Band Plan: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
|173 |
|173 |
||
|20 |
|20 |
||
− | |Richmond / Berkeley / Oakland / |
+ | |Richmond / Berkeley / Oakland / Hayward |
|We should probably be using 174 to avoid overlap with 171 (see [[wikipedia:List_of_WLAN_channels#5_GHz_(802.11a/h/j/n/ac/ax)|here]]) |
|We should probably be using 174 to avoid overlap with 171 (see [[wikipedia:List_of_WLAN_channels#5_GHz_(802.11a/h/j/n/ac/ax)|here]]) |
||
|- |
|- |
Revision as of 23:23, 20 August 2022
San Francisco / Oakland / Berkeley
Channel | Width (MHz) | Purpose | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
171 | 10 | Cross Bay | |
173 | 20 | Richmond / Berkeley / Oakland / Hayward | We should probably be using 174 to avoid overlap with 171 (see here) |
175 | 10 | Mount Diablo | |
177 | 10 | Oakland / Berkeley | |
179 | 10 | SFWEM | |
181 | 10 | NALCO | |
183 | 10 | NALCO |
Notes
I confess that I don't understand how a band plan should work in a wifi network when we have a combination of tight point-to-point links with beam widths of 7° (beam diameter is ~1/8 the beam distance) with sectors with beam widths of 120° (beam diameter is ... massive).
San Carlos / San Bruno
Channel | Width (MHz) | Purpose | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
171 | 10 | ||
173 | 10 | ||
175 | 10 | ||
177 | 10 | ||
179 | 10 | ||
181 | 10 | ||
183 | 10 |
Redwood City / Belmont
Channel | Width (MHz) | Purpose | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
171 | 10 | ||
173 | 10 | ||
175 | 10 | ||
177 | 10 | ||
179 | 10 | ||
181 | 10 | ||
183 | 10 |
Mountain View / Sunnyvale / Palo Alto
Channel | Width (MHz) | Purpose | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
171 | 10 | ||
173 | 10 | ||
175 | 10 | ||
177 | 10 | ||
179 | 10 | ||
181 | 10 | ||
183 | 10 |
Comments
Channels are defined to be 5 MHz wide, reaching 2.5 MHz above and below their center frequency. Most channels used by BAM are 10 MHz wide, so +/- 5MHz of their center frequency. This means we only use odd channel numbers as 10 MHz channels overlap with even channels.
20 MHz channels extend +/- 10 MHz. This mean the partially or completely overlap with two channels above and below.