This document provides a configuration and user guide for Cambium Networks' PMP 400/430 point-to-multipoint and PTP 200/230 point-to-point product lines. It includes an introduction, product descriptions, specifications, installation instructions, and configuration information for the wireless bridges and subscriber modules. The guide covers radio technology, applications, power and grounding, and administration systems for the Cambium Networks products.
This document provides a user guide for the Cambium CMM4 device. It includes sections on product description and specifications for the CMM4 controller board and integrated Ethernet switch. It also covers planning considerations for typical cabling configurations, power planning, and syncing multiple CMMs. The document details how to configure the CMM4's IP parameters, ports, users, and other settings through its web interface. It provides guidance on technical support contact options and disclaimers regarding copyright, restrictions, and use in hazardous environments.
This document provides a user guide for the Cambium Networks CMM4 device. It includes sections on product description and specifications, planning installation and cabling, configuring the device's network and system parameters, and troubleshooting. The guide covers topics such as power planning, Ethernet cabling diagrams, adding and deleting user accounts, and configuring ports, SNMP settings, VLANs, and other unit settings. It aims to help users understand and set up the CMM4 for use in their network.
E ran2[1].1 dbs3900 lte fdd product description(2011q1)ProcExpl
This document provides an overview of the DBS3900 LTE product from Huawei, which uses a distributed architecture with separate baseband units (BBU) and remote radio units (RRU). It describes the positioning and benefits of the product, the architecture including the BBU and various RRU options, common application scenarios, typical configurations, operation and maintenance features, and technical specifications.
Product description of net numen _m3_(cdma_omc)Adeep Asaad
The document provides a technical proposal for a CDMA OMC (Operational and Maintenance Center) product called NetNumenTM M3. It includes:
1) An overview of the system features including layered management structure, rich O&M functions, flexibility, reliability, and standard interfaces.
2) A description of the system structure including a two-layer structure with OMMs (Operation and Maintenance Modules) managing individual NEs (Network Elements) and NMCs (Network Management Centers) providing centralized management.
3) Details on the hardware including servers, disks, switches, and redundancy features to ensure reliability.
The document provides technical details about the Huawei BTS3900 GSM system, including:
1. Descriptions of the cabinet structures for -48V, +24V and 220V configurations.
2. Explanations of power, signal, transmission and RF cable connections for single cabinets and stacked cabinets.
3. Specifications and components of the BBU3900 equipment, DRFU, DCDU, GATM, fan unit and power subracks.
4. Lists and diagrams of the various cables used in the BTS3900 system for power distribution, signaling, transmission and RF connections.
I manager u2000 v200r014 optional feature description (elte2.3) 01(20140314)Diego Badilla
The document describes optional features of the Huawei iManager U2000 V200R014 network management system. It discusses features related to security management, including encrypted transmission between the U2000 and network devices using protocols like SSL, FTPS, and SFTP. It also covers digital certificate management using CMP V2 for the U2000 and devices. Other sections describe features for hardware/software management, fault management, network monitoring, base station power savings, OSS solutions, and more.
The document provides essential information for installing and configuring the Cambium PMP 450 module, including:
- The default IP address, administrator username and password, and software upgrade procedure.
- Two options for resetting the module to factory defaults via the radio GUI.
- Safety guidelines for working with power lines, at heights, and grounding and protective earth. RF exposure risks near the antenna are also noted.
The document provides configuration information for the Cambium PMP 450 wireless system, including:
- The default IP address, username, and no default password for access to the management GUI.
- Instructions for software upgrades and resetting the unit to factory defaults using the radio GUI.
- Safety and regulatory guidelines that must be followed when installing or operating the equipment.
This document provides a user guide for the Cambium CMM4 device. It includes sections on product description and specifications for the CMM4 controller board and integrated Ethernet switch. It also covers planning considerations for typical cabling configurations, power planning, and syncing multiple CMMs. The document details how to configure the CMM4's IP parameters, ports, users, and other settings through its web interface. It provides guidance on technical support contact options and disclaimers regarding copyright, restrictions, and use in hazardous environments.
This document provides a user guide for the Cambium Networks CMM4 device. It includes sections on product description and specifications, planning installation and cabling, configuring the device's network and system parameters, and troubleshooting. The guide covers topics such as power planning, Ethernet cabling diagrams, adding and deleting user accounts, and configuring ports, SNMP settings, VLANs, and other unit settings. It aims to help users understand and set up the CMM4 for use in their network.
E ran2[1].1 dbs3900 lte fdd product description(2011q1)ProcExpl
This document provides an overview of the DBS3900 LTE product from Huawei, which uses a distributed architecture with separate baseband units (BBU) and remote radio units (RRU). It describes the positioning and benefits of the product, the architecture including the BBU and various RRU options, common application scenarios, typical configurations, operation and maintenance features, and technical specifications.
Product description of net numen _m3_(cdma_omc)Adeep Asaad
The document provides a technical proposal for a CDMA OMC (Operational and Maintenance Center) product called NetNumenTM M3. It includes:
1) An overview of the system features including layered management structure, rich O&M functions, flexibility, reliability, and standard interfaces.
2) A description of the system structure including a two-layer structure with OMMs (Operation and Maintenance Modules) managing individual NEs (Network Elements) and NMCs (Network Management Centers) providing centralized management.
3) Details on the hardware including servers, disks, switches, and redundancy features to ensure reliability.
The document provides technical details about the Huawei BTS3900 GSM system, including:
1. Descriptions of the cabinet structures for -48V, +24V and 220V configurations.
2. Explanations of power, signal, transmission and RF cable connections for single cabinets and stacked cabinets.
3. Specifications and components of the BBU3900 equipment, DRFU, DCDU, GATM, fan unit and power subracks.
4. Lists and diagrams of the various cables used in the BTS3900 system for power distribution, signaling, transmission and RF connections.
I manager u2000 v200r014 optional feature description (elte2.3) 01(20140314)Diego Badilla
The document describes optional features of the Huawei iManager U2000 V200R014 network management system. It discusses features related to security management, including encrypted transmission between the U2000 and network devices using protocols like SSL, FTPS, and SFTP. It also covers digital certificate management using CMP V2 for the U2000 and devices. Other sections describe features for hardware/software management, fault management, network monitoring, base station power savings, OSS solutions, and more.
The document provides essential information for installing and configuring the Cambium PMP 450 module, including:
- The default IP address, administrator username and password, and software upgrade procedure.
- Two options for resetting the module to factory defaults via the radio GUI.
- Safety guidelines for working with power lines, at heights, and grounding and protective earth. RF exposure risks near the antenna are also noted.
The document provides configuration information for the Cambium PMP 450 wireless system, including:
- The default IP address, username, and no default password for access to the management GUI.
- Instructions for software upgrades and resetting the unit to factory defaults using the radio GUI.
- Safety and regulatory guidelines that must be followed when installing or operating the equipment.
This document provides a training proposal for a WCDMA product. It outlines 41 proposed training programs covering topics such as WCDMA principles, radio network design and planning, performance management, optimization, and product-specific training. The training programs include classroom instructor-led training and web-based training, with durations ranging from 1 to 6 days. The goal is to provide comprehensive technical training to support the WCDMA product.
The document provides an overview of HSDPA and its key functions:
- HSDPA improves downlink capacity and data rates through fast scheduling, fast HARQ, and fast AMC.
- It introduces new physical channels (HS-PDSCH, HS-SCCH, HS-DPCCH) and a new MAC sublayer (MAC-hs).
- The document then describes HSDPA control plane functions including channel switching, load control, and code resource management. It also describes user plane functions such as scheduling, HARQ, and TFRC selection.
This document provides an overview of a CDMA2000 1X network characterization seminar. The seminar will cover the network characterization process including collecting performance data, post-processing, and extracting key performance indicators (KPIs). Attendees will learn how to examine their own network and determine if it is operating well. The seminar materials include data files to open with various analysis software tools.
The document provides essential information about configuring and operating Cambium PMP 450 modules, including:
- Default IP address and login credentials for management access.
- Software upgrade and factory reset procedures.
- Two options for resetting the module to factory defaults.
- Safety guidelines and regulatory compliance information for installation and operation.
Oep100301 lte radio network design issue 1.00Md Kamruzzaman
This document contains the contents of an LTE radio network design training manual. The contents include chapters that cover LTE architecture, the LTE air interface, LTE traffic types, and the radio planning process. Specifically, it outlines sections on EPS architecture, E-UTRAN interfaces, UE states and areas, OFDM principles, channel coding, channel structure, data rates, UE categories, traffic types and protocols, issues with voice over LTE, and the steps of pre-planning, detailed planning and optimization in radio network planning.
The document provides information about configuring and resetting the Cambium PMP 450 wireless system:
1. The default IP address, username, and password for accessing the management GUI are listed.
2. There are two options for resetting the radio to factory default settings - either through the radio GUI interface or by using an override plug during power up.
3. Instructions are provided for upgrading the software version and guidelines for safety, regulatory compliance, and warranty information.
This document contains information about setting up and operating an Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR radio system, including:
- The CD contains manuals for operating and maintaining the 9500 MPR radio.
- Contact information is provided for technical assistance from Alcatel-Lucent, including phone support hours and emergency procedures.
- Instructions are included for initial turnup of the system, such as enabling modules, provisioning radios and protection schemes, and setting the network element time.
This document provides data information for some vendor directors and switches, including descriptions, system architecture, and management. This document also provides installation guidelines and cabinet configuration examples.
PREFACE
I had my training experience from 04th January 2016 to 27th March 2016 at Mobitel (Private) Limited. Here in this report I present the experience, knowledge, skills I had during the training period.
The report contains three chapters. The first chapter contains an introduction to Mobitel (Private) Limited, company strategy and organizational structure. The second chapter contains the training experience, information on telecommunication industry and equipment, project work and assignments that I involved during the training period. Next chapter contains the management structure of Mobitel (Private) Limited. And the summery and conclusion were included in the last chapter.
This document provides an overview and specifications for the RRU5508 radio unit. It describes the physical appearance and ports of the unit. It also provides extensive technical specifications for the unit, including supported frequency bands, capacity, receiver sensitivity, typical output power for various frequency band combinations, power consumption, input power requirements, and environmental specifications.
This document provides requirements and installation instructions for Wireless Manager (WM). It outlines the minimum hardware requirements for the WM server and client. The supported server operating systems are Windows Server 2008 R2/2008 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.x. Certain network ports must be open for communication between the WM server and devices/client. The document guides the user through installing or upgrading WM and discovering devices on the network.
Og for sdh ason network management (v100 r002c01-02)Nicat Mikayilov
This document provides an overview and instructions for configuring and managing SDH ASON networks using the iManager U2000 network management system. It describes ASON concepts and protocols, how to create an ASON topology and domains, manage link resources and services, and configure the migration of services between traditional and ASON networks. The document also covers UNI, OVPN, and data import/export functions.
The document provides an overview of the DSAM Product Family meters and describes their key features and capabilities. The meters provide DOCSIS/EuroDOCSIS cable modem installation testing for high-speed data and video services. They communicate with the CMTS to verify conditions for cable modem installation and include signal level metering, spectrum scanning, and mini-scan analysis of up to 12 channels. AutoTest functions make installations easier and more reliable.
The document is a user's manual for the NWA-6281 1U rackmount server network platform. It provides contact information for the manufacturer, Quanmax Inc., outlines safety instructions, and covers topics such as unpacking, regulatory compliance, warranty policies, and maintaining the computer. The manual contains chapters on introduction and specifications, assembly/disassembly, getting started, and the AMI BIOS setup. Tables provide details on jumper locations, LED indicators, and BIOS menu options.
This document provides help and instructions for using the Cambium Network Updater tool, including recommended system requirements, key concepts, installation instructions, and configuration settings. It describes functions like auto discovery of network elements, grouping elements in folders, installing software packages, estimating upgrade timelines, and accessing subscriber modules. The document also covers copyrights, licenses, related documentation, and providing feedback on the tool or help file.
This document provides an overview of cell management in LTE networks and describes its technical aspects. It discusses sectors and cells, including sector types and the mapping between sectors, carriers, and cells. It also covers frequency bands and parameters for cell configuration. The document provides guidelines for deploying, optimizing, and troubleshooting cell management features.
