It's a conspiracy..   Solecteks answer to every thing back in mid 90s was
multi path problem.   90% of time is water in cable or interference....
With all the radar noise around here I just stay away from those
channels.   Commercial, government, military and international users.

On Oct 14, 2016 10:16 AM, "Ken Hohhof" <af...@kwisp.com> wrote:

> Sure, it’s possible, DFS is a stupid scheme for anything that needs to be
> reliable.  On the other hand, only the AP does radar detection, not the
> CPE, so a customer router near the CPE shouldn’t trigger a false DFS
> event.  And if you have the antenna gain properly configured on the AP, the
> radar detection level should be relatively high, so that a customer router
> a mile away through an outer wall shouldn’t trip it.  If you have a rooftop
> AP, or houses right near the tower, it could happen.  Also I believe we
> have seen atmospheric conditions create false DFS events probably by
> ducting the signal from a transmitter we usually can’t see.  I also suspect
> reflections off metal objects like trucks, trains, maybe even airplanes can
> cause events.
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] *On Behalf Of *Eric Muehleisen
> *Sent:* Friday, October 14, 2016 10:50 AM
> *To:* af@afmug.com
> *Subject:* [AFMUG] DFS impact on indoor SOHO routers
>
>
>
> On occasion we see DFS events on our outdoor WISP network. It's rare, but
> does happen. It's understandable since we use high gain sector antennas and
> AP's with great receive sensitivity. Not to mention these are outdoor
> radios with direct view of the sky.
>
>
>
> On the other hand, we are seeing 802.11ac home routers with DFS
> capabilities. The router indoors has all sort of built in attenuation,
> walls, obstacles, etc. Would you expect to see DFS events, if any, in this
> scenario?
>
>
>
>
>

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