Gino,

What have your results been with the Redline product?

Travis
Microserv

Gino Villarini wrote:
 
 
it uses 802.03af PS ...
 
My point was that you could use the low cost Vecima Bases with these
CPEs ...
 
or stick with el cheapo tranzeo units .... Would you pay extra $50 for a
quality cpe? I'll do
 
Definetly Tranzeo does not manufacture this unit .... 
 

Gino A. Villarini 
[email protected] 
Aeronet Wireless Broadband Corp. 
tel  787.273.4143   fax   787.273.4145 

 

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Travis Johnson
Sent: Saturday, December 13, 2008 7:21 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Vecima 3.65


Ummmm.... pricing is WAY, WAY different.

Redline AP's are around $10k
Vecima AP's are around $4k

Redline CPE's are $300 each (even in 250 quantity)
Vecima CPE's are less than $249 

And, I was told Tranzeo is making Redline's CPE as well? Could you send
a picture of the Redline CPE?
 
Travis
Microserv

Gino Villarini wrote: 

	iirc one vendor told me the recline CPe could talk with the
Vecima  
	base....
	
	
	The redline units are top notch quality construction, no tranzeo

	mickey mouse stuff.
	
	
	Afaik pricing is not much diferent
	
	
	Gino
	
	Sent from my Motorola Startac...
	
	
	On Dec 13, 2008, at 2:37 PM, "Travis Johnson" <[email protected]>
<mailto:[email protected]>  wrote:
	
	  

		Hi,
		
		We received our Vecima "trial" kit (one AP and five CPE)
on Thursday  
		afternoon. We have not yet put it on a tower, as there
were several  
		issues with their software on the AP... but here's some
info thus far:
		
		The base station is quite large. It measures
approximately 14 inches  
		tall x 8 inches wide x 6 inches thick. It weighs about
25 pounds  
		(seriously). It has an RJ-45 ethernet connector and an
N-male  
		connector on the bottom. (I was lead to believe they had
omni, 90  
		degree, 120 degree and connectorized versions, and I
requested the  
		120 unit, but instead got this with an LMR jumper and an
MTI 120  
		antenna).
		
		We began by getting into the AP and making some "normal"
changes  
		(downlink was set to 50%, so we changed it to 70%). Also
the center  
		frequency was set to 3.410 so we changed that to 3.650.
We also  
		changed to 7mhz channel size. We then applied and
rebooted... and  
		then we could no longer get into the "radio"
configuration page  
		(where we had just made all those changes). So we did a
factory  
		reset and tried again. Same thing. We opened a trouble
ticket with  
		Vecima the next morning, and they were able to reproduce
the problem  
		in their lab. Then about 3 hours later, another tech
called back and  
		told us we needed to upgrade the firmware (even though
the first  
		tech said we were running the latest). We upgraded and
that fixed  
		the problem... but then we had a new problem. The
"Allowed MAC  
		address" file somehow got corrupted... so they had to
SSH into the  
		base station and fix that file. (By the way, this AP is
just running  
		Linux 2.6.14 kernel). We were now able to make a
connection to one  
		of the CPE (after setting up the service classifiers,
service flows,  
		and adding a service flow to this MAC address). Making a
link on our  
		test bench (10 feet away), we had a -55ish signal...
however, the  
		ping times and speeds were terrible (2000ms and at the
most 2Mbps).  
		I am thinking it was because this is running OFDM and in
close  
		proximity, the signals bounce all over. Last, all three
techs that I  
		talked to at Vecima asked "Do you have an NMS (network
management  
		server)?" and I had to continually say "no" and then
they would say  
		"oh... I don't know how to do this manually". One of the
reasons we  
		were testing this solution is that it did not require
their NMS to  
		function... however, even their tech support is pretty
limited if  
		you don't have it. Their NMS server is about $5,000 (but
a single  
		server will support an entire network, with unlimited
AP's and CPE).
		
		On to the CPE: This is one of the worst designs of a CPE
that I have  
		ever seen. The entire unit is made by Tranzeo and looks
just like  
		their normal 2.4 CPE. It has the bar of lights on the
top showing  
		Power, LAN, RSSI, etc. The mounting bracket is the "L"
bracket that  
		bolts to the back and has a U-bolt and clamp to hook to
the pipe.  
		The biggest problem is how the ethernet cable connects.
It has the  
		white cover plate that goes over the RJ-45 connector
that has to be  
		bolted to the back of the radio... the problem is, the
pass-thru  
		connector is not big enough to allow an already crimped
RJ-45 cable  
		to pass thru... meaning, you have to run the cable thru
the white  
		plastic thing, then crimp it, then plug it in, and then
screw the  
		nuts down holding the white cover. If you ever have to
replace the  
		radio with something different, you have to cut the
cable and then  
		re-crimp. Also, I can guarantee that water is going to
get into the  
		RJ-45 as it is on the back of the radio and the water
will always be  
		trying to get into the white cover and then will just
"flow" right  
		into the RJ-45. I have attached a picture that is 99%
the same as  
		this unit (except this unit is smaller than the
picture). The other  
		issue is the PoE injector that comes with the unit. This
is the  
		worst PoE that I have ever seen. I don't understand why
they can't  
		use a grounded PoE that doesn't require a separate
ground wire. Use  
		the ground built into the electrical wiring that is
already there  
		(like the PacWireless PoE units). Attached is a picture
of the PoE  
		that was supplied.
		
		I will be testing the speeds and range this Monday
(assuming the  
		weather is better... we got 6" of snow and 40MPH winds
last night).  
		I will post more results as I have them. At this point,
I am not  
		really impressed with a $4,000 AP that's just running
Linux.
		
		Travis
		Microserv
		<cpe.jpg>
		<poe.jpg>
		
		
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