This document is the user's manual for the NAR-5060 Communications Appliance. It contains instructions for hardware installation and configuration of the system board. Chapter 1 introduces the manual and the NAR-5060 features. Chapter 2 guides the user on hardware setup, including installing storage devices, memory, and I/O cards. Chapter 3 describes the system architecture and operation. Appendix sections provide code samples.
The document provides an overview of the BTS3900 system, including its architecture, structure, subsystems, configuration types, signal flow, topologies, and specifications. It describes the physical cabinet structures for the -48V, +24V and 220V power versions. The logical and software structures are also explained. The power distribution, monitoring system, reference clocks, signal flows and topologies are summarized. Configuration principles and typical examples are provided. The OM system and its functions are outlined. Finally, the document lists the technical specifications for capacity, RF performance, engineering parameters, ports and environmental requirements.
This document describes Huawei's enhanced fast dormancy feature. It allows user equipment (UE) to send signaling connection release indication (SCRI) messages without a specific cause value, allowing the radio network controller (RNC) to move the UE to a power-saving state instead of releasing the connection. The document provides an overview and details of standard fast dormancy, enhanced fast dormancy, identifying fast dormancy UEs, state transitions, related parameters and counters. It emphasizes working with Huawei engineers for proper configuration of this feature.
This document provides a user guide for the Cambium CMM4 device. It includes sections on product description and specifications for the CMM4 and its components like the controller board, power supply, and Ethernet switch. It also covers planning considerations for the CMM4 like typical cabling configurations, power planning, and syncing multiple CMMs. Additional sections provide details on configuring the CMM4 interface and parameters through the web interface.
1. Obtain a new license key from Cambium using the unique Access Key.
2. Connect to the PTP 600 unit and navigate to the License Key page.
3. Enter the new license key to enable the optical interface capability.
4. Connect the fiber optic cable to the SFP module and configure the SFP settings.
5. The unit can now be connected to the fiber network and configured for operation.
1. Obtain a new license key from Cambium using the unique Access Key.
2. Connect to the PTP 600 unit and navigate to the License Key page.
3. Enter the new license key to enable the optical interface capability.
4. Connect the fiber optic cable to the SFP module and configure the SFP settings.
5. The unit can now be connected to the fiber network and configured for operation.
This document provides a training proposal for a WCDMA product. It outlines 41 proposed training programs covering topics such as WCDMA principles, radio network design and planning, performance management, optimization, and product-specific training. The training programs include classroom instructor-led training and web-based training, with durations ranging from 1 to 6 days. The goal is to provide comprehensive technical training to support the WCDMA product.
The document provides an overview of HSDPA and its key functions:
- HSDPA improves downlink capacity and data rates through fast scheduling, fast HARQ, and fast AMC.
- It introduces new physical channels (HS-PDSCH, HS-SCCH, HS-DPCCH) and a new MAC sublayer (MAC-hs).
- The document then describes HSDPA control plane functions including channel switching, load control, and code resource management. It also describes user plane functions such as scheduling, HARQ, and TFRC selection.
This document provides an overview of a CDMA2000 1X network characterization seminar. The seminar will cover the network characterization process including collecting performance data, post-processing, and extracting key performance indicators (KPIs). Attendees will learn how to examine their own network and determine if it is operating well. The seminar materials include data files to open with various analysis software tools.
The document provides essential information about configuring and operating Cambium PMP 450 modules, including:
- Default IP address and login credentials for management access.
- Software upgrade and factory reset procedures.
- Two options for resetting the module to factory defaults.
- Safety guidelines and regulatory compliance information for installation and operation.
Oep100301 lte radio network design issue 1.00Md Kamruzzaman
This document contains the contents of an LTE radio network design training manual. The contents include chapters that cover LTE architecture, the LTE air interface, LTE traffic types, and the radio planning process. Specifically, it outlines sections on EPS architecture, E-UTRAN interfaces, UE states and areas, OFDM principles, channel coding, channel structure, data rates, UE categories, traffic types and protocols, issues with voice over LTE, and the steps of pre-planning, detailed planning and optimization in radio network planning.
The document provides information about configuring and resetting the Cambium PMP 450 wireless system:
1. The default IP address, username, and password for accessing the management GUI are listed.
2. There are two options for resetting the radio to factory default settings - either through the radio GUI interface or by using an override plug during power up.
3. Instructions are provided for upgrading the software version and guidelines for safety, regulatory compliance, and warranty information.
This document contains information about setting up and operating an Alcatel-Lucent 9500 MPR radio system, including:
- The CD contains manuals for operating and maintaining the 9500 MPR radio.
- Contact information is provided for technical assistance from Alcatel-Lucent, including phone support hours and emergency procedures.
- Instructions are included for initial turnup of the system, such as enabling modules, provisioning radios and protection schemes, and setting the network element time.
This document provides data information for some vendor directors and switches, including descriptions, system architecture, and management. This document also provides installation guidelines and cabinet configuration examples.
PREFACE
I had my training experience from 04th January 2016 to 27th March 2016 at Mobitel (Private) Limited. Here in this report I present the experience, knowledge, skills I had during the training period.
The report contains three chapters. The first chapter contains an introduction to Mobitel (Private) Limited, company strategy and organizational structure. The second chapter contains the training experience, information on telecommunication industry and equipment, project work and assignments that I involved during the training period. Next chapter contains the management structure of Mobitel (Private) Limited. And the summery and conclusion were included in the last chapter.
This document provides an overview and specifications for the RRU5508 radio unit. It describes the physical appearance and ports of the unit. It also provides extensive technical specifications for the unit, including supported frequency bands, capacity, receiver sensitivity, typical output power for various frequency band combinations, power consumption, input power requirements, and environmental specifications.
This document provides requirements and installation instructions for Wireless Manager (WM). It outlines the minimum hardware requirements for the WM server and client. The supported server operating systems are Windows Server 2008 R2/2008 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.x. Certain network ports must be open for communication between the WM server and devices/client. The document guides the user through installing or upgrading WM and discovering devices on the network.
Og for sdh ason network management (v100 r002c01-02)Nicat Mikayilov
This document provides an overview and instructions for configuring and managing SDH ASON networks using the iManager U2000 network management system. It describes ASON concepts and protocols, how to create an ASON topology and domains, manage link resources and services, and configure the migration of services between traditional and ASON networks. The document also covers UNI, OVPN, and data import/export functions.
The document provides an overview of the DSAM Product Family meters and describes their key features and capabilities. The meters provide DOCSIS/EuroDOCSIS cable modem installation testing for high-speed data and video services. They communicate with the CMTS to verify conditions for cable modem installation and include signal level metering, spectrum scanning, and mini-scan analysis of up to 12 channels. AutoTest functions make installations easier and more reliable.
The document is a user's manual for the NWA-6281 1U rackmount server network platform. It provides contact information for the manufacturer, Quanmax Inc., outlines safety instructions, and covers topics such as unpacking, regulatory compliance, warranty policies, and maintaining the computer. The manual contains chapters on introduction and specifications, assembly/disassembly, getting started, and the AMI BIOS setup. Tables provide details on jumper locations, LED indicators, and BIOS menu options.
This document provides help and instructions for using the Cambium Network Updater tool, including recommended system requirements, key concepts, installation instructions, and configuration settings. It describes functions like auto discovery of network elements, grouping elements in folders, installing software packages, estimating upgrade timelines, and accessing subscriber modules. The document also covers copyrights, licenses, related documentation, and providing feedback on the tool or help file.
This document provides an overview of cell management in LTE networks and describes its technical aspects. It discusses sectors and cells, including sector types and the mapping between sectors, carriers, and cells. It also covers frequency bands and parameters for cell configuration. The document provides guidelines for deploying, optimizing, and troubleshooting cell management features.
This document is the user's manual for the NAR-5060 Communications Appliance. It contains instructions for hardware installation and configuration of the system board. Chapter 1 introduces the manual and the NAR-5060 features. Chapter 2 guides the user on hardware setup, including installing storage devices, memory, and I/O cards. Chapter 3 describes the system architecture and operation. Appendix sections provide code samples.
The document provides an overview of the BTS3900 system, including its architecture, structure, subsystems, configuration types, signal flow, topologies, and specifications. It describes the physical cabinet structures for the -48V, +24V and 220V power versions. The logical and software structures are also explained. The power distribution, monitoring system, reference clocks, signal flows and topologies are summarized. Configuration principles and typical examples are provided. The OM system and its functions are outlined. Finally, the document lists the technical specifications for capacity, RF performance, engineering parameters, ports and environmental requirements.
This document describes Huawei's enhanced fast dormancy feature. It allows user equipment (UE) to send signaling connection release indication (SCRI) messages without a specific cause value, allowing the radio network controller (RNC) to move the UE to a power-saving state instead of releasing the connection. The document provides an overview and details of standard fast dormancy, enhanced fast dormancy, identifying fast dormancy UEs, state transitions, related parameters and counters. It emphasizes working with Huawei engineers for proper configuration of this feature.
This document provides a user guide for the Cambium CMM4 device. It includes sections on product description and specifications for the CMM4 and its components like the controller board, power supply, and Ethernet switch. It also covers planning considerations for the CMM4 like typical cabling configurations, power planning, and syncing multiple CMMs. Additional sections provide details on configuring the CMM4 interface and parameters through the web interface.
1. Obtain a new license key from Cambium using the unique Access Key.
2. Connect to the PTP 600 unit and navigate to the License Key page.
3. Enter the new license key to enable the optical interface capability.
4. Connect the fiber optic cable to the SFP module and configure the SFP settings.
5. The unit can now be connected to the fiber network and configured for operation.
1. Obtain a new license key from Cambium using the unique Access Key.
2. Connect to the PTP 600 unit and navigate to the License Key page.
3. Enter the new license key to enable the optical interface capability.
4. Connect the fiber optic cable to the SFP module and configure the SFP settings.
5. The unit can now be connected to the fiber network and configured for operation.
This document provides guidelines for safely installing and operating Cambium PTP 600 series radio equipment in hazardous locations. It specifies the allowed operating envelope, part numbers and product labels, installation and operating requirements, and instructions for installing integrated and connectorized units. Special attention must be paid to limiting radio frequency emissions to prevent explosions.
The document provides safety guidelines for installing and operating Cambium PTP 600 Series radio products in hazardous locations. Key points include:
- The maximum Effective Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) is limited based on the gas group in the location.
- Only products with ATEX/Hazloc labels can be used in hazardous areas.
- Integrated antennas have pre-set power limits; external antennas require ensuring limits are not exceeded.
- Indoor units like the PIDU must be located in safe areas away from hazards.
- Proper certification labels must be present and limitations in installation manuals followed.
The document provides guidance on safely installing and operating Cambium PTP 600 Series radio products in hazardous locations. Key points include:
- The products are certified for use in ATEX Zone 2 and NEC Class 1 Division 2 areas with specific EIRP limits depending on the gas group.
- Only models with the correct certification labels can be used. Integrated units have preset power limits.
- External antennas require ensuring limits are not exceeded. The indoor PIDU and accessories are not certified for hazardous areas.
- Installation must meet ATEX/NEC standards and not exceed radio regulatory or hazardous location EIRP limits for the frequency band and region.
This document provides a user guide for the Cambium Universal Global Positioning System (uGPS) module. It describes the uGPS product, power and connectivity configurations, installation procedures, and how to retrieve GPS status and location data. The guide covers uGPS operation and is intended for network planners, operators, administrators, and installers. It disclaims liability for improper use or configuration of the uGPS module.
The document provides a user guide for the Cambium Universal GPS (uGPS) module. It describes the uGPS product, including an overview of its functionality and specifications. It also provides instructions on installing and operating the uGPS, including power configurations, installation considerations, and retrieving GPS status and location data. The guide aims to help network planners, operators, administrators and installers with deploying and using the uGPS module.
