Koenraad Lelong wrote:
> Patrick Kirsch schreef:
>> Hey,
>>>> So, has anyone of you some hints what to try next to get connected ?
>>>> P.S. as far as I know there are no other transmitters in that band
>>>> (2.4GHz ?) at home.
>>> Do you have a cordless phone?
>>>
>>> A lot of them are in that band and will interfere. We had to buy a new
>>> cordless in a higher band.
>>>
>> Yes, DECT should use the band from 1880 MHz to 1900 MHz, but ETSI allows
>> 2400–2480 MHz which can cause trouble. If your wlan router and your wlan
>> cards allows you to choose channel 14 (normally available in Japan) then
>> you have a good chance that they are not overlapping. I'm not sure if
>> this helps, but you can also adjust the burst-rate at the wlan-router.
>>
>> Furthermore it helps to look for other radio-emitting (phone, microwave,
>> ham radio) devices that stand closely to each other (to the wlan
>> router). Try to place them at least 12,5cm away from each other.
>>
>> A next good guess would be to look what objects are standing close to
>> the wlan router, because of reflection, refraction and interference it
>> is possible that the transmission waves are razed.
>>
>> Patrick
>
> Thanks for those suggestions, but besides some cell-phones (not near
> laptor or accesspoint) we don't have any wireless (radio) devices, and
> the microwave oven is meters away and inactive at most of the times of
> my tests.
> I'll look at the burst rate and give it a try.
> I tried at least five different locations in the house but except for
> one these were on or in open wooden closets, next to a wall. The other
> one was on the table max. 1 meter away from my laptop. I'll try on a
> different table farther away.
Do not forget your neighbors.

-- 

Joseph Loo
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