We are offering speeds up to 200Mbps with the Mimosa A5 but you have to make sure your entire backend is built to deliver it. To do that , we are expecting the A5-360 14’s to be within about ½ mile on average and 40 customers. We have tested out to 1.5 miles with the C5’s, but modulation drops to about 360Mbps. In that case, I probably wouldn’t offer more than 100Mbps. However, that changes when the A5c and B5 sector products come out with bigger antenna options.
Rory From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Darin Steffl Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2016 8:12 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [AFMUG] AC Speed Options XL is using the new Mimosa A5 hardware for those speeds, not the Ubiquiti AC. I would be confident offering those speeds with the new Mimosa gear if you have great signals and keep distance low. On Tue, Mar 22, 2016 at 9:56 PM, Cassidy B. Larson <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: So we’re looking at adding some new AC-only rates to our pricing and wondering what ya’ll are doing. We normally have a three-level hierarchical policer that lets us do a commit and a burst rate and a burst bucket (MB). We also usually have the upload close to the same commit as the download, but with a smaller bucket and burst size than the download. We’re wondering if we’re going to be using up too many upload timeslots in continuing the semi-symmetrical upload/download options. I noticed at the show the XL Broadband guy had a 25/5, 50/6, 75/7, and 100/8 set of packages. Thoughts? Does limiting the upload by that much really buy you that much on airtime? Thanks, -c -- Darin Steffl Minnesota WiFi www.mnwifi.com<http://www.mnwifi.com/> 507-634-WiFi [http://www.snoitulosten.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/facebook-small.jpg]<http://www.facebook.com/minnesotawifi> Like us on Facebook<http://www.facebook.com/minnesotawifi>