This document provides an overview of Cambium Networks Release 11.2, which includes resolved issues, known open issues, notes and references, regulatory notices, and performance benchmarking processes. Release 11.2 provides options for 5, 10, and 20 MHz channel sizes for the PMP 430 and 10 and 20 MHz channel sizes for the PTP 230. It also details DFS operation and center channel frequencies for different products and region codes. The document outlines national regulatory notices and RF exposure guidelines.
www.cambiumnetworks.com/support/downloads
3.1 OBTAINING CNUT UPGRADE PACKAGES
The latest CNUT upgrade packages for Release 11.2 are available from the Cambium Assistant
website at www.cambiumnetworks.com/support/downloads.
3.2 NETWORK MANAGEMENT
Release 11.2 includes a new Cambium Graphical User Interface. To ensure that the GUI is displayed
properly, refreshing the browser window may be required.
3.3 PMP 430 – OPTIONS FOR 5, 10, AND 20 MHZ CHANNEL SIZE
Release 11.2 introduces options for 5, 10, and 20 MHz channel
This document provides administrator guidance for the Polycom RealPresence Collaboration Server (RMX) 1500/2000/4000 system. It describes the conferencing capabilities and features of the RMX including continuous presence (CP) and scalable video coding (SVC) conferencing, content sharing, encryption, cascading conferences and more. It provides information on configuring profiles, resolutions, protocols and other system settings to optimize different conferencing scenarios. The document also includes guidelines, procedures and reference materials to help administrators manage and monitor RMX conferences.
This document provides important safety information and guidelines for installing and operating Cambium PTP 810 equipment. It describes key features of the PTP 810 product, including supported bands and frequencies, typical applications, system components, link types, and the modular modem unit. The document outlines licensing requirements and contains contents for product description, installation, configuration, operation, maintenance, and other sections.
The document describes the CPE WAN Management Protocol, which defines a mechanism for secure auto-configuration and management of customer premises equipment (CPE) by an auto-configuration server (ACS). The protocol supports auto-configuration, software/firmware management, status monitoring, diagnostics, and optional web identity management. It uses HTTP, SOAP, and SSL/TLS for secure communication between CPE and ACS. The protocol allows for both CPE-initiated and ACS-initiated connections to perform management functions in a common framework.
This document provides release notes for the Cambium PMP 450 system release 12.0. It includes sections on safety and regulatory information, general information about the release, procedures for reporting problems and obtaining warranty support, security advice, and warnings. The document outlines important guidelines regarding safe installation and operation of the PMP 450 equipment in compliance with regulations.
This document provides help and instructions for using the Cambium Network Updater tool, including recommended system requirements, key concepts, installation instructions, and configuration settings. It describes functions like auto discovery of network elements, updating groups of elements simultaneously, estimating update times, and accessing subscriber modules. The document also covers copyrights, licenses, related documentation, and providing feedback on the tool or help file.
This document provides an engineer's guide for planning, installing, and maintaining the hardware of an AMAG Technology Symmetry M2150 access control system. It covers topics such as selecting system components, planning the layout and locations of controllers and cabinets, choosing reader technologies, and determining cable and wiring requirements. Guidelines are provided for issues like elevator control, door hardware, power supplies, and ensuring compliance with safety and regulatory standards. The document is intended to help integrators and engineers design an M2150 system that meets their site's security and operational needs.
This document provides a summary of a user guide for the FibeAir IP-20C/S/E product line from Ceragon Networks. It includes sections on introduction and overview, web EMS configuration, configuration guide, unit management, radio configuration, Ethernet services and interfaces, quality of service, Ethernet protocols, synchronization, access management and security, and alarm management and troubleshooting. The document contains notices regarding copyright, trademarks, conditions of use, and open source software used in the product. It also includes a table of contents outlining the various sections and configuration topics covered in the user guide.
This document provides licenses and attributions for third party software included in Cambium PTP 250 system releases. It contains the full text of various open source licenses such as GPLv2, LGPLv2.1, and BSD licenses. It also lists the copyright holders and original authors for each third party software component. The purpose is to ensure Cambium's compliance with license terms of open source code used in its products.
This document provides licenses and attributions for third party software included in Cambium PTP 250 system releases. It contains the full text of various open source licenses such as GPLv2, LGPLv2.1, and BSD licenses. It also lists the copyright holders and original authors for each third party software component. The purpose is to ensure Cambium's compliance with license terms of open source code used in its products.
This document provides a user guide for the Cambium PTP 800 Series product line. It includes descriptions of the key system components like the compact modem unit (CMU), outdoor unit (ODU), and indoor RF unit (IRFU). It also covers topics like link planning, grounding and lightning protection, network planning, security planning, and ordering information. The document aims to provide all the necessary reference information to successfully deploy and operate Cambium PTP 800 wireless links.
Similar to Pmp 400 430-and_ptp_200-230_configuration_and_user_guide (20)
Cambium Networks is an industry leader in point-to-multipoint and point-to-point wireless broadband solutions. They have shipped over 4 million nodes totaling over $1 billion to networks in more than 150 countries. Their ePMP product line provides affordable and scalable wireless access networks through features like GPS synchronization, high scalability and consistent performance, interference mitigation technology, and effective quality of service capabilities.
The VX 9000 virtualized software-based wireless LAN controller combines the power of virtualization with Motorola Solutions' WiNG Controller. It provides centralized management of wireless networks through a single interface with high scalability, flexibility and advanced wireless services. Key features include integrated network security, the advanced WiNG 5 operating system, plug-and-play deployment, simplified licensing and infinite scalability through virtualization. It supports all major hypervisors and public/private clouds for maximum deployment flexibility at low cost.
The NX 7500 integrated services platform provides comprehensive management of up to 2,048 network elements through a single interface. It allows all network infrastructure to intelligently route traffic for maximum speed and throughput without congestion. The NX 7500 offers advanced wireless LAN performance for mid-sized and campus environments with features such as plug-and-play installation, hierarchical management, smart routing, BYOD support, and integrated security services. It provides flexibility and investment protection through modular upgrades.
The document discusses the challenges retailers face in supporting increased wireless applications and next-generation Wi-Fi in stores. It introduces the Motorola AP 8200 Series as a solution that provides high-performance wireless connectivity for customers and staff. The AP 8200 Series allows easy access, security, support for 802.11ac Wi-Fi, bandwidth for applications, and performance for many users. It provides flexibility, a cost-effective upgrade to 802.11ac, and features for security, environmental monitoring, location services, and more.
The document describes the innovative features of the Motorola AP 8222 wireless access point. It has a sleek design suitable for retail, office, and other customer-facing spaces. It provides dual-band 802.11ac and 802.11n wireless connectivity at speeds up to 1.3Gbps. Key features include advanced beamforming, gap-free security, and support for bandwidth-heavy applications like video calling. The access point is centrally managed through Motorola's WiNG 5 networking operating system.
The AP 8163 is a ruggedized outdoor mesh access point designed to withstand extreme weather conditions. It has three radios - two for client access across 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands, and a third radio that can be used for wireless intrusion prevention scanning or dynamic frequency selection to avoid radar interference. The advanced WiNG 5 operating system allows the access points to self-optimize the network for best performance. Key features include powerful antennas for extended range, mesh networking for redundancy, and security features like firewalls and wireless intrusion prevention.
The document describes the features and capabilities of the Motorola AP 8122 3x3 MIMO 802.11n access point. It delivers high throughput to support enterprise applications including voice and HD video using 802.11n technology with standard 802.3af PoE. It has advanced features like load balancing, pre-emptive roaming, and dual band radios to increase network reliability, resilience, and security. The access point also supports advanced wireless capabilities such as voice over wireless, location services, and guest access controls.
The document describes the innovative features of the AP 7532 wireless access point. It provides the highest wireless speeds available with 3x3 MIMO and 256 QAM modulation on both 2.4GHz and 5GHz radios. It has a dual radio 802.11ac/802.11n design that provides a upgrade path to 1.3Gbps 802.11ac speeds while maintaining support for existing devices. It offers various advanced features like load balancing, security, sensor support and quality of service for voice. The access point is designed to deliver maximum performance at a low cost.
The AP 7502 is a dual-band 802.11ac wireless access point designed for installation in small spaces like hotel rooms. It has a compact wall-mount design, supports the latest WiFi standards, and includes features to ensure reliable connectivity even in challenging environments. Setup and management are simplified through zero-touch provisioning and both standalone and controller-based operation modes.
The document describes the innovative features of the AP 7522 wireless access point. It provides dual-band 802.11ac and 802.11n radios for high performance WiFi. It offers internal or external antenna options and can function as both an access point and wireless sensor. The access point provides security, load balancing, and other features to support mission critical applications on the wireless network.
What is an RPA CoE? Session 1 – CoE VisionDianaGray10
In the first session, we will review the organization's vision and how this has an impact on the COE Structure.
Topics covered:
• The role of a steering committee
• How do the organization’s priorities determine CoE Structure?
Speaker:
Chris Bolin, Senior Intelligent Automation Architect Anika Systems
HCL Notes and Domino License Cost Reduction in the World of DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-and-domino-license-cost-reduction-in-the-world-of-dlau/
The introduction of DLAU and the CCB & CCX licensing model caused quite a stir in the HCL community. As a Notes and Domino customer, you may have faced challenges with unexpected user counts and license costs. You probably have questions on how this new licensing approach works and how to benefit from it. Most importantly, you likely have budget constraints and want to save money where possible. Don’t worry, we can help with all of this!
We’ll show you how to fix common misconfigurations that cause higher-than-expected user counts, and how to identify accounts which you can deactivate to save money. There are also frequent patterns that can cause unnecessary cost, like using a person document instead of a mail-in for shared mailboxes. We’ll provide examples and solutions for those as well. And naturally we’ll explain the new licensing model.
Join HCL Ambassador Marc Thomas in this webinar with a special guest appearance from Franz Walder. It will give you the tools and know-how to stay on top of what is going on with Domino licensing. You will be able lower your cost through an optimized configuration and keep it low going forward.
These topics will be covered
- Reducing license cost by finding and fixing misconfigurations and superfluous accounts
- How do CCB and CCX licenses really work?
- Understanding the DLAU tool and how to best utilize it
- Tips for common problem areas, like team mailboxes, functional/test users, etc
- Practical examples and best practices to implement right away
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/temporal-event-neural-networks-a-more-efficient-alternative-to-the-transformer-a-presentation-from-brainchip/
Chris Jones, Director of Product Management at BrainChip , presents the “Temporal Event Neural Networks: A More Efficient Alternative to the Transformer” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
The expansion of AI services necessitates enhanced computational capabilities on edge devices. Temporal Event Neural Networks (TENNs), developed by BrainChip, represent a novel and highly efficient state-space network. TENNs demonstrate exceptional proficiency in handling multi-dimensional streaming data, facilitating advancements in object detection, action recognition, speech enhancement and language model/sequence generation. Through the utilization of polynomial-based continuous convolutions, TENNs streamline models, expedite training processes and significantly diminish memory requirements, achieving notable reductions of up to 50x in parameters and 5,000x in energy consumption compared to prevailing methodologies like transformers.
Integration with BrainChip’s Akida neuromorphic hardware IP further enhances TENNs’ capabilities, enabling the realization of highly capable, portable and passively cooled edge devices. This presentation delves into the technical innovations underlying TENNs, presents real-world benchmarks, and elucidates how this cutting-edge approach is positioned to revolutionize edge AI across diverse applications.
[OReilly Superstream] Occupy the Space: A grassroots guide to engineering (an...Jason Yip
The typical problem in product engineering is not bad strategy, so much as “no strategy”. This leads to confusion, lack of motivation, and incoherent action. The next time you look for a strategy and find an empty space, instead of waiting for it to be filled, I will show you how to fill it in yourself. If you’re wrong, it forces a correction. If you’re right, it helps create focus. I’ll share how I’ve approached this in the past, both what works and lessons for what didn’t work so well.
Discover top-tier mobile app development services, offering innovative solutions for iOS and Android. Enhance your business with custom, user-friendly mobile applications.
Connector Corner: Seamlessly power UiPath Apps, GenAI with prebuilt connectorsDianaGray10
Join us to learn how UiPath Apps can directly and easily interact with prebuilt connectors via Integration Service--including Salesforce, ServiceNow, Open GenAI, and more.
The best part is you can achieve this without building a custom workflow! Say goodbye to the hassle of using separate automations to call APIs. By seamlessly integrating within App Studio, you can now easily streamline your workflow, while gaining direct access to our Connector Catalog of popular applications.
