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Chapter 8 Wireless Screen
NWA-3160 Series User’s Guide
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radar activity on the channel you select, it automatically instructs the wireless 
clients to move to another channel, then resumes communications on the new 
channel.
8.3.3  Roaming
A wireless station is a device with an IEEE 802.11a/b/g compliant wireless 
interface. An access point (AP) acts as a bridge between the wireless and wired 
networks. An AP creates its own wireless coverage area. A wireless station can 
associate with a particular access point only if it is within the access point’s 
coverage area.
In a network environment with multiple access points, wireless stations are able 
to switch from one access point to another as they move between the coverage 
areas. This is known as roaming. As the wireless station moves from place to 
place, it is responsible for choosing the most appropriate access point depending 
on the signal strength, network utilization or other factors.
The roaming feature on the access points allows the access points to relay 
information about the wireless stations to each other. When a wireless station 
moves from a coverage area to another, it scans and uses the channel of a new 
access point, which then informs the other access points on the LAN about the 
change. An example is shown in 
With roaming, a wireless LAN mobile user enjoys a continuous connection to the 
wired network through an access point while moving around the wireless LAN.
Enable roaming to exchange the latest bridge information of all wireless stations 
between APs when a wireless station moves between coverage areas. Wireless 
stations can still associate with other APs even if you disable roaming. Enabling 
roaming ensures correct traffic forwarding (bridge tables are updated) and 
maximum AP efficiency. The AP deletes records of wireless stations that associate