Your experience is consistent with ours Jeff.  We get good use of 40MHz 
channels in most areas.  That said, complaints about basic connectivity 
greatly outnumber complaints about speed, so I recommend that when in doubt 
people should use 20MHz.  However, we currently have locations where speed 
is an issue, and I’m expecting those to increase with time.  Once your APs 
are close enough together to provide an SNR of 30dB or more (See GT’s 
contributions for reasons why this is important), adding 20MHz APs is more 
costly and less effective effective than enabling 40 MHz.



From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jeffrey D. Sessler
Sent: Tuesday, September 26, 2017 11:43 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Two RF Questions



For your residential, is that concern rooted in belief/assumption or proven 
by testing in production? I remember channel-width discussions with the 
advent of 11n, and people here advocated sticking to 20 MHz for the same 
reasons, only our in-field testing said it was a bad assumption, reaffirmed 
by our vendor and SEs. We’re been using 40 MHz-wide channels since 2008, and 
adopted DBS with the deployment of 11ac.



Unless our campus and/or residential is unique in some way, shape, or 
fashion – our dense deployments overwhelmingly prefer 80 MHz wide channels, 
and data on both sides (client and infrastructure) reaffirms the software is 
making the right decision.



Jeff



From: "[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> " 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > on behalf of Rob Harris 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Reply-To: "[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> " 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Date: Tuesday, September 26, 2017 at 7:33 AM
To: "[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> " 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Two RF Questions



While there are performance gains to be sure (by going to 40, or 80), there 
are other concerns as well. We use 20 in our dorms because of the density of 
APs and users, we need those additional channels (even with dfs in use). We 
use 40 in our public spaces when there’s adequate capacity for it, and 80 in 
our theater area since we designed for it.





Robert Harris
Manager of Network Services

Culinary Institute of America

1946 Campus Drive

Hyde Park, NY
845-451-1681

www.ciachef.edu <http://www.ciachef.edu/>

Food is Life

Create and Savor Yours.™



Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail.



From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jeffrey D. Sessler
Sent: Tuesday, September 26, 2017 10:20 AM
To: [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Two RF Questions



It’s surprising to me that anyone would purchase a Lamborghini, then 
disconnect ten of the twelve cylinders and drive it at 25 mph on the 
autobahn.



When I see static 20 MHz channels, or using 40 MHz in only limited areas, I 
wonder what’s behind the purposeful neutering of the system. If you are a 
Cisco customer running 8.1 or above, and not using DBS (Dynamic Bandwidth 
Selection), then it’s the equivalent of the Lamborghini above running on 
only two cylinders.



Don’t miss out on the significant advancements in bandwidth management. Free 
those resources spent doing point-in-time simulation and surveys for 
something the software doesn’t already do far better at. I promise, DBS won’t 
hurt a bit and your users will thank you a hundred times over.



Jeff





From: "[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> " 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > on behalf of "Street, Chad A" 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Reply-To: "[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> " 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Date: Tuesday, September 26, 2017 at 6:59 AM
To: "[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> " 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Two RF Questions



What is your reasoning behind not wanting 40 megahertz channels if you have 
plenty of overhead with your channel utilization?  People saying you should 
or should not do something without Gathering any type of metric worry me.



On Sep 25, 2017 3:28 PM, Chuck Enfield <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

1.      Enable it in places to check for radar events.  If you get few, then 
yes.  Client devices are almost fully capable now.  Hidden SSID’s are the 
only issue.  Some clients don’t probe on DFS channels, and will only respond 
to beacons.  Make sure 2.4 is usable for the small number of incompatible 
devices.

2.      No.  Don’t even consider 40MHz unless you’re using almost all the 
DFS channels, but even then you’ll probably have to disable it in some high 
density areas.



From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David Blahut
Sent: Monday, September 25, 2017 3:17 PM
To: [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Two RF Questions



Greetings,

I have two hopefully simple RF related questions:

1.  Should I enable the extended UNII-2 channels campus wide?

2.  Should I enable 40Mhz channel width campus wide?

In other words what are you doing on your campus and what is the "best 
practice?



Our wireless infrastructure:



3 Cisco 5508s running 8.2.141.0



20 - 3800 APs

368 - 3700 APs

414 - 3600 APs

8 - 3500 APs

7 - 1810 APs

32 - 1142 APs



Prime 3.1.0



Thanks for your input.

David

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