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ii

4.7.1

Software Upgrade ....................................................................... 33

4.7.2

Administration.............................................................................. 34

CHAPTER 5.

STATUS MONITOR.......................................................... 35

5.1

S

YSTEM 

I

NFORMATION

........................................................................ 36

5.2

DHCP I

NFORMATION

.......................................................................... 37

5.3

S

TATION 

I

NFORMATION

........................................................................ 38

5.4

S

TATISTIC 

I

NFORMATION

..................................................................... 39

CHAPTER 6.

SPECIFICATIONS ............................................................ 40

CHAPTER 7.

DEFAULT SETTINGS ...................................................... 42

7.1

G

ENERAL 

C

ONFIGURATION

.................................................................. 42

7.1.1

System......................................................................................... 42

7.1.2

Virtual Server Mapping................................................................ 43

7.1.3

DHCP .......................................................................................... 44

7.1.4

SNMP .......................................................................................... 45

7.1.5

Wireless LAN............................................................................... 47

7.2

U

TILITY

............................................................................................... 48

7.2.1

Software Upgrade ....................................................................... 48

7.2.2

Administration.............................................................................. 48

CHAPTER 8.

REGULATORY COMPLIANCE INFORMATION ............. 49

1

Chapter 1. Hardware Installation

This chapter describes the procedures for installing the SendFar Outdoor
Access Point.

1.1  Before You Start

After unpacking the system, make sure the following items are present and
in good condition.

1. Access 

Point

2.  Inline Power Injector
3.  AC Power Cord
4.  MIL-C-5015 style RS232 Console Port Cable
5. Grounding 

Wire

6.  Cross over Ethernet Cable
7.  Two rubber dipole antenna
7.  30M MIL-C-5015 style Ethernet Cable
8.  Mast Mounting Kit
10.  Wall Mounting Kit
11.  User’s Manual Disk
12. Simple Spanner

2

3

4

5

6

8

9

10

11

12

7

Summary of Contents for AP-8110

Page 1: ...9 2 4 WIRELESS ACCESS ROUTER WITH STATIC IP ETHERNET CONNECTION 10 CHAPTER 3 WEB ACCESS 11 CHAPTER 4 CONFIGURATION 15 4 1 INTRODUCTION 15 4 1 1 Basic Configuration Steps 15 4 2 SYSTEM SETUP 16 AFTER...

Page 2: ...2 Administration 48 CHAPTER 8 REGULATORY COMPLIANCE INFORMATION 49 1 Chapter 1 Hardware Installation This chapter describes the procedures for installing the SendFar Outdoor Access Point 1 1 Before Y...

Page 3: ...Installing the Antennas Step 1 With the unit powered off attach the dipole antenna to the antenna connector as shown in Figure 1 3 NOTE Do not over tighten finger tight is sufficient Position the ant...

Page 4: ...the access point Step 6 Plug the RJ 45 Ethernet connector the other end of the Special Ethernet cable into the Power Data Output Port on the front of the Inline Power Injector When the Access Point re...

Page 5: ...ne through a centralized Access Point To show some possibilities of wireless topologies the following examples are provided 1 Wireless Access Bridge 2 Wireless Access Router with PPPoE Ethernet connec...

Page 6: ...n DHCP server on the OWAP and assign IP address to PC1 PC2 and PC3 5 Set Wireless parameters on client stations PC1 PC2 and PC3 SSID wireless 9 2 3 Wireless Access Router with dynamic IP Ethernet conn...

Page 7: ...1 Identify the IP Address assigned to the unit However the IP Address may be changed and you cannot connect the unit using the default IP Address In this case you must identify the OWAP IP Address bef...

Page 8: ...nfigure each item 1 Open your browser and enter the IP Address 2 Press ENTER and the OWAP Login screen appear 13 Figure 3 2 Login Screen 3 Enter root in the User Name and the Password fields And then...