We’ll discuss and demo the benefits of UiPath Apps and connectors including:
Creating a compelling user experience for any software, without the limitations of APIs.
Accelerating the app creation process, saving time and effort
Enjoying high-performance CRUD (create, read, update, delete) operations, for
seamless data management.
Speakers:
Russell Alfeche, Technology Leader, RPA at qBotic and UiPath MVP
Charlie Greenberg, host
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
AppSec PNW: Android and iOS Application Security with MobSFAjin Abraham
Mobile Security Framework - MobSF is a free and open source automated mobile application security testing environment designed to help security engineers, researchers, developers, and penetration testers to identify security vulnerabilities, malicious behaviours and privacy concerns in mobile applications using static and dynamic analysis. It supports all the popular mobile application binaries and source code formats built for Android and iOS devices. In addition to automated security assessment, it also offers an interactive testing environment to build and execute scenario based test/fuzz cases against the application.
This talk covers:
Using MobSF for static analysis of mobile applications.
Interactive dynamic security assessment of Android and iOS applications.
Solving Mobile app CTF challenges.
Reverse engineering and runtime analysis of Mobile malware.
How to shift left and integrate MobSF/mobsfscan SAST and DAST in your build pipeline.
Driving Business Innovation: Latest Generative AI Advancements & Success StorySafe Software
Are you ready to revolutionize how you handle data? Join us for a webinar where we’ll bring you up to speed with the latest advancements in Generative AI technology and discover how leveraging FME with tools from giants like Google Gemini, Amazon, and Microsoft OpenAI can supercharge your workflow efficiency.
During the hour, we’ll take you through:
Guest Speaker Segment with Hannah Barrington: Dive into the world of dynamic real estate marketing with Hannah, the Marketing Manager at Workspace Group. Hear firsthand how their team generates engaging descriptions for thousands of office units by integrating diverse data sources—from PDF floorplans to web pages—using FME transformers, like OpenAIVisionConnector and AnthropicVisionConnector. This use case will show you how GenAI can streamline content creation for marketing across the board.
Ollama Use Case: Learn how Scenario Specialist Dmitri Bagh has utilized Ollama within FME to input data, create custom models, and enhance security protocols. This segment will include demos to illustrate the full capabilities of FME in AI-driven processes.
Custom AI Models: Discover how to leverage FME to build personalized AI models using your data. Whether it’s populating a model with local data for added security or integrating public AI tools, find out how FME facilitates a versatile and secure approach to AI.
We’ll wrap up with a live Q&A session where you can engage with our experts on your specific use cases, and learn more about optimizing your data workflows with AI.
This webinar is ideal for professionals seeking to harness the power of AI within their data management systems while ensuring high levels of customization and security. Whether you're a novice or an expert, gain actionable insights and strategies to elevate your data processes. Join us to see how FME and AI can revolutionize how you work with data!
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/how-axelera-ai-uses-digital-compute-in-memory-to-deliver-fast-and-energy-efficient-computer-vision-a-presentation-from-axelera-ai/
Bram Verhoef, Head of Machine Learning at Axelera AI, presents the “How Axelera AI Uses Digital Compute-in-memory to Deliver Fast and Energy-efficient Computer Vision” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
As artificial intelligence inference transitions from cloud environments to edge locations, computer vision applications achieve heightened responsiveness, reliability and privacy. This migration, however, introduces the challenge of operating within the stringent confines of resource constraints typical at the edge, including small form factors, low energy budgets and diminished memory and computational capacities. Axelera AI addresses these challenges through an innovative approach of performing digital computations within memory itself. This technique facilitates the realization of high-performance, energy-efficient and cost-effective computer vision capabilities at the thin and thick edge, extending the frontier of what is achievable with current technologies.
In this presentation, Verhoef unveils his company’s pioneering chip technology and demonstrates its capacity to deliver exceptional frames-per-second performance across a range of standard computer vision networks typical of applications in security, surveillance and the industrial sector. This shows that advanced computer vision can be accessible and efficient, even at the very edge of our technological ecosystem.
Ivanti’s Patch Tuesday breakdown goes beyond patching your applications and brings you the intelligence and guidance needed to prioritize where to focus your attention first. Catch early analysis on our Ivanti blog, then join industry expert Chris Goettl for the Patch Tuesday Webinar Event. There we’ll do a deep dive into each of the bulletins and give guidance on the risks associated with the newly-identified vulnerabilities.
zkStudyClub - LatticeFold: A Lattice-based Folding Scheme and its Application...Alex Pruden
Folding is a recent technique for building efficient recursive SNARKs. Several elegant folding protocols have been proposed, such as Nova, Supernova, Hypernova, Protostar, and others. However, all of them rely on an additively homomorphic commitment scheme based on discrete log, and are therefore not post-quantum secure. In this work we present LatticeFold, the first lattice-based folding protocol based on the Module SIS problem. This folding protocol naturally leads to an efficient recursive lattice-based SNARK and an efficient PCD scheme. LatticeFold supports folding low-degree relations, such as R1CS, as well as high-degree relations, such as CCS. The key challenge is to construct a secure folding protocol that works with the Ajtai commitment scheme. The difficulty, is ensuring that extracted witnesses are low norm through many rounds of folding. We present a novel technique using the sumcheck protocol to ensure that extracted witnesses are always low norm no matter how many rounds of folding are used. Our evaluation of the final proof system suggests that it is as performant as Hypernova, while providing post-quantum security.
Paper Link: https://eprint.iacr.org/2024/257
Introduction of Cybersecurity with OSS at Code Europe 2024Hiroshi SHIBATA
I develop the Ruby programming language, RubyGems, and Bundler, which are package managers for Ruby. Today, I will introduce how to enhance the security of your application using open-source software (OSS) examples from Ruby and RubyGems.
The first topic is CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures). I have published CVEs many times. But what exactly is a CVE? I'll provide a basic understanding of CVEs and explain how to detect and handle vulnerabilities in OSS.
Next, let's discuss package managers. Package managers play a critical role in the OSS ecosystem. I'll explain how to manage library dependencies in your application.
I'll share insights into how the Ruby and RubyGems core team works to keep our ecosystem safe. By the end of this talk, you'll have a better understanding of how to safeguard your code.
The Microsoft 365 Migration Tutorial For Beginner.pptxoperationspcvita
This presentation will help you understand the power of Microsoft 365. However, we have mentioned every productivity app included in Office 365. Additionally, we have suggested the migration situation related to Office 365 and how we can help you.
You can also read: https://www.systoolsgroup.com/updates/office-365-tenant-to-tenant-migration-step-by-step-complete-guide/
3. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Table of Contents
Table of Contents ..................................................................................................................................... 3
List of Tables ............................................................................................................................................ 5
List of Figures........................................................................................................................................... 6
List of Procedures .................................................................................................................................... 7
Chapter 1 : Introduction .................................................................................. 8
General information .................................................................................................................................10
Version information ..........................................................................................................................10
Contacting Cambium Networks .......................................................................................................10
Purpose ...........................................................................................................................................10
Cross references .............................................................................................................................10
Feedback .........................................................................................................................................11
Problems and Warranty...........................................................................................................................11
Reporting problems .........................................................................................................................11
Repair and service ...........................................................................................................................11
Warranty ..........................................................................................................................................12
Security Advice .......................................................................................................................................12
Warnings, cautions, and notes ................................................................................................................12
Warnings .........................................................................................................................................13
Cautions ..........................................................................................................................................13
Notes ...............................................................................................................................................13
Abbreviations ..........................................................................................................................................13
Security Advice .......................................................................................................................................15
Chapter 2 : Product Description ................................................................... 16
Technology and Benefits .........................................................................................................................28
nLOS Benefits and Limitations ........................................................................................................28
Applications .............................................................................................................................................29
Configuration Options – RF, IP, DFS ......................................................................................................29
Power and Grounding .............................................................................................................................30
Administration Systems ...........................................................................................................................31
Specifications ..........................................................................................................................................32
Radio specifications (common to all formats) ..................................................................................33
Specifications for PMP 430 (5.4 & 5.8-GHz) SM and PTP 230 (5.4 & 5.8-GHz) BH radio with
integrated antenna ...........................................................................................................................33
Specifications for PMP 400 (4.9 & 5.4-GHz) AP/SM and PTP 200 (4.9 & 5.4-GHz) BH radio with
integrated antenna ...........................................................................................................................34
Specification for PMP 400/430 AP and PTP 200 BH connectorized radio .......................................35
Specifications for PMP 400/430 kitted, connectorized radio (antenna included) .............................35
Performance............................................................................................................................................37
Chapter 3 : Planning ...................................................................................... 39
Tower Channel Planning .........................................................................................................................39
Downtilt ...................................................................................................................................................41
Weather Radar ........................................................................................................................................41
Range and throughput planning ..............................................................................................................41
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 3 of 79
4. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Spectrum Analyzer ..................................................................................................................................42
Collocation of 5.8 GHz OFDM with Standard 5.7 GHz Canopy FSK .......................................................43
Channel Spacing .....................................................................................................................................43
Frame Calculations and Configuration Settings ......................................................................................43
Collocation of 5.4 GHz OFDM with Standard 5.4 GHz Canopy FSK .......................................................44
Channel Spacing .............................................................................................................................44
Frame Calculations and Configuration Settings ...............................................................................44
Chapter 4 : Configuring ................................................................................. 47
Link Operation – 1X/2X/3X ......................................................................................................................47
Transmitter Output Power (and no Jitter) ................................................................................................48
Downlink Data %, Range, and Control Slots ...........................................................................................50
DFS and Regulatory Parameters for 5.8 & 5.4 GHz Radios....................................................................51
Background and Operation ..............................................................................................................52
Setting DFS and Regulatory Parameters.........................................................................................54
Installation Color Code ............................................................................................................................56
External Gain Field ..................................................................................................................................56
Network Control Parameters ...................................................................................................................57
Forward Error Correction.........................................................................................................................57
Cyclic Prefix (Configurable only on PTP 200/230 BH & PMP 430 AP/SM) .............................................58
Chapter 5 : Installation .................................................................................. 59
Installing an AP with Connectorized Antenna..........................................................................................59
Installing an SM or BH with an Integrated Antenna .................................................................................66
Chapter 6 : Regulatory and Legal Notices ................................................... 68
Important Note on Modifications ..............................................................................................................68
National and Regional Regulatory Notices ..............................................................................................68
U.S. Federal Communication Commission (FCC) Notification .........................................................68
Industry Canada (IC) Notification .....................................................................................................71
Regulatory Requirements for CEPT Member States (www.cept.org) ..............................................72
European Union Notification for 5.8 GHz Product............................................................................72
Equipment Disposal .........................................................................................................................73
EU Declaration of Conformity for RoHS Compliance .......................................................................73
UK Notification .................................................................................................................................73
Luxembourg Notification ..................................................................................................................73
Czech Republic Notification .............................................................................................................73
Greece Notification ..........................................................................................................................73
Brazil Notification .............................................................................................................................74
Labeling and Disclosure Table for China .........................................................................................74
