Murata Electronics North America HN2010 Manual Do Utilizador

Página de 48
 
 
Configuring the Network 
M-2410-0011, Rev. - 
HopNet Family of Products 
21 
Enable Global Network Mode 
For networks with multiple base stations, remotes are ordinarily only able to link to 
one base station, set by the hopping pattern.  Mode 1 enables the global mode that 
allows remotes to link to any base station they can hear, acquiring whatever hop 
pattern is required. In this mode a remote can only change base stations once it is no 
longer registered with a base station. Mode 2 enables seamless roaming where a 
remote will seamlessly register with a new base station based on received signal 
strength before it has lost registration with the old base station. To implement 
seamless roaming without the potential for data loss, synchronization between base 
stations is required. This feature is available in the SNAP2410 family of products 
only.  Bases and remotes must be set to the same mode. 
 
Set Hopping Pattern 
The HopNet has 64 preprogrammed hopping patterns (also referred to as network 
numbers).  By using different hopping patterns, nearby or co-located networks can 
avoid interfering with each other’s transmissions.  Even if both networks tried to use 
the same frequency, on the next hop they would be on different frequencies.   
Set Transmit Power 
The HopNet has two preset transmit power levels, 10mW (10dBm) and 100mW 
(20dBm).  Control of the transmit power is provided through this command.  Default 
is 100mW. 
Read Receive Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) 
This command reports the relative signal strength averaged over the last 10 hops.  
This command returns a one byte value that is proportional to received signal strength 
and can range from 00H to FFH.  Typical values range from 30H to 80H where the 
lower the number the lower the received signal strength and the higher the number the 
higher the received signal strength.  This is a relative indication and does not directly 
correspond to a field strength number. This is available only at the remotes as the 
base station is the only source that transmits on a regular basis.  Plus, in a point-to-
multipoint network the base will receive different signal strengths from each remote.