Page 9: ...reless Router with DHCP Client Ethernet connection 4 Wireless Router with Static IP Ethernet connection 4 1 1 Basic Configuration Steps Modify the Default Settings and Apply the New This section will...

Page 10: ...17 Figure 4 2 General Configuration System Setup 2 Host Information Host Name The Host Name is not an essential setting but it helps identify the device in network Use this setting to assign a name to...

Page 11: ...the Ethernet interface s IP address Subnet Mask Enter an IP subnet mask to identify the sub network so the IP address can be recognized on the WAN NAPT performs on which interface There are three inte...

Page 12: ...P Primary DNS Server IP Enter the Primary Domain Name Server IP Address Secondary DNS Server IP Enter the Secondary Domain Name Server IP Address After that click FINISH at the bottom of this page to...

Page 13: ...ries list 4 To modify or delete a virtual server entry click the select button beside the entry index number and click Modify or Delete 5 To add another entry to the Virtual Server Mapping Pool repeat...

Page 14: ...e 4 3 2 Fixed Host Entries Figure 4 5 shows the general DHCP parameters and the fixed host entry table Default fixed host entry pool is empty 1 Click Add The Fixed Host Entry Edit page Figure 4 6 appe...

Page 15: ...Access Right and Community field Validity Select Enable or Disable to control this community 27 Access Right Select a command from the pull down menu for this field Community Enter the password relate...

Page 16: ...t is 1600 frag Threshold default is 1600 SSID default is wireless and Station Name default is ap that are suitable for your radio network and then you can clicked radio button to disable WEP or enable...

Page 17: ...or 64 and 128 bits WEP KEY encryption and then click KeyGen to generate the WEP64 WEP128 key patterns WEP Disable or enable 64 128 bit WEP services Default Key Select an encryption key from the pull d...

Page 18: ...can also click ADD DELETE MODIFY button to maintain this MAC address table After that click FINISH at the bottom of this page to complete the modification of this page Figure 4 12 33 4 7 Utility 4 7...

Page 19: ...the New Settings 1 Click Utility Administration select the Save then Restart to apply the new configuration settings 2 Click FINISH To take effect the previous configuration changes Hint It takes abou...

Page 20: ...ed the Operation Mode Interface IP Net mask and brief wireless parameters if the operator turn on the DHCP or PPPoE services you can also see the related information on here Services Information This...

Page 21: ...AP this association table includes the associated station MAC address and the corresponded connection time 39 5 4 Statistic Information Click Running Status Statistic Info Figure 5 3 shows the statis...

Page 22: ...Sensitivity 84dBm for 11Mbps 8 PER Packet Error Rate 90dBm for 2Mbps 8 PER Packet Error Rate RF Output Power 19dBm typically including antenna gain ETSI 14 2dBm typically including antenna gain FCC R...

Page 23: ...ass IP Address 192 168 1 1 Wireless Interface Address Subnet Mask 255 255 255 0 IP Address 192 168 2 1 Ethernet WAN Interface Address Subnet Mask 255 255 255 0 IP Address 192 168 2 1 Ethernet LAN Inte...

Page 24: ...tart IP IP starting address 192 168 1 240 DHCP End IP IP ending address 192 168 1 249 Interface 1 Wireless 2 Ethernet Wireless Ethernet Address Fixed Host Entries Max 10 IP Address Empty 45 7 1 4 SNMP...

Page 25: ...oyed 1 Channel USA 1 11 Europe 1 13 1 RTS Threshold Set RTS Request To Send threshold value 1600 Fragmentation Threshold Set fragmentation threshold value 1600 SSID Wireless LAN service area identifie...

Page 26: ...with any other antenna of transmitter Interference Statement This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules and Re...

Page 27: ...high power systems are operated strictly as a point to point system Systems operating as a point to multipoint system or use non directional antennas cannot exceed 30dBm EIRP power requirement under a...

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