Exposure Separation Distances ..............................................................................................................75
Details of Exposure Separation Distances Calculations and Power Compliance Margins ...............75
Legal Notices ..........................................................................................................................................77
Software License Terms and Conditions .........................................................................................77
Hardware Warranty in US ................................................................................................................79
Limit of Liability ........................................................................................................................................79
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 4 of 79
5. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
List of Tables
Table 1: Cambium PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series ...........................................................................17
Table 2: 5.8GHz OFDM - PMP 430 and PTP 230 Series Model Number Descriptions .................................17
Table 3: 5.4GHz OFDM - PMP 430 Series Model Number Descriptions .......................................................19
Table 4: 5.4GHz OFDM - PMP 400 and PTP 200/230 Model Number Descriptions ......................................20
Table 5: 4.9GHz OFDM - PMP 400 and PTP 200 Model Number Descriptions.............................................21
Table 6: CMM4 56VDC and 30 VDC Operation .............................................................................................22
Table 7: Ancillary Equipment and Model Numbers ........................................................................................25
Table 8: Performance Details.........................................................................................................................37
Table 9: 5.8 GHz Channel Center Frequencies, by Region ...........................................................................39
Table 10: 5.4 GHz Channel Center Frequencies, by Region .........................................................................40
Table 11: 4.9 GHz Channel Center Frequencies ...........................................................................................41
Table 12: PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Tx output power ..........................................................................48
Table 13: PMP 400/430 AP Control Slot Settings ..........................................................................................51
Table 14: 5.4 / 5.8 GHz OFDM DFS Operation based on Region Code ........................................................52
Table 15: US FCC IDs and Industry Canada Certification Numbers and Covered Configurations ................69
Table 16: Disclosure Table ............................................................................................................................75
Table 17: Exposure Separation Distances .....................................................................................................75
Table 18: Calculated Exposure Distances and Power Compliance Margins ..................................................76
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 5 of 79
6. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
List of Figures
Figure 1: PMP 430 CAP 54430 & 58430 ........................................................................................................ 8
Figure 2: PMP 400 CAP 54400 - 5.4 GHz....................................................................................................... 8
Figure 3: PMP 400 CAP 49400 - 4.9 GHz....................................................................................................... 8
Figure 4: PMP 430 CSM 54430 & 58430 ........................................................................................................ 8
Figure 5: PMP 400 CSM 54400 - 5.4GHz ....................................................................................................... 8
Figure 6: PMP 400 CSM 49400 - 4.9 GHz ...................................................................................................... 8
Figure 7: PTP 200 Integrated .......................................................................................................................... 9
Figure 8: PTP 200 Connectorized ................................................................................................................... 9
Figure 9: PTP 230 Integrated .......................................................................................................................... 9
Figure 10: CMM4 56 VDC Power Supply .......................................................................................................22
Figure 11: CMMmicro and CMM4 30 VDC Power Supply..............................................................................22
Figure 12: CMM4 - 56 VDC and 30 VDC terminal blocks ..............................................................................23
Figure 13: 600SS Surge Suppression AP and SM diagram ...........................................................................24
Figure 14: LOS, nLOS, and NLOS .................................................................................................................29
Figure 15: AP Grounding Lug ........................................................................................................................31
Figure 16: 600SS pole mount kit ....................................................................................................................31
Figure 17: PMP 430 SM .................................................................................................................................34
Figure 18: PMP 430 SM with Optional LENS .................................................................................................34
Figure 19: PMP 400 and PTP 200 radio with integrated antenna ..................................................................35
Figure 20: PMP 400/430 and PTP 200 BH connectorized radio ....................................................................35
Figure 21: CAP 49400 ...................................................................................................................................36
Figure 22: CAP 58430 and 54430 ..................................................................................................................36
Figure 23: PMP 430 spectrum analysis compared to FSK .............................................................................42
Figure 24: Dynamic Rate Adapt on AP "Configuration => General" page ......................................................47
Figure 25: SM Power Level on AP “Home => Session Status” page. ............................................................49
Figure 26: Max Range & Downlink Data on AP "Configuration => Radio" page. ...........................................50
Figure 27: DFS Status on AP "Home => DFS Status" page. .........................................................................52
Figure 28: Region Code on AP “Configuration => General” page ..................................................................55
Figure 29: Ground lug highlighted on AP .......................................................................................................65
Figure 30: Dielectric Grease – Apply to RJ45 connector ...............................................................................66
Figure 31: Dielectric Grease - Insert Ethernet Cable .....................................................................................67
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 6 of 79
7. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
List of Procedures
Procedure 1-1 Reporting Problems................................................................................................................11
Procedure 2: Finding collocation values using Frame Calculators .................................................................45
Procedure 3: Assembling a 5.8 or 5.4 GHz AP, and attaching to tower .........................................................60
Procedure 4: Assembling a 4.9 GHz AP, and attaching to tower ...................................................................62
Procedure 5: Cabling and Grounding/Earthing the AP ...................................................................................65
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 7 of 79
8. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Chapter 1: Introduction
This guide provides product configuration information specific to the PMP 400/430 Series networks and PTP
200/230 Series bridges in 5.8-GHz, 5.4-GHz and 4.9-GHz bands. Note: PMP 400 5.4-GHz Series is
replaced with PMP 430 5.4-GHz Series.
PMP 430 Series
PMP 400 Series PMP 400 Series –
– 5.4 & 5.8 GHz
– 5.4 GHz 4.9 GHz
Figure 1: PMP
Figure 2: PMP 400 CAP Figure 3: PMP 400 CAP
430 CAP 54430 &
54400 - 5.4 GHz 49400 - 4.9 GHz
58430
Figure 4: PMP
Figure 5: PMP 400 CSM Figure 6: PMP 400 CSM
430 CSM 54430
54400 - 5.4GHz 49400 - 4.9 GHz
& 58430
Integrated and Connectorized Integrated and Connectorized
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 8 of 79
9. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
PTP 200 Series Backhauls –5.4 and 4.9 GHz
Figure 7: PTP 200 Figure 8: PTP 200
Integrated Connectorized
PTP 54200 and 49200 PTP 54200 and 49200
PTP 230 Series Backhauls –5.4 and 5.8 GHz
Figure 9: PTP 230
Integrated
PTP 54230 and 58230
This guide should be used along with the PMP Solutions User Guide, which covers general information,
including all network features, RF control features, and GUI (Graphical User Interface) features common
across PMP 100, 400, and 500 Series networks and PTP 100 and 200 Series bridges. The PMP Solutions
User Guide is available from the “PMP Software and Documentation” section of the Cambium Document
Library, http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/support/pmp/software.
This guide assumes that the reader has general RF (Radio Frequency) and Internet Protocol (IP) knowledge
and background.
This issue is consistent with features provided by Canopy Release 11.2. Separate Release Notes for each
release are available and include open issues and other important information specific to each release.
R11.2 software and software release notes can be downloaded from the Cambium support web site:
http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/support/pmp/software.
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 9 of 79
10. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
General information
Version information
The following shows the issue status of this document since it was first released.
Version Date of issue Description
A JAN 2012 Initial release
Contacting Cambium Networks
Support website: http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/support
Main website: http://www.cambiumnetworks.com
Sales inquiries: solutions@cambiumnetworks.com
Support inquiries: support@cambiumnetworks.com
Telephone Numbers:
North America: +1 866-961-9288
Latin/Central America: +420 533 336 946
Europe, Middle East or Africa: +44 203 0277499
Asia/Pacific: +420 533 336 946
Full list:
http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/support/technical.php
Address:
Cambium Networks
1299 E Algonquin Road
Schaumburg, IL 60196
Purpose
Cambium Networks documents are intended to instruct and assist personnel in the operation,
installation and maintenance of the Cambium equipment and ancillary devices. It is
recommended that all personnel engaged in such activities be properly trained.
Cambium disclaims all liability whatsoever, implied or express, for any risk of damage, loss or
reduction in system performance arising directly or indirectly out of the failure of the customer,
or anyone acting on the customer's behalf, to abide by the instructions, system parameters, or
recommendations made in this document.
Cross references
References to external publications are shown in italics. Other cross references, emphasized
in blue text in electronic versions, are active links to the references.
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 10 of 79
11. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
This document is divided into numbered chapters that are divided into sections. Sections are
not numbered, but are individually named at the top of each page, and are listed in the table of
contents.
Feedback
We appreciate feedback from the users of our documents. This includes feedback on the
structure, content, accuracy, or completeness of our documents. Send feedback to email
support (see „Contacting Cambium Networks‟).
Problems and Warranty
Reporting problems
If any problems are encountered when installing or operating this equipment, follow this procedure
to investigate and report:
Procedure 1-1 Reporting Problems
1 Search this document and the software release notes of supported releases
2 Visit the support website (http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/support)
3 Ask for assistance from the Cambium product supplier
4 Gather information from affected units such as:
The IP addresses, MAC addresses, and product Serial Numbers
The software releases
The configuration of software features
Any available diagnostic downloads, including CNUT Customer Support Tool output
5 Escalate the problem by emailing or telephoning support
See „Contacting Cambium Networks‟ for URLs, email addresses and telephone numbers.
Repair and service
If unit failure is suspected, obtain details of the Return Material Authorization (RMA) process from
the support website.
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 11 of 79
12. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Warranty
Cambium‟s standard hardware warranty is for one (1) year from date of shipment from Cambium or
a Cambium distributor. Cambium warrants that hardware will conform to the relevant published
specifications and will be free from material defects in material and workmanship under normal use
and service. Cambium shall within this time, at its own option, either repair or replace the defective
product within thirty (30) days of receipt of the defective product. Repaired or replaced product will
be subject to the original warranty period but not less than thirty (30) days.
To register products or activate warranties, visit the support website.
For warranty assistance, contact the reseller or distributor.
Using non-Cambium parts for repair could damage the equipment or void warranty. Contact
Cambium for service and repair instructions.
Portions of Cambium equipment may be damaged from exposure to electrostatic discharge. Use
precautions to prevent damage.
Security Advice
Cambium Networks systems and equipment provide security parameters that can be configured by
the operator based on their particular operating environment. Cambium recommends setting and
using these parameters following industry recognized security practices. Security aspects to be
considered are protecting the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of information and assets.
Assets include the ability to communicate, information about the nature of the communications, and
information about the parties involved.
In certain instances Cambium makes specific recommendations regarding security practices,
however the implementation of these recommendations and final responsibility for the security of
the system lies with the operator of the system. Upon equipment release from manufacturing,
some software parameters may be set to an insecure setting to ease field deployment and initial
device management.
Warnings, cautions, and notes
The following describes how warnings and cautions are used in this document and in all documents
of the Cambium Networks document set.
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 12 of 79
13. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Warnings
Warnings precede instructions that contain potentially hazardous situations. Warnings are used to
alert the reader to possible hazards that could cause loss of life or physical injury. A warning has
the following format:
Warning text and consequence for not following the instructions in the warning.
Cautions
Cautions precede instructions and are used when there is a possibility of damage to systems,
software, or individual items of equipment within a system. However, this damage presents no
danger to personnel. A caution has the following format:
Caution text and consequence for not following the instructions in the caution.
Notes
A note means that there is a possibility of an undesirable situation or provides additional
information to help the reader understand a topic or concept. A note has the following format:
Note text.
Abbreviations
The following abbreviations may be used in these notes:
1X 1X (QPSK) modulation
2X 2X (16 QAM) modulation
3X 3X (64 QAM) modulation
AAA Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting
AES Advanced Encryption Standard
AP Access Point Module
BH Backhaul Module, either timing master or timing slave
BHM Backhaul Module – Master
BHS Backhaul Module – Slave
CAP Access Point Module
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 13 of 79
14. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
CIR Committed Information Rate
CMM Cluster Management Module (CMM4 or CMMicro)
CNUT Canopy Network Updater Tool
CSM Subscriber Module
DES Data Encryption Standard
DFS Dynamic Frequency Selection for radar avoidance
DHCP Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
DiffServ Differentiated Services
EIRP Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power
ETSI European Telecommunications Standards Institute
EU European Union
FCC Federal Communications Commission (United States)
FSK Frequency Shift Keying
GHz Gigahertz
GPS Global Positioning System
Note: CMM uses GPS to synchronize APs & BHs
LoS Line of Sight
MIB Management Information Base for SNMP
MIR Maximum Information Rate
NAT Network Address Translation
nLoS Near Line of Sight
NLoS Non Line of Sight
OFDM Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing
PMP Point-to-Multi-Point (AP to SMs)
PPS Packet Per Second
PTP Point-to-Point (Backhauls)
QAM Quadrature Amplitude Modulation
QPSK Quadrature Phase Shift Keying
RADIUS Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service
RF Radio Frequency
SM Subscriber Module
VDC Volts Direct Current
VLAN Virtual Local Area Network
VSA Vendor-Specific Attribute
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 14 of 79
15. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Security Advice
Cambium Networks systems and equipment provide security parameters that can be configured by
the operator based on their particular operating environment. Cambium recommends setting and
using these parameters following industry recognized security practices. Security aspects to be
considered are protecting the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of information and assets.
Assets include the ability to communicate, information about the nature of the communications, and
information about the parties involved.
