Here is an excerpt from a posting on the Cambium community forum from one of
our system engineers. The posting has screenshots and examples of a
troubleshooting scenario with VE.
Adam,
No. You can't connect a PTP 650 to a PTP 600 in a single link. You can
synchronize PTP 650 links and PTP 600 links next to each other on the same
tower but the air interface is not compatible.
Regards,
Bruce
Product Manager
Cambium Networks
From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com]
Gino,
We don't recommend interchanging these power injectors between the version used
with the PTP 650 and the version used with the PTP 600.
Pinout and voltage level -wise they are the same. However, there are two key
differences:
1. PTP 650 AC+DC Power Injector can source more power
We're in the process of generating requirements for next generation PMP
solutions. As part of this I'm trying to better understand how people are
deploying TDD synchronization and distributing power with their current PMP 100
and PMP 450 deployments. We've created a short survey at the
LINKPlanner Release V4.2.0 was just posted. The main feature of this release is
the addition of PTP 450 in both 5GHz and 3GHz.
There are a couple new PMP features as well:
* For PMP 450 we have added high level throughput to the AP Performance
Summary (in effect this gives the same
Hi Josh and Sam,
Support for PTP 450 is coming in a LINKPlanner release scheduled for December.
At this point we don’t have plans to add PTP 230 to LINKPlanner.
Regards,
Bruce
Product Manager
Cambium Networks
From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Josh Luthman via Af
Sent:
The short answer is that PTP 650 does support 5.15 GHz.
To access 5.15GHz you will need to be on release 01-21 and then go to the
support website to add 5.1GHz license key (no charge). Because of the
out-of-band emissions requirements there are automatic backoffs in power on the
band edges of
Hi Mike,
You are correct. The PTP 650 supports what we call ‘split frequency operation’
which assigns a Tx frequency separate from the Rx frequency. Both Tx and Rx
frequencies must be the same channel bandwidth.
This is useful in cases where there is localized noise at one end of a link OR