56
AP MAC Address:
The MAC address of wireless AP.
Wireless Mode:
The default setting is
802.11b+g+n
(Mixed mode). If you do not know or have both
11g and 11b devices in your network, then keep the default in
mixed mode
. From the drop-down
manual, you can select
802.11g
if you have only 11g card. If you have only 11b card, then select
802.11b
and if you only have 802.11n then select
802.11n
.
Channel:
The range of radio frequencies used by IEEE 802.11b/g/n wireless devices is called a
channel. There are Regulation Domains and Channel ID in this field. The Channel ID will be different
based on Regulation Domains. Select a channel from the drop-down list box.
Beacon interval:
The Beacon Interval value indicates the frequency interval of the beacon. Enter a
value between 20 and 1000. A beacon is a packet broadcast by the Router to synchronize the wireless
network.
RTS/CTS Threshold:
The RTS (Request To Send) threshold (number of bytes) for enabling RTS/CTS
handshake. Data with its frame size larger than this value will perform the RTS/CTS handshake.
Enter
a value between 1500 and 2347.
Fragmentation Threshold:
The threshold (number of bytes) for the fragmentation boundary for
directed messages. It is the maximum data fragment size that can be sent. Enter a value between 256
and 2346, even number only.
DTIM Interval:
This value, between 1 and 255, indicates the interval of the Delivery Traffic Indication
Message (DTIM).
TX Power:
The transmission power of the antennas, ranging from 1-100, the higher the more powerful
of the transmission performance.
IGMP Snooping:
Enable or disable the IGMP Snooping function for wireless. Without IGMP snooping,
multicast traffic is treated in the same manner as broadcast traffic - that is, it is forwarded to all ports.
With IGMP snooping, multicast traffic of a group is only forwarded to ports that have members of that
group.”
11n Settings
Channel Bandwidth:
Select either
20 MHz
,
40HZ
or
20/40 MHz
for the channel bandwidth. The
wider the Channel bandwidth the better the performance will be.
Guard Interval:
Select either
Auto
or
800nsec
for the guard interval. The guard interval is here to
ensure that data transmission do not interfere with each other. It also prevents propagation delays,
echoing and reflections. The shorter the Guard Interval, the better the performance will be. We
recommend users to select Auto.
MCS:
There are options
0~15
and
AUTO
to select for the
Modulation and Coding Scheme
. We
recommend users selecting
AUTO
.
SSID Settings
Available SSID:
User can determine how many virtual SSIDs to be used. Default is 1, maximum is 4.
SSID Index:
Select the number of SSIDs you want to use; up to 4 SSIDs are available in the list.
SSID:
The SSID is the unique name of a wireless access point (AP) to be distinguished from another.
For security propose, change the default
wlan-ap
to
a unique ID name to the AP which is already
built-in to the router’s wireless interface. Make sure your wireless clients have exactly the SSID as the
device, in order to get connected to your network.
Broadcast SSID:
Select
Yes
to make the SSID visible so a station can obtain the SSID through
passive scanning. Select
No
to hide the SSID in so a station cannot obtain the SSID through passive
Summary of Contents for BiPAC 4500NZ(L)
Page 88: ...85...
Page 90: ...87...
Page 92: ...89...
Page 99: ...96 4 Input Internet address and Destination name for this connection and press Next...
Page 100: ...97 5 Input the account user name and password and press Create...
Page 101: ...98 6 Connect to the server...
Page 103: ...100...
Page 142: ...139 EWAN Click START to begin to diagnose the connection...