In certain instances Cambium makes specific recommendations regarding security practices,
however the implementation of these recommendations and final responsibility for the security of
the system lies with the operator of the system.
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 15 of 79
16. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Chapter 2: Product Description
PMP 400/430 Series networks and PTP 200/230 Series bridges add OFDM-based (Orthogonal Frequency
Division Multiplexing) products to the Canopy family.
PMP 430 5.4 and 5.8-GHz SMs as shown in Figure 4 on page 8 use the Canopy SM form factor
with an integrated antenna.
PMP 400 5.4-GHz SMs as shown in Figure 5 on page 8 are available with either an integrated
antenna or an external N-type connector on a short length of coaxial cable for connecting to a
connectorized antenna.
PMP 400 5.4-GHz AP and PMP 430 5.4 and 5.8-GHz APs as shown on page 8 are always
connectorized, and sold either as a radio with a connectorized antenna as a kit, or as a radio with
an external N-type connector on a short length of coaxial cable for connecting to an operator-
provided antenna. U.S. customers must use the kit version since the FCC requires the radio to be
regulatory certified with the connectorized antenna.
PTP 200 5.4 and 4.9-GHz BHs as shown in Figure 7 and Figure 8 on page 9 are available with
either an integrated antenna or an external N-type connector on a short length of coaxial cable for
connecting to a connectorized antenna.
PTP 230 5.4 and 5.8-GHz BHs as shown in Figure 9 on page 9 use the Canopy SM form factor
with an integrated antenna.
PMP 400/430 Series networks are available in multiple bands:
PMP 58430 APs and SM provide connectivity in the unlicensed 5.8 GHz band.
PMP 54430 APs and SMs provide connectivity in the unlicensed 5.4 GHz band.
PMP 54400 APs and SMs provide connectivity in the unlicensed 5.4 GHz band.
PMP 49400 APs and SMs provide connectivity in the licensed 4.9 GHz band allocated to public
safety services. State and local governmental entities are eligible to hold 4.9 GHz licenses.
PTP 200/230 Series networks are available in multiple bands:
PTP 54200 BHs provide connectivity in the unlicensed 5.4 GHz band.
PTP 49200 BHs provide connectivity in the licensed 4.9 GHz band allocated to public safety
services. State and local governmental entities are eligible to hold 4.9 GHz licenses.
PTP 54230 BHs provide connectivity in the unlicensed 5.4 GHz band.
PTP 58230 BHs provide connectivity in the unlicensed 5.8 GHz band.
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 16 of 79
17. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Table 1 shows the Cambium PMP 400/430 Series and PTP 200/230 Series of products by frequency band,
channel bandwidth, cyclic prefix and current software version.
Table 1: Cambium PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series
Frequency PMP Series PTP Series Channel Bandwidth Cyclic Software Version
(Point-to- (Point-To-Point) Prefix
PMP PTP PMP PTP
MultiPoint)
Series Series Series Series
PMP 430 Series PTP 230 Series 5, 10 or 10 or 1/4, 1/8 or 11.2 11.2
- 58430 -58230 20MHz 20MHz 1/16
5.8 GHz
5.4 GHz PMP 430 Series PTP 230 Series 5, 10 or 10 or 1/4, 1/8 or 11.2 11.2
- 54430 -54230 20MHz 20MHz 1/16
5.4 GHz PMP 400 Series PTP 200 Series 10MHz 10MHz 1/4 11.2 11.2
- 54400 - 54200
4.9 GHz PMP 400 Series PTP 200 Series - 10MHz 10MHz 1/4 11.2 11.2
- 49400 49200
Table 2 shows the Cambium PMP 430 Series (5.8 GHz OFDM) AP and SM models.
Table 2: 5.8GHz OFDM - PMP 430 and PTP 230 Series Model Number Descriptions
CSM 58430 Power 29.5 Specs
5.8GHz OFDM Subscriber
Model Encryption Picture VDC in
Module (SM) Description
Number Supply Type Section
5790SM4 5.8 GHz OFDM SM – 4 Mbps DES 2.6.2
5791SM4 5.8 GHz OFDM SM – 4 Mbps AES 2.6.2
5790SM10 5.8 GHz OFDM SM – 10 Mbps DES 2.6.2
5791SM10 5.8 GHz OFDM SM – 10 Mbps AES 2.6.2
5790SM20 5.8 GHz OFDM SM – 20 Mbps DES 2.6.2
5791SM20 5.8 GHz OFDM SM – 20 Mbps AES 2.6.2
Refer to Table 7
5790SM40 5.8 GHz OFDM SM – Uncapped DES for Models 2.6.2
5791SM40 5.8 GHz OFDM SM – Uncapped AES 2.6.2
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 17 of 79
18. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
CAP 58430 Specs
5.8GHz OFDM Access Point
Model Encryption Picture CMM Type in
(AP) Description
Number Section
Requires CMM4 2.6.5
5.8 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5780AP DES w/56 VDC
AP w/antenna
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.5
5.8 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5780APUS DES w/56 VDC
AP w/antenna - US Model
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.5
5.8 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5781AP AES w/56 VDC
AP w/antenna
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.5
5.8 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5781APUS AES w/56 VDC
AP w/antenna - US Model
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.4
5.8 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5780APC DES w/56 VDC
AP – No antenna
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.4
5.8 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5781APC AES w/56 VDC
AP - No antenna
supply
PTP 58230 Specs
5.8GHz OFDM Backhaul (BH)
Model Encryption Picture CMM Type in
Description
Number Section
CMMmicro or
5780BH10 5.8 GHz OFDM BH – 10 Mbps DES CMM4 w/30 VDC 2.6.6
supply
CMMmicro or
5780BH20 5.8 GHz OFDM BH – 20 Mbps DES CMM4 w/30 VDC 2.6.6
supply
CMMmicro or
5.8 GHz OFDM BH –
5780BH50 DES CMM4 w/30 VDC 2.6.6
Uncapped supply
CMMmicro or
5781BH10 5.8 GHz OFDM BH – 10 Mbps AES CMM4 w/30 VDC 2.6.6
supply
CMMmicro or
5781BH20 5.8 GHz OFDM BH – 20 Mbps AES CMM4 w/30 VDC 2.6.6
supply
CMMmicro or
5.8 GHz OFDM BH –
5781BH50 AES CMM4 w/30 VDC 2.6.6
Uncapped supply
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 18 of 79
19. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Table 3 shows the Cambium PMP 430 Series (5.4 GHz OFDM) AP and SM models.
Table 3: 5.4GHz OFDM - PMP 430 Series Model Number Descriptions
CSM 54430 Power 29.5 Specs
5.4GHz OFDM Subscriber
Model Encryption Picture VDC in
Module (SM) Description
Number Supply Type Section
5490SM4 5.4 GHz OFDM SM – 4 Mbps DES 2.6.2
5491SM4 5.4 GHz OFDM SM – 4 Mbps AES 2.6.2
5490SM10 5.4 GHz OFDM SM – 10 Mbps DES 2.6.2
5491SM10 5.4 GHz OFDM SM – 10 Mbps AES 2.6.2
5490SM20 5.4 GHz OFDM SM – 20 Mbps DES 2.6.2
5491SM20 5.4 GHz OFDM SM – 20 Mbps AES 2.6.2
Refer to Table 7
5490SM40 5.4 GHz OFDM SM – Uncapped DES for Models 2.6.2
5491SM40 5.4 GHz OFDM SM – Uncapped AES 2.6.2
CAP 54430 Specs
5.4GHz OFDM Access Point
Model Encryption Picture CMM Type in
(AP) Description
Number Section
Requires CMM4 2.6.5
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5480AP DES w/56 VDC
AP w/antenna
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.5
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5480APUS* DES w/56 VDC
AP w/antenna - US Model
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.5
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5481AP AES w/56 VDC
AP w/antenna
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.5
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5481APUS* AES w/56 VDC
AP w/antenna - US Model
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.4
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5480APC DES w/56 VDC
AP – No antenna
supply
Requires CMM4 2.6.4
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized
5481APC AES w/56 VDC
AP - No antenna
supply
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 19 of 79
20. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Table 4 shows the Cambium PMP 400 and PTP 200/230 Series (5.4 GHz OFDM) models available.
Table 4: 5.4GHz OFDM - PMP 400 and PTP 200/230 Model Number Descriptions
CSM 54400 DES
5.4 GHz OFDM Subscriber Power 29.5 VDC Specs in
Model or Picture
Module (SM) Description Supply Type Section
Number AES
5440SM 5.4 GHz OFDM SM DES 2.6.3
5441SM 5.4 GHz OFDM SM AES 2.6.3
5440SMC 5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized SM DES 2.6.4
Refer to Table 7
5441SMC 5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized SM AES for Models 2.6.4
CAP 54400 DES
5.4 GHz OFDM Access Point (AP) Specs in
Model or Picture CMM Type
Description Section
Number AES
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized AP CMMmicro or CMM4
5440AP DES w/30 VDC supply Appendix
w/antenna
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized AP CMMmicro or CMM4
5440APUS DES w/30 VDC supply Appendix
w/antenna - US Model
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized AP CMMmicro or CMM4
5441AP AES w/30 VDC supply Appendix
w/antenna
CMMmicro or CMM4
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized AP w/30 VDC supply
5441APUS AES Appendix
w/antenna - US Model
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized AP CMMmicro or CMM4
5440APC DES 2.6.4
– No Antenna w/30 VDC supply
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized AP CMMmicro or CMM4
5441APC AES w/30 VDC supply 2.6.4
– No Antenna
PTP 54200 DES
5.4 GHz OFDM Backhaul (BH) Specs in
Model or Picture CMM Type
Description Section
Number AES
CMMmicro or CMM4
5440BH 5.4 GHz OFDM BH DES w/30 VDC supply
2.6.3
CMMmicro or CMM4
5440BHUS 5.4 GHz OFDM BH – US Model DES w/30 VDC supply
2.6.3
CMMmicro or CMM4
5441BH 5.4 GHz OFDM BH AES w/30 VDC supply
2.6.3
CMMmicro or CMM4
5441BHUS 5.4 GHz OFDM BH – US Model AES w/30 VDC supply
2.6.3
CMMmicro or CMM4
5440BHC 5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized BH DES w/30 VDC supply
2.6.4
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized BH CMMmicro or CMM4
5440BHCUS DES 2.6.4
– US Model w/30 VDC supply
CMMmicro or CMM4
5441BHC 5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized BH AES w/30 VDC supply
2.6.4
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 20 of 79
21. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
5.4 GHz OFDM Connectorized BH CMMmicro or CMM4
5441BHCUS AES 2.6.4
– US Model w/30 VDC supply
PTP 54230 DES
5.4 GHz OFDM Backhaul (BH) Specs in
Model or Picture CMM Type
Description Section
Number AES
CMMmicro or CMM4
5480BH10 5.4 GHz OFDM BH – 10 Mbps DES w/30 VDC supply 2.6.6
CMMmicro or CMM4
5480BH20 5.4 GHz OFDM BH – 20 Mbps DES w/30 VDC supply 2.6.6
CMMmicro or CMM4
5480BH50 5.4 GHz OFDM BH – Uncapped DES w/30 VDC supply 2.6.6
CMMmicro or CMM4
5481BH10 5.4 GHz OFDM BH – 10 Mbps AES w/30 VDC supply
2.6.6
CMMmicro or CMM4
5481BH20 5.4 GHz OFDM BH – 20 Mbps AES w/30 VDC supply
2.6.6
CMMmicro or CMM4
5481BH50 5.4 GHz OFDM BH – Uncapped AES w/30 VDC supply
2.6.6
Table 5 shows the Cambium PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series (4.9 GHz OFDM) AP, SM and BH models.
