There is no license with anything Ubiquiti other than their licensed radio
offerings, and even that isn't through them.

I do run several VoIP endpoints in my home. Some wired, some wireless.

I would never recommend wireless to feed VoIP unless there was no other
option. It doesn't matter if you vlan, have proper dscp, etc - the problem
is the nature of the media and it's suceptability to interference and
distortion.

A sip dect handset to a wired basestation is another animal all together.

On Aug 28, 2017 10:10 AM, "Lewis Bergman" <[email protected]> wrote:

I am installing a VoIP system in an old building. It had CAT5 run at some
point with pretty crappy cable. Out of 29 cables on a punch down I could
only locate 5 jacks that toned, out of those only 1 passed. By the length
it is likely that those other 4 just need a few inches cut and
re-terminated.

Anyway, Only one of those is in the right place. I was considering
installing an AP to connect the VoIP phones to and if the AP supported
VLAN, DSCP and QOS, maybe let them use it for everything else as well.

I looked at the Ubiquiti UAP-AC-LITE-US which says it has WMM for voice and
802.1x. I was also looking at the Xclaim Xi-1 which is a Rukus entry level.
I trust the Rukus name more but the UAP is faster and appears to have all
the features. Rukus comes with free cloud management and it looks like
Ubiquiti is a license.

Anyone have experience with VoIP on WiFi with any of the above gear?

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