the TSPEC Violation Interval, which is the 
time interval in seconds for the WAP device to report associated clients that do 
not adhere to mandatory admission control procedures. The reporting occurs 
through the system log and SNMP traps. Enter a time from 0 to 900 seconds. The 
default is 300 seconds.
STEP  3
For WAP561 devices, select the Radio interface to configure (Radio 1 or Radio 2).
STEP  4
In the Basic Settings area, configure these settings:
NOTE
Local regulations may prohibit the use of certain radio modes. Not all 
modes are available in all countries. Also, for the dual-radio WAP561, Radio 
1 supports either the 2.4 GHz (the default selection) or 5 GHz band, but Radio 
2 supports the 5 GHz band only. The single radio on the WAP551 device 
supports either band.
Radio—Turns on or off the radio interface. By default, the radio is off.
MAC Address—The Media Access Control (MAC) address for the interface. 
The MAC address is assigned by the manufacturer and cannot be changed.
Mode—The IEEE 802.11 standard and frequency the radio uses. For each 
radio, select one of the available modes:
-
802.11a—Only 802.11a clients can connect to the WAP device. 
-
802.11b/g—802.11b and 802.11g clients can connect to the WAP device.
-
802.11a/n—802.11a clients and 802.11n clients operating in the 5-GHz 
frequency can connect to the WAP device. 
-
802.11b/g/n (default)—802.11b, 802.11g, and 802.11n clients operating in 
the 2.4-GHz frequency can connect to the WAP device.
-
5 GHz 802.11n—Only 802.11n clients operating in the 5-GHz frequency 
can connect to the WAP device.
-
2.4 GHz 802.11n—Only 802.11n clients operating in the 2.4-GHz 
frequency can connect to the WAP device.
Channel Bandwidth—The 802.11n specification allows a coexisting 20/
40 MHz channel in addition to the legacy 20 MHz channel available with 
other modes. The 20/40 MHz channel enables higher data rates but leaves 
fewer channels available for use by other 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz devices.