11 megabit, for 802.11b, so with headers and encryption, 8-9 megabit.
Weather conditions, distance, and interferance can nock this rate down.
the 2 db dipole "rubber ducky" antenna's that come stock with AP's and some
Bridges have about a 200 meter range.  If you have any questions on what
antennas, cables and towers may be appropriate for you just go to cisco.com
tac tools, and aironet antenna calculator. This will tell you how much
distance/throughput/antenna hieght you will need/get.

Question on your voice integration, does the PBX connect directly into an
external csu/dsu that the router does (such as a kentrox with 2 v.35
connections) or does it plug into your router into a vwic card ?.

Cheers,
Colin McNamara

""Kevin O'Gilvie""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> You are right.
> The 1200's dont support briging as yet, they are just WAP's.
> How much bandwidth does the 350 offer?
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Charlie Wehner"
> To:
> Sent: Monday, December 16, 2002 9:07 PM
> Subject: RE: Aironet 1200 [7:59310]
>
>
> > What type of throughput does the remote office need?  With two 1200
series
> > access points you can:
> >
> > a) Run one AP as Root and the other in Repeater mode.
> > b) Blast the signal across the street with just one AP
> >
> > I don't think you can bridge with 1200s series APs.  You might be better
> off
> > buying 350 bridges instead depending on your environment.
> >
> > You could also buy a WGB to connect to one of the APs.  That's another
> > option.




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