2x2 mimo you use the same channel , on this setup you are using 2 channelsŠ so 2 (2x2) = 4x4 = 16 :-)
Gino A. Villarini President Aeronet Wireless Broadband Corp. www.aeronetpr.com @aeronetpr On 1/14/15, 6:31 PM, "Bill Prince" <[email protected]> wrote: >I think I would call that 2x2 MIMO. > >bp ><part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com> > >On 1/14/2015 2:29 PM, Gino Villarini wrote: >> You need to add to the fact that you can get more 2x the bandwitdh by >> adding a second ODU and antenna in a setup similar to spatial diversity >> >> Using the same channel and polarityï¿1Ž2 >> >> So 4x4 mimo in Ceragon terms is: >> >> 4 dual core ODUS a (4 radio paths) >> >> 4 Antennas >> >> Using 2 channels ( can be xpic same channel or 2 HH, 2VV ) >> >> >> >> Gino A. Villarini >> President >> Aeronet Wireless Broadband Corp. >> www.aeronetpr.com >> @aeronetpr >> >> >> >> >> >> >> On 1/14/15, 6:18 PM, "Caleb Knauer" <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> Each ODU has two separate cores, so one "ODU" gives you 2x throughput >>> of your standard single core ODU we're used to dealing with. They do >>> a bunch of crazy things with combiners, MIMO sync, etc and some >>> creative naming mechanisms. But in the end your standard IP20C with >>> both cores on an 80Mhz channel will do 1.2Gbps or so. The two cores >>> are layer 1 bonded. >>> >>> On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 5:14 PM, Peter Kranz <[email protected]> >>> wrote: >>>> How does ï¿1Ž2LoS 4X4 MIMO quadrupling capacity using only 2 radio >>>>unitsï¿1Ž2 >>>> work..? What is the real throughput of this radio? >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Peter Kranz >>>> Founder/CEO - Unwired Ltd >>>> www.UnwiredLtd.com >>>> Desk: 510-868-1614 x100 >>>> Mobile: 510-207-0000 >>>> [email protected] >>>> >>>> >
