Maybe RF Elements is onto something with their waveguide port radios, extend 
using low loss elliptical waveguide and put the radios inside a nice building 
or enclosure on the ground away from the lighting.

From: Paul McCall via Af 
Sent: Sunday, October 19, 2014 4:42 PM
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Pmp450 vs epmp pros vs cons

For us, the biggest issue is the replacement cost of the 450.  NOT the initial 
cost, that is what it is, but we are in the lightning capital of the world.  
Sometimes we can repair everything that gets hit and sometimes on a direct 
strike, we can’t repair any of it.  On most towers, we deploy 5 Ghz and 2.4 
Ghz, so 8 APs each.  Some are only one frequency band, so then there are only 
4.  Say those 4 APs are supporting 50 customers at $ 45 each… $ 2250 / month. 
(most towers are a less than that and some are more).  So, if I lose $ 8K in 
APs ($ 2000 x 4) in one evening, I am looking at least 4 months of lost revenue 
just to replace those APs (not counting labor, etc.)  We have had commercial, 
well-grounded towers that get hit twice in a season, so that’s 8 months 
(probably more like 10 months loss in real business terms) per year.  That 
makes NO sense to play that game.  

 

And, again, a lot of towers have two frequency bands, thus 8 APs.  We have had 
4 commercial towers out of 18 with total losses this year on the APs.  
Thankfully, the used market on 100 series APs is very low cost, so not nearly 
as big of an impact.  

 

So, with ePMP APs (while maybe not as good as 450APs) I can at least cut my 
losses by 80%.  That’s a big deal !

 

Unfortunately, that reality forces my hands.

 

Paul

 

 

From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Gino Villarini via Af
Sent: Sunday, October 19, 2014 5:27 PM
To: <af@afmug.com>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Pmp450 vs epmp pros vs cons

 

So it's Roy against the world of sync 😀

Gino A. Villarini 

@gvillarini

 

 


On Oct 19, 2014, at 5:20 PM, Rory Conaway via Af <af@afmug.com> wrote:

  Yea, I covered that in one of my articles.  I just didn’t see everyone 
sitting around the campfire singing Kumbya.  Another reason I don’t worry about 
GPS.   My next article covers my main reason.

   

  Rory

   

  From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Josh Reynolds via Af
  Sent: Sunday, October 19, 2014 1:56 PM
  To: af@afmug.com
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Pmp450 vs epmp pros vs cons

   

  LOL :)

  Josh Reynolds, Chief Information Officer
  SPITwSPOTS, www.spitwspots.com

  On 10/19/2014 08:13 AM, Rory Conaway via Af wrote:

    I’m assuming all 12 WISPs cooperate with each other?

     

    Rory

     

    From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Mike Hammett via Af
    Sent: Sunday, October 19, 2014 5:33 AM
    To: af@afmug.com
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Pmp450 vs epmp pros vs cons

     

    Entirely not true spoken by a WISP that has up until this point used 
Mikrotik and Ubiquiti in rural and suburban markets with 12 WISP competitors.



    -----
    Mike Hammett
    Intelligent Computing Solutions
    http://www.ics-il.com

     


----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    From: "Mark Radabaugh via Af" <af@afmug.com>
    To: af@afmug.com
    Sent: Saturday, October 18, 2014 3:52:03 PM
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Pmp450 vs epmp pros vs cons

    And now your completely out of spectrum and can't deploy anything new.  I 
suppose the good part for you is nobody else can do anything given the amount 
of noise your making.

    Mark

    On 10/18/14, 1:27 PM, Josh Reynolds via Af wrote:

      You just hit the nail on the head why we have never considered deploying 
450 (and similar) in the past:

      By the time "you" (relative term) have the cashflow to pay for those 
sectors, "we" (another relative term, for people deploying UBNT or similar) 
have already thrown up 4-6 shielded sectors and at least 10 clients per. If we 
don't think we can hit a decent sub density or at least make the site a 
valuable repeater, then we don't go there.

      Josh Reynolds, Chief Information Officer
      SPITwSPOTS, www.spitwspots.com

      On 10/18/2014 09:01 AM, Kurt Fankhauser via Af wrote:

        I prefer sectors too but math doesnt always work out. I'll put the omni 
in to get the site up and once the customers are there change it to sectors. 
The 450 platform is very easy to drop sectors in and have the existing clients 
link right up. I have a couple sites with existing customers i am dropping a 
two sector 450 system in with 120 segree KP antennas. cant afford any more 
sectors than that per site right now...

