Wireless Access Point
50
Installing the Wireless AP
IEEE 802.11ac data rates are dependent on the number of spatial streams obtained
through the use of MU-MIMO, 80 vs. 160MHz channel widths, the number of
transmit antennas, and the type of modulation.
shows the maximum
data rate achievable at each level, with many additional lower rates occurring at
each level dependent on signal level, signal to noise ratio in the environment, etc.
Phase 1 802.11ac, first available in consumer products in 2012 and enterprise
products in 2013, supports up to 80MHz channels and up to 3 spatial streams for a
maximum data rate of 1.3Gbps.
Phase 2 and beyond products, expected starting in 2014, will add 160MHz
channels and up to 8 spatial streams for a maximum data rate of 6.9Gbps.
ACExpress™
Xirrus 802.11ac IAPs use ACExpress™ to optimize wireless performance by
automatically separating faster 802.11ac clients from slower Wi-Fi clients. Since
Wi-Fi is a shared medium, this separation ensures that slower 802.11a/b/g/n
clients do not starve the performance of 802.11ac clients. For example, the data
rate of an 802.11n client is less than 25% of the rate of an 802.11ac client, and thus
will take four times as much air time for a given amount of data. This takes
available bandwidth away from faster clients, reducing their performance
significantly. ACExpress intelligently separates clients by type onto different
radios, grouping fast clients separately from slow clients, thereby maximizing
performance for all. ACExpress is supported on all Xirrus 802.11ac products, and
may be enabled or disabled as part of the Load Balancing feature. See
.
802.11ac Deployment Considerations
The theoretical data rates shown are just that, theoretical. For 802.11ac
deployments, numerous factors affect real-world performance. These are some
important considerations in the deployment of networks that include 802.11ac:
Wireless networks are not wired networks.
Wired network users who
share a Gigabit network can expect to see bursts of up to 900Mbps,
depending on their hardware. Maximum Wi-Fi data rates are reduced by
signaling overhead and media contention. Most 802.11ac users will see
Summary of Contents for XR Series
Page 1: ...August 11 2015 Release 7 5 Wireless Access Point User s Guide ...
Page 2: ......
Page 17: ...Wireless Access Point xiii Glossary of Terms 607 Index 619 ...
Page 18: ...Wireless Access Point xiv ...
Page 26: ...Wireless Access Point xxii List of Figures ...
Page 54: ...Wireless Access Point 28 Introduction ...
Page 120: ...Wireless Access Point 94 The Web Management Interface ...
Page 186: ...Wireless Access Point 160 Viewing Status on the Wireless AP ...
Page 434: ...Wireless Access Point 408 Configuring the Wireless AP ...
Page 535: ...Wireless Access Point Appendices 509 Appendices ...
Page 536: ...Wireless Access Point 510 Appendices Page is intentionally blank ...
Page 544: ...Wireless Access Point 518 ...
Page 588: ...Wireless Access Point 562 ...
Page 601: ...Wireless Access Point 575 Declaration of Conformity Brazil XR 1000 XR 2000 XR 4000 ...
Page 612: ...Wireless Access Point 586 ...
Page 624: ...Wireless Access Point 598 ...
Page 660: ...Wireless Access Point 634 Index ...
Page 661: ......