Only Siklu and Ceragon have anything certified beyond 64.8 GHz. Ceragon only 
goes to 65.975 GHz and Siklu only goes to 69.875 GHz. 




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 

Midwest Internet Exchange 

The Brothers WISP 




----- Original Message -----

From: "Mathew Howard" <mhoward...@gmail.com> 
To: "AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group" <af@af.afmug.com> 
Sent: Friday, August 30, 2019 9:53:45 AM 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Fwd: FCC ID SWX-AF60 Application Processed : Ubiquiti Inc. 
for New Equipment 



I would be surprised if it's not just 802.11ad based (which does make it odd 
that they put the airFiber name on it). I suspect that it's pretty much the 
same radio as the other 60ghz radios they were making (which seem to have 
completely disappeared from their website now...), just with a dish attached to 
it. 



It's interesting to note that it only goes up to 64.8ghz, which seems odd for a 
new product, considering everybody's been screaming at the other 60ghz 
manufacturers to hurry up and get their products updated for the higher 
channels... I guess that could just be the FCC dragging their feet on getting 
certifications through for that part of the band though. 



On Fri, Aug 30, 2019 at 9:40 AM Adam Moffett < dmmoff...@gmail.com > wrote: 


Remember Motorola used to sell Canopy with an FPGA and custom silicon 
for $220 in bulk packs. $300 isn't crazy.....but you're right to keep 
an eye on it. 

-Adam 


On 8/30/2019 10:21 AM, Colin Stanners wrote: 
> 
> -The Ubiquiti Early Access store lists it for $300. At that low price 
> I'd be quite surprised if it was based on FPGA or Ubnt's proprietay 
> silicon - it's likely Wi-Fi chipset based. This would be the first 
> member of the AirFiber family that is Wi-Fi chipset based, in which 
> case I'd have questions about its performance, especially in number of 
> PPS, and software stability. (Currently the AirFiber line is what I 
> consider Ubiquiti's best products - kind of expected since the 
> ex-Cambium team was involved). 
> 
> -I'm surprised of the manufacturers (Ubnt and MT) that use a grid dish 
> at 60Ghz; at that wavelengthand considering their experience in using 
> solid dishes, I would think it would be easier and cheaper to use a 
> solid dish. 


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