Table 5: 4.9GHz OFDM - PMP 400 and PTP 200 Model Number Descriptions
CSM 49400 Specs
4.9 GHz OFDM Subscriber Power 56 VDC
Model Encryption Picture in
Module (SM) Description Supply Type
Number Section
4940SM 4.9 GHz OFDM SM DES 2.6.3
4941SM 4.9 GHz OFDM SM AES 2.6.3
4.9 GHz OFDM Connectorized
4940SMC DES 2.6.4
SM
4.9 GHz OFDM Connectorized Refer to Table 7
4941SMC AES for Models 2.6.4
SM
CAP 49400 Specs
4.9 GHz OFDM Access Point Power 56 VDC
Model Encryption Picture in
(AP) Module Description CMM Type
Number Section
4.9 GHz OFDM Connectorized Requires CMM4 Appendi
4940AP DES
AP w/antenna w/56 VDC supply x
4.9 GHz OFDM Connectorized Requires CMM4 Appendi
4941AP AES
AP w/antenna w/56 VDC supply x
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 21 of 79
22. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
4.9 GHz OFDM Connectorized Requires CMM4
4940APC DES 2.6.4
AP – No antenna w/56 VDC supply
4.9 GHz OFDM Connectorized Requires CMM4
4941APC AES 2.6.4
AP – No antenna w/56 VDC supply
PTP 49200 Specs
4.9 GHz OFDM Backhaul (BH) Power 56 VDC
Model Encryption Picture in
Description CMM Type
Number Section
Wall type 56VDC
4940BH 4.9 GHz OFDM BH DES supply or CMM4 2.6.3
w/56 VDC supply
Wall type 56VDC
4941BH 4.9 GHz OFDM BH AES supply or CMM4 2.6.3
w/56 VDC supply
Wall type 56VDC
4.9 GHz OFDM Connectorized
4940BHC DES supply or CMM4 2.6.4
BH – No antenna
w/56 VDC supply
Wall type 56VDC
4.9 GHz OFDM Connectorized
4941BHC AES supply or CMM4 2.6.4
BH – No antenna
w/56 VDC supply
A Cluster Management Module (CMM4) provides GPS synchronization and power to the PMP 400/430 and
PTP 200/230 series of products: Table 6 details the power requirements of the APs and BHs.
Table 6: CMM4 56VDC and 30 VDC Operation
Frequency PMP Series Access PTP 230 Series Canopy Custom Power over
Point (AP) Backhaul (BH) Ethernet (PoE)
5.8 GHz PMP 430 Series – CAP PTP 230 Series – 30 VDC - power on pins 7 and 8
5.4 GHz 58430/54430 PTP 58230/54230 and return on pins 4 and 5
5.4 GHz PMP 400 Series – CAP PTP 200 Series – 30 VDC - power on pins 7 and 8
54400 PTP 54200 and return on pins 4 and 5
4.9 GHz PMP 400 Series – CAP PTP 200 Series – 56 VDC - Power on pins 5 & 8,
49400 PTP 49200 return on pins 4 & 7
The CMM4 can be configured with either or both a 56VDC and a 30VDC external power supply as shown in
Figure 10 and Figure 11. The CMM4 must be used for 56 VDC operations which are required for the PMP
430 5.4 and 5.8-GHz AP, and PMP 400 4.9-GHz AP. The CMMmicro only supports 30 VDC operations.
Figure 10: CMM4 56 VDC Figure 11: CMMmicro
Power Supply and CMM4 30 VDC
Power Supply
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 22 of 79
23. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Shown in Figure 12 is a CMM4 with labels for the various parts. When using both a 56 VDC and 30 VDC
power supply, it is necessary to install a resistor in the 30 VDC terminal blocks. Refer to instructions
included with the CMM4. When planning CMM deployment, consider using both available input terminal
blocks for power supply redundancy.
For details on configuring the CMM4, refer to the CMM4 User Guide which is available from the Cambium
support web site. http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/support.
Figure 12: CMM4 - 56 VDC and 30 VDC terminal blocks
A Cluster Management Module (CMMmicro) provides GPS synchronization and 30 VDC power to the:
5.4-GHz PMP 400 Series - CAP 54400 uses 30 VDC
5.4-GHz PTP 200 Series - PTP 54200 uses 30 VDC
5.4-GHz and 5.8-GHz PTP 230 Series – PTP 54230/PTP 58230 use 30 VDC
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 23 of 79
24. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
A 600SSD surge suppressor provides over-voltage and over-current protection to APs, SMs, and BHs in
various configurations. The diagram in Figure 13 illustrates the use of the 600SS surge suppressor with the
PMP 400/430 AP and SM.
Figure 13: 600SS Surge Suppression AP and SM diagram
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 24 of 79
25. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Table 7 lists various ancillary equipment and model numbers.
Table 7: Ancillary Equipment and Model Numbers
Name Model or Part Number Typically use with
C C P C C P C C P
A S T A S T A S T
P M P P M P P M P
5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4
x x x 4 4 4 9 9 9
4 4 2 4 4 2 4 4 2
3 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cluster Management Module micro
(CMMmicro – 30 VDC power supply)
Controller and 8-port embedded switch
Outdoor enclosure for controller and
X X
switch (but not power supply)
30 VDC power supply included with two 1070CK (with N. American AC cord
models (with 10 ft (3m) DC cable) for power supply)
GPS antenna and mounting bracket 1070CK-02 (no AC cord)
1070CK-03 (no power supply)
CMMmicro or CMM4 30 VDC power supply
X X X
(w 10 ft (3 m) DC cable)
ACPS120WA (with N. American AC
cord for power supply)
APCS120W-02A (no AC cord)
PMP 400/430 5.8 & 5.4 GHz SM 29.5 VDC
power supply ACPSSW-09B (US, UK, Euro clips)
(also for isolated 5.4GHz AP or BH) ACPSSW-13B (N. America)
Includes 6 ft (2m) DC cord ACPSSW-10C (Argentina)
ACPWWS-11C (China) X X
No AC cord needed (plugs directly
into AC receptacle) ACPSSW-12A (Australia)
Canopy-proprietary PoE (differs ACPSSW-14A (Brazil)
from IEEE 803.3af) ACPSSW-20A (Infrastructure Grade,
US, UK, EU clips)
ACPSSW-21A (Infrastructure Grade,
C8 clip to allow AC cord)
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 25 of 79
26. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Name Model or Part Number Typically use with
C C P C C P C C P
A S T A S T A S T
P M P P M P P M P
5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4
x x x 4 4 4 9 9 9
4 4 2 4 4 2 4 4 2
3 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cluster Management Module 4 (CMM4)
Controller and 14-port EtherWAN switch
(old version had 9-port EtherWAN switch)
Outdoor enclosure for controller and
switch (but not power supply) X X X X X
GPS antenna and mounting bracket
included
No power supply or GPS cables 1090CK
included
Power supply is not included – Order
56 VDC and/or 30 VDC power supply
Cluster Management Module (CMM4)
Controller ONLY – Without EtherWAN
1091
switch
Power supply is not included – Order X X X X X
Outdoor enclosure for controller
56 VDC and/or 30 VDC power supply
(but not power supply)
GPS antenna and mounting bracket
Rackmount Cluster Management Module
(CMM4)
Controller ONLY – Without EtherWAN
switch X X X X X
Designed for 19” rack mounting
1092
GPS antenna and mounting bracket
Power supply is not included – Order
56 VDC and/or 30 VDC power supply
56 VDC power supply for CMM4
Does not include DC cable or AC line X X X
cord – Procure locally
SGPN4076
PMP 400 4.9GHz SM 56 VDC power supply
(also for standalone use with PMP 430 5.4
and 5.8 GHz AP, PMP 400 4.9 GHz AP or
PTP 200 4.9 GHz BH) ACPSSW-15A (US, UK, and EU X X X
Includes 6 ft (2m) DC cord clips)
ACPSSW-16A (C8 clip to allow AC
Requires country-specific AC cord
cord)
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 26 of 79
27. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Name Model or Part Number Typically use with
C C P C C P C C P
A S T A S T A S T
P M P P M P P M P
5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4
x x x 4 4 4 9 9 9
4 4 2 4 4 2 4 4 2
3 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
SGKN4427A (US/Canada/Mexico)
SGKN4426A (Europe)
SGKN4425A (Australia)
4.9 GHz SM 56 VDC power supply AC cords SGKN4424A (China-Mainland)
(also for standalone use with PMP 430 5.4 SGKN4423A (Japan)
X
and 5.8 GHz AP, PMP 400 4.9 GHz AP or SGKN4422A (Korea)
PTP 200 5.4 and 4.9 GHz BH) SGKN4421A (United
Kingdom/Singapore)
SGKN4420A (India/Pakistan/South Africa)
SGKN4419A (Argentina)
Surge suppressor (for AP, SM, BH) X X X X X X X X X
600SSD
Surge suppressor (for CMM)
200SS
Surge suppressor pole-mount kit
SGHN5169A X X X X X X X X X
Refer to Figure 16 on page 31
Radio mounting bracket X X
SMMB1A SMMB2A
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 27 of 79
28. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Name Model or Part Number Typically use with
C C P C C P C C P
A S T A S T A S T
P M P P M P P M P
5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4
x x x 4 4 4 9 9 9
4 4 2 4 4 2 4 4 2
3 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Universal GPS (UGPS)
Provides network synchronization for
smaller networks where CMM may not
be cost effective. The UGPS provides
synchronization for one or two modules
X X X
so that even remote areas at the edge
of the network can operate with
synchronization for improved
performance.
Technology and Benefits
The radio automatically selects QPSK (Quadrature Phase Shift Keying), 16-QAM (Quadrature Amplitude
Modulation), or 64-QAM based on RF environment to provide 1X, 2X, and 3X operation, respectively. This
provides 3 speeds and a throughput of over 45 Mbps aggregate (sum of up plus down when configured for
20MHz channel bandwidth) compared to FSK Canopy products with 2 speeds and a throughput of up to 14
Mbps.
The OFDM radios feature lower receive sensitivity, FEC (Forward Error Correction), and higher antenna
gain, all of which combine to provide longer range within regulatory-specified EIRP (Equivalent Isotropic
Radiated Power).
Details on performance are listed in Table 8 on page 37.
The PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series radios use an OFDM physical layer with 10 MHz channels and 256 sub-
carriers while the PMP 430 Series radios use an OFDM physical layer with configurable channel bandwidth
of 5, 10 or 20MHz. The PTP 230 Series radios use an OFDM physical layer with configurable channel
bandwidth of 10 or 20 MHz. A PMP 400 Series 5.4-GHz radio with 10MHz channels will interoperate with a
PMP 430 Series 5.4-GHz radio configured with 10MHz channel bandwidth and 1/4 cyclic prefix. However;
due to the different carrier and modulation schemes between these OFDM radios and FSK Canopy radios,
the two do not interoperate over the air. For example, a PMP 430/400 Series 5.4-GHz OFDM SM cannot
connect to a 5.4-GHz FSK AP.
nLOS Benefits and Limitations
In addition to providing LOS (Line-of-Sight) connectivity, use of OFDM technology can provide nLOS (near
Line-of-Sight) connectivity and sometimes NLOS (Non-Line-of-Sight) connectivity:
LOS: the installer can see the AP from the SM and the first Fresnel zone is clear.
nLOS: the installer can see the AP from the SM, but a portion of the first Fresnel zone is blocked.
NLOS: the installer cannot see the AP from the SM and a portion or even much of the first Fresnel
zone is blocked, but subsequent Fresnel zones are open.
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29. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Figure 14 shows examples of LOS, nLOS, and NLOS links.
Figure 14: LOS, nLOS, and NLOS
Whereas multi-pathing degrades a link in some technologies (FSK, for example), OFDM can often use multi-
pathing to an advantage to overcome nLOS, especially in cases where the Fresnel zone is only partially
blocked by buildings, “urban canyons”, or foliage. OFDM tends to help especially when obstacles are near
the middle of the link, and less so when the obstacles are very near the SM, AP, or BH.
However, attenuation through walls and trees is substantial for any use of the 5.8 GHz, 5.4 GHz or 4.9 GHz
frequency bands. Even with OFDM, these products should not be expected to penetrate walls or extensive
trees and foliage.
Applications
Applications for the PMP 400/PTP 200 (5.4-GHz) and PMP 430/PTP 230 (5.4 & 5.8-GHz) Series include:
High throughput enterprise applications
nLOS video surveillance in metro areas
Extend networks into urban areas
Extend networks into areas with foliage
Applications for the PMP 49400 (4.9-GHz) and PTP 49200 Series systems include:
High throughput licensed network for government applications
Municipal network - nLOS video surveillance in metro areas
Disaster relief network
Data service network - extend licensed networks into areas with foliage
Configuration Options – RF, IP, DFS
These systems use the Canopy Media Access Controller (MAC) layer. Settings like Downlink Data %,
Range, and Control Slots are similar to Canopy FSK radios. An OFDM AP can communicate to over 200
SMs, similar to a Canopy FSK AP.