        Sent from my iPhone 

         

        Kurt Fankhauser

        Wavelinc Communications

        P.O. Box 126

        Bucyrus, OH 44820

        http://www.wavelinc.com

        tel. 419-562-6405

        fax. 419-617-0110


        On Oct 18, 2014, at 11:21 AM, Mike Hammett via Af <af@afmug.com> wrote:

          I've noticed a lot of PMP operators are deploying omnis (presumably 
because they can't afford 4 APs. Give me TDMA Atheros with sectors over omnis 
on anything any day.



          -----
          Mike Hammett
          Intelligent Computing Solutions
          http://www.ics-il.com

           


----------------------------------------------------------------------

          From: "Kurt Fankhauser via Af" <af@afmug.com>
          To: af@afmug.com
          Sent: Saturday, October 18, 2014 8:38:14 AM
          Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Pmp450 vs epmp pros vs cons

          TJ, 

           

          No difference between the 3 different frequencies bands (other than 
NLOS range) as far as the product itself they are all the same animal. 2.4ghz 
NLOS is slightly better than 3.65ghhz. They all function the same and have the 
same expected throughputs per channel width. They all use the same firmware and 
i love the interface being the same across all 3. The only major difference is 
the 5ghz is V/H versus slant on the other two. That just translates to the 5ghz 
omni being ALOT smaller and lighter. There are some places that i wish the 
2.4ghz woulda been V/H because of the omni size but overall I am still very 
happy with the 2.4ghz 450. 




           

          Kurt Fankhauser

          Wavelinc Communications

          P.O. Box 126

          Bucyrus, OH 44820

          http://www.wavelinc.com

          tel. 419-562-6405

          fax. 419-617-0110

           

          On Sat, Oct 18, 2014 at 4:57 AM, TJ Trout via Af <af@afmug.com> wrote:

          Kurt, 

           

          Any pros and cons on 450 between 2ghz, 3.65 and 5?  Any differences 
at all? Range vs throughput? Obviously 2ghz penetrates better, 3 is licensed 
and 5 has more spectrum but anything else? All bands are open for me 

           

          Thanks

           

          On Fri, Oct 17, 2014 at 11:20 PM, Kurt Fankhauser via Af 
<af@afmug.com> wrote:

          I started the spring deploying 450 in 2.4ghz, 5ghz, and 3.65ghz and 
then middle of the summer deciding i had to"try" some ePMP because the cost was 
so low I couldn't resist.... I can say now that I am fairly certain I will 
probably stick with the 450. There are many small reasons that when I 
considered them all i came to this conclusion. Here are my reasons: 

           

          1. ePMP latency starts to go up quickly once you have more than 10 
clients on an AP. Once you get over 20 clients the latency is pretty much 25-30 
ms. Cambium was honest about this at the road tour and they noted if you want 
the best latency to stick with the 450.

          2. Sync between the two platforms is not there yet. If you have 
adjacent towers on the different platforms that can see each other you won't 
have sync.

          3. No remote spectrum analyzer for clients. This is HUGE for when the 
clients fire up their wireless camera and baby monitors and trash the whole 
spectrum.

          4.No burst bucket on CPE's 

          5.EPMP Interface is SLOWWW. Cambium explained at the tour they were 
offloading alot of processing power to the PC you are viewing the interface 
with and i can't be taking a quad core machine up a tower to work on these 
radios and do site surveys. I am working with a Panasonic Toughbook and takes 
FOREVER to log into the EPMP radios.

          6. Fore some reason site surveys are a PITA with ePMP. Think its a 
combination of many factors here... slow interface one of them...

          7. EPMP in 5ghz DFS band has really low power output. Something like 
13-14db. When using an omni antenna you can't get maximum legal EIRP out of the 
ePMP.

          8. 450 link tests and SM modulation is pretty stable and predictable. 
EPMP seems like its all over the place. I don't think I have yet seen EPMP 
linktest get full up or down outside of a lab environment.

           

          There might be other reasons but I'm pretty tired and was heading for 
bed.




           

          Kurt Fankhauser

          Wavelinc Communications

          P.O. Box 126

          Bucyrus, OH 44820

          http://www.wavelinc.com

          tel. 419-562-6405

          fax. 419-617-0110

           

          On Fri, Oct 17, 2014 at 5:05 PM, TJ Trout via Af <af@afmug.com> wrote:

          I haven't been keeping real up to date on current generation ptmp 
offerings but we have a new site going up and I need to decide pretty quickly 
on some equipment. For the guys who have been using both 450 and epmp do you 
have any pros and cons ? Any reason to spend the extra money when epmp seems to 
have the same if not better performance , sync, etc?

          My gut says 450 is going to be my best long term solution but with 
all of the positive epmp feedback it's hard to justify the extra money?

           

           

           

           

       

     

-- Mark Radabaugh Amplex m...@amplex.net  419.837.5015 x 1021 

   

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