Wireless Ethernet bridge

Stefano Gridelli sgridelli at gmail.com
Thu Mar 11 16:50:43 UTC 2010


The motorola PTP 600 seems thus far the most valid solution. We want to
remain on ISM bands, because we don't want to take the burden of renewing
the license with FCC every x years ... we need something that once installed
requires the least maintenance effort possible.
We already have antennas and cables that work with the 5.8 GHz spectrum.
There's a distance of 3 miles between the two antennas and there's LOS
available.
The copper handoff could be solved with a media converter ...

I am also proposed an Exalt EX-5i at 200 Mbps. Does anybody have this
hardware installed and can share any experience had?

Thanks

On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 5:31 PM, Scott Brown/Clack/ESD <
SBrown at clackesd.k12.or.us> wrote:

> The Dragonwave would be my first choice too, but they are not in the 5.8GHz
> band.
>
> The Motorola PTP-600 has a 2000 byte MTU, but doesn't do multimode handoff.
>
> What radio to get will come down to what you are willing to give up -- if
> you are willing to drop the 5.8Ghz band and go with 11Ghz then the
> Dragonwave is for you -- the new Horizon Quantum is amazing (and pretty
> inexpensive when I priced it out)
>
> Bridgewave isn't bad either - you can get to 1.25Gbps with some fiber
> handoff.
>
>
> Scott
>
> Mike Lyon <mike.lyon at gmail.com> wrote on 03/10/2010 02:23:33 PM:
>
> > From: Mike Lyon <mike.lyon at gmail.com>
> > To: Stefano Gridelli <sgridelli at gmail.com>
> > Cc: nanog at nanog.org
> > Date: 03/10/2010 02:23 PM
> > Subject: Re: Wireless Ethernet bridge
> >
> > Check out DragonWave:
> >
> > http://www.dragonwaveinc.com/
> >
> > -Mike
> >
> >
> >
> > On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 2:18 PM, Stefano Gridelli
> <sgridelli at gmail.com>wrote:
> >
> > > Hi All,
> > >
> > > I need a wireless bridge solution that allows to pass jumbo frames over
> a
> > > distance of 3 miles, using the 5.8 GHz band. The original solution was
> a
> > > Proxim Tsunami GX 200, but unfortunately it doesn't go beyond an MTU of
> > > 1536
> > > bytes: we need at least 1544 bytes, ideally between 4470 and 9212 bytes
> > > MTU. The handoff should be MM fiber, the desired throughput 200 Mbps.
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Stefano
> > >
>
>
>



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