In the Cisco 3800 dual-radio design, while the fixed 5Ghz radio is omni in 
azimuth, the XOR radio when running in 5Ghz is directional – this is one of the 
mitigation techniques mentioned in the 7signal video. The directional (micro 
cell) is supporting the high-bandwidth multi-spatial 11ac clients under it, and 
the one spatial 11ac, legacy, etc. clients can be pushed to the omni (macro 
cell).

At the end of the day, I think the XOR (flex) radio is fantastic investment 
protection. Instead of having to deal with (and waste a lot of time on) 2.4 
overpopulation and unused radios, you gain a huge amount of flexibility.

I’ve got a new residence hall coming online in a few weeks that will be 
equipped with about 100 of the new Cisco 3800-series (and multi-gig) so I’ll no 
doubt have a bit of real-world data to share.

Jeff

From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
on behalf of Kees Pronk <[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, June 30, 2016 at 5:23 AM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Turning off 2.4 on a select SSID?

All,

Little kick at the discussion from a while ago:
There is a YouTube video now from 7signal in which dual 5GHz radio setup is 
discussed: https://youtu.be/6eueR3PYXlA (from 11:30 in the video). Pretty 
interesting!

BR, Kees

Van: Kees Pronk
Verzonden: donderdag 7 april 2016 13:45
Aan: [email protected]
Onderwerp: RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Turning off 2.4 on a select SSID?

Hi Chris,

“you could in theory double the airtime available”

I would be interested in your actual experience with this. Now that a few 
vendors have taken this approach and others stay away from this.

Arguments in favor of 5/5 you will find these abundant on the vendors marketing 
pages, but how about :
Extra COGS (band pass filters etc), extra complexity with your channels plans 
(need a lot of separation between the 5/5 radios), you must enable DFS channels 
on every AP but what about false positive radar detects? What about the 2 
radio’s  ‘deafening’ each other while trying so send/receive at the same time.

Please keep us posted and maybe others testing with this

1.      Innovation

2.      Marketing gimmick
(pick one ;-)

Best regards, Kees

Van: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] Namens Larry Dougher
Verzonden: donderdag 7 april 2016 03:11
Aan: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Onderwerp: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Turning off 2.4 on a select SSID?

Thanks Chris!


Larry Dougher
Chief Information Officer
Information Technology Services<http://its.wsesu.net>
Windsor Southeast Supervisory Union<http://wsesu.net>
127 State Street, Windsor, VT 05089
Email<mailto:[email protected]> | Google+<http://goo.gl/gEAdt> | 
Twitter<http://twitter.com/larrydougher> | 
LinkedIn<http://www.linkedin.com/in/larrydougher> | 802.674.8336

On Wed, Apr 6, 2016 at 2:45 PM, Chris Adams (IT) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Larry,

We have deployed 802.11ac WAPs in many locations, but only have 80mhz channels 
enabled sparingly around campus. My hope is that by having the SDR option, we 
could configure 2x 5ghz radios with either 20Mhz or 40Mhz channels, logically 
operating as 2 WAPs. Our wireless use case is primarily for internet access – 
we just don’t have a need for true wave1/2 802.11ac throughputs at this time.

To see true Wave2 throughputs, I believe the client WNIC would need to be 
upgraded. If we could operate 2 “logical” 5ghz WAPs from a single unit for a 
small increase in price, I think this is where our greatest benefit would be at 
this time as you could in theory double the airtime available.

This is based on several assumptions I am making – I have not gotten my hands 
on the new AP250 yet but I am actively looking to do so.

http://boundless.aerohive.com/blog/Designing-WLANS-What-If-we-could-double-our-airtime-at-5-GHz.html


Thanks,

Chris Adams

Director, Network & Telecom Services
Division of Information Technology
University of North Georgia

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
 On Behalf Of Larry Dougher
Sent: Wednesday, April 6, 2016 2:28 PM

To: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Turning off 2.4 on a select SSID?

Chris,

I have a question about the AP250, but may be a question about MU-MIMO more 
generally.  So, all things being equal, would a 5Ghz 802.11ac device/client see 
any benefit from a Wave 2 AP or would that device/client have to have an 
upgraded/new 802.11ac 5Ghz Wave 2 chip to see a benefit?

Thanks,


Larry Dougher
Chief Information Officer
Information Technology Services<http://its.wsesu.net>
Windsor Southeast Supervisory Union<http://wsesu.net>
127 State Street, Windsor, VT 05089
Email<mailto:[email protected]> | Google+<http://goo.gl/gEAdt> | 
Twitter<http://twitter.com/larrydougher> | 
LinkedIn<http://www.linkedin.com/in/larrydougher> | 
802.674.8336<tel:802.674.8336>

On Wed, Apr 6, 2016 at 1:30 PM, Chris Adams (IT) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I echo Jeremy’s sentiment – our experience with band-steering has been 
overwhelmingly positive. We are also not (currently) using DFS channels – but 
may be revisiting this soon. I’d estimate almost 2/3 of our 2.4ghz radios are 
disabled.

I am very happy to see the new Aerohive AP250 has a SDR with the option of 
disabling the 2.4ghz radio in favor of having 2x 5ghz radios.

Thanks,

Chris Adams

Director, Network & Telecom Services
Division of Information Technology
University of North Georgia

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
 On Behalf Of Jeremy Gibbs
Sent: Wednesday, April 6, 2016 1:27 PM
To: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Turning off 2.4 on a select SSID?

I find the opposite to be true with band steering.  If we turn it off, the 
majority of our clients won't connect to 5 Ghz, even if they are right above an 
AP.  This causes lots of disconnect problems and congestion in the 2.4 Ghz 
spectrum.  Turning band steering on fixes the problem for us.


--

Jeremy L. Gibbs
Sr. Network Engineer
Utica College IITS
On Wed, Apr 6, 2016 at 1:18 PM, Turner, Ryan H 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
All,

This is probably a fool’s errand, but we are debating experimenting with 
turning off the 2.4 spectrum on our eduroam SSID on parts of campus that have a 
dense 5 gig coverage.  We’ve always positioned eduroam as the premium SSID, and 
left a WPA2-PSK SSID for all the rest that don’t support advanced EAP methods.  
We are debating trying this in just the IT building to start (see how many 
people scream).  Has anyone done anything like this?  The goals would be to 
continually remove traffic from the garbage bands, hopefully increasing client 
performance.  Band steering isn’t very good.

Thanks,
Ryan Turner
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
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