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30. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
The GUI (Graphical User Interface) is almost identical to Canopy‟s FSK products, with a few additions to
support OFDM-specific features.
Network features like High Priority using DiffServ, MIR, CIR, NAT, DHCP and VLAN are available for the
PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series OFDM radios, and are configured in the same way as they are for
the PMP 100 Series and PTP 100 Series radios.
In the 5.4 and 5.8-GHz band, DFS (Dynamic Frequency Selection) is provided for regulatory compliant
operation, and is activated (if required per regulatory rules) using the “Region Code” feature. Two alternate
frequencies can be configured to provide service in the unlikely case a module detects radar and triggers
DFS, the same as standard Canopy. “External Antenna Gain” may need to be configured consistent with
any antennas used, to avoid making the system overly sensitive to radar detection. “Whitening,” a technique
used to avoid self-interference on Canopy FSK radios, is not offered as an option on the PMP 400/430 and
PTP 200/230 Series radios, as whitening is not a technology applicable to an OFDM signal.
Power and Grounding
PMP 430 Series APs and PTP 230 BHs use a nominal 56 VDC power system with power on pins 5 and 8
and return on pins 4 and 7. PMP 430 Series APs must use a CMM4 with a 56 VDC power supply. A
CMMmicro will not power these units as it is providing the wrong voltage on the wrong pins. PMP 430 Series
SMs use a 29.5 VDC wall mount power supply.
PMP 54400 APs and SMs and PTP 54200 BHs use a nominal 30 VDC power system with power on pins 7
and 8 and return on pins 4 and 5. PMP 54400 APs and PTP 54200 BHs can be powered from either a
CMMmicro with a 30 VDC power supply or a CMM4 with a 30 VDC power supply. A 29.5 VDC wall mount
power supply is available for PMP 54400 SMs.
PMP 49400 APs and SMs and PTP 49200 BHs use a nominal 56 VDC power system with power on pins 5
and 8 and return on pins 4 and 7. PMP 49400 APs and PTP 49200 BHs must use a CMM4 with a 56 VDC
power supply. A CMMmicro will not power these units as it is providing the wrong voltage on the wrong pins.
A 56 VDC power supply is available for PMP 49400 SMs.
IMPORTANT!
When working on sites with both power systems, use care not to wrongly
mix power supplies and radios as the two power systems use different
pinouts as well as different voltages.
On sites with a mix of 30 VDC and 56 VDC radios (up to the limit of 8 radios supported by one CMM4), a
CMM4 connected to both a 30 VDC power supply and a 56 VDC power supply can be used.
Due to the full metallic connection to the tower or support structure through the AP‟s antenna or a
connectorized BH‟s antenna, grounding the AP or BH and installing a 600SS surge suppressor within 3 ft (1
m) of the AP or BH (see Figure 13) is strongly recommended to suppress over voltages and over currents,
such as those caused by near-miss lightning. APs and BHs provide a grounding lug, as shown in Figure 15,
for grounding to the tower or support structure.
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31. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Figure 15: AP Grounding Lug
A pole mount kit (model no. SGHN5169A) is available for the 600SS. The pole mount kit, shown in Figure
16, provides a grounding point on one of its U-bolts that can be used for terminating ground straps from both
the 600SS and the AP.
Figure 16: 600SS pole mount kit
Administration Systems
Cambium Networks Wireless Manager v3.0 SP 3 is recommended for managing PMP 400/430 and PTP
200/230 Series products with Release 11.2.
Cambium‟s Wireless Manager v3.0 SP 3 is available for download at:
http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/support under “Management Tools”.
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32. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Wireless Manager is used to manage and monitor Canopy modules. However; the standalone CNUT tool
must be used to upgrade radio software.
CNUT 3.20.19 (Canopy Network Updater Tool) is the stand-alone software update tool for PMP 400/430 and
PTP 200/230 Series products.. CNUT is available at http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/support under
“Management Tools”.
PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 equipment may also be managed by SNMP queries based on the Canopy
MIB (Management Information Base) objects.
Release 11.0 adds support for RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial In User Service) protocol supporting:
SM Authentication allows only known SMs onto the network (blocking “rogue” SMs), and can
be configured to ensure SMs are connecting to a known network (preventing SMs from
connecting to “rogue” APs). RADIUS authentication is used for SMs, but not used for APs,
BHMs, or BHSs.
SM Configuration configures authenticated SMs with MIR (Maximum Information Rate), CIR
(Committed Information Rate), High Priority, and VLAN (Virtual LAN) parameters from the
RADIUS server when an SM registers to an AP.
Centralized AP and SM user name and password management allows AP and SM
usernames and access levels (Administrator, Installer, Technician) to be centrally administered
in the RADIUS server instead of on each radio and tracks access events (logon/logoff) for
each username on the RADIUS server. BHMs and BHSs do not support RADIUS accounting.
This accounting does not track and report specific configuration actions performed on radios or
pull statistics such as bit counts from the radios. Such functions require an Element
Management System (EMS) such as Cambium Wireless Manager. This accounting is not the
ability to perform accounting functions on the subscriber/end user/customer account.
Specifications
PMP 430 (5.4 and 5.8-GHz) products are sold in the following formats:
SM - Radio with integrated antenna
AP - Kitted, connectorized radio (antenna included)
AP – Connectorized radio (antenna provided by operator)
PMP 400 (5.4 and 4.9-GHz) and PTP 200 (5.4 and 4.9-GHz) products are sold in the following formats:
SM/BH - Radio with integrated antenna
AP/SM/BH - Connectorized radio (antenna provided by operator)
AP - Kitted, connectorized radio (antenna included)
PTP 230 (5.4 and 5.8-GHz) products are sold in the following format:
SM/BH - Radio with integrated antenna
The following sections list specifications for each format.
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33. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Radio specifications (common to all formats)
Settable Transmit (Tx) Output Power Range by Channel Bandwidth
Radio Type Frequency
5 MHz 10 MHz 20 MHz
PMP 430 AP
and 5.8 GHz -30 to +21 dBm -30 to +21 dBm -30 to +21 dBm
PTP 230 BH
PMP 430 AP
and 5.4 GHz -30 to +21 dBm -30 to +21 dBm -30 to +21 dBm
PTP 230 BH
PMP 400 AP
and 5.4 GHz N/A -30 to +12 dBm N/A
PTP 200 BH
PMP 400 AP
and 4.9 GHz N/A -30 to +18 dBm N/A
PTP 200 BH
4.9, 5.4 and SM Auto Transmit Power Control (TPC) with power set by the AP to
SM
5.8- GHz provide power leveling for close-in SMs
PMP 430 AP/SM: configurable channel bandwidth: 5, 10 or 20MHz
PMP 430 AP/SM: configurable cyclic prefix (1/4, 1/8 or 1/16)
PMP 430 AP: Max range 1-30 miles for 5 and 10MHz channel bandwidth, 1-24 miles for 20MHz
channel bandwidth
PMP 400 AP: Max range 1-30 miles
PMP 400 AP/SM and PTP 200 BH: channel bandwidth fixed at 10MHz
PMP 400 AP/SM: cyclic prefix fixed at 1/4
PTP 200 BH: configurable cyclic prefix (1/4 or 1/8)
PTP 230 BH: configurable channel bandwidth: 10 or 20MHz
PTP 230 BH: configurable cyclic prefix (1/4, 1/8 or 1/16)
PTP 230 BH: Max range 1-30 miles for 10MHz channel bandwidth, 1-24 miles for 20MHz channel
bandwidth
Under 22 W DC power
Environment range of -40°C to +55°C (-40°F to +131°F); 0 to 95% relative humidity, non-
condensing
PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 products are available with either DES or AES encryption
Specifications for PMP 430 (5.4 & 5.8-GHz) SM and PTP 230 (5.4
& 5.8-GHz) BH radio with integrated antenna
Radio with an integrated, internal vertically polarized antenna
1 lb, 11.75 x 3.4 x 3.4 in (hwd) or ~.45 kg, 29.9 x 8.6 x 8.6 cm (hwd)
PMP 430 Configurable channel bandwidth: 5, 10 or 20MHz
PTP 230 Configurable channel bandwidth: 10 or 20MHz
Configurable cyclic prefix: 1/4, 1/8 or 1/16
10 dBi patch antenna - 55° x 55° and 3 dB beam width
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34. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
Optional LENS mounts directly to SM or BH– No additional mounting hardware required
o adds 6 dBi to 10 dB internal patch antenna which can increase range
o narrows beam width by 3x (from 55° to 18°) which can reduce interference caused by
multi-path reflections
o LENS part number: AN500A
Optional Reflector dish
o adds 15 dBi to 10 dB internal patch antenna which can increase range
o narrows beam width (from 55° to 6°) which can reduce interference caused by multi-path
reflections
Figure 17: PMP 430 SM
Figure 18: PMP 430 SM with Optional LENS
Specifications for PMP 400 (4.9 & 5.4-GHz) AP/SM and PTP 200
(4.9 & 5.4-GHz) BH radio with integrated antenna
Radio with an integrated, internal vertically polarized antenna
10MHz channel bandwidth
1/4 Cyclic Prefix
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35. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
15.5° elevation x 17.5° azimuth -- 3 dB beam
17 dBi gain for antenna at 5.4 GHz. 17 dBi antenna gain plus 10 dBm transmit power gives the
regulatory maximum of 27 dBm EIRP.
17 dBi gain for antenna at 4.9 GHz. 17 dBi antenna gain plus 18 dBm transmit power gives 35 dBm
EIRP.
2.8 lb, 13.25 x 8.25 x 4.38 in (hwd) or ~1.3 kg, 33.7 x 21 x 11.13 cm (hwd)
Figure 19: PMP 400 and PTP 200 radio with integrated antenna
Specification for PMP 400/430 AP and PTP 200 BH connectorized
radio
Connectorized radio only with N-type connector (antenna to be provided by operator)
2.8 lb, 13.25 x 8.25 x 4.38 in (hwd) or ~1.3 kg, 33.7 x 21 x 11.13 cm (hwd)
Figure 20: PMP 400/430 and PTP 200 BH connectorized radio
Specifications for PMP 400/430 kitted, connectorized radio
(antenna included)
Connectorized radio (N-type connector) and connectorized antenna kitted together
Antenna optimized for system coverage vs. system self-interference for 90° sectors (3 dB beam
pattern of 60° azimuth by 5° elevation, with near-in null fill)
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36. PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Configuration and User Guide
5.8 GHz - 18 dBi gain for antenna. 18 dBi antenna gain minus 1 dB cable loss plus: 19
dBm tx power gives the U.S. regulatory max 36 dBm EIRP (5, 10 or 20 MHz Channel) 13 dBm
tx power gives the Europe regulatory max 30 dBm EIRP. (5MHz Channel) 16 dBm tx
power gives the Europe regulatory max 33 dBm EIRP. (10MHz Channel) 19 dBm tx power
gives the Europe regulatory max 36 dBm EIRP. (20MHz Channel)
5.4 GHz - 18 dBi gain for antenna. 18 dBi antenna gain minus 1 dB cable loss plus: 7
dBm tx power gives the U.S./Europe regulatory max 24 dBm EIRP. (5MHz Channel)
10 dBm tx power gives the U.S./Europe regulatory max 27 dBm EIRP. (10MHz Channel) 13
dBm tx power gives the U.S./Europe regulatory max 30 dBm EIRP. (20MHz Channel)
4.9 GHz - 17 dBi gain for antenna. 17 dBi antenna gain plus 18 dBm tx power gives 35 dBm
EIRP.
13 lb, 28 x 8.25 x 11 in (hwd) or ~6 kg, 71 x 21 x 28 cm (hwd)
Figure 21: CAP 49400 Figure 22: CAP 58430 and 54430
Issue 1.0 January 2012 Page 36 of 79