I have two M5 nanobridge units 12 miles apart with a clear Fresnel zone. I'm running up in the ham only channels. SNR is 30db or better. At 5MHz bandwidth, the link is solid but the max throughput is less than 5MB/s. Ping times are less than 5ms. Changing to 10MHz bandwidth makes the link unstable. LQ and NLQ are still 100%, but ping times go from 5ms to 400+ms and throughput is non-existent. The distance parameter is set to 15km. Changing to 20MHz is also unstable.
I've tried moving to different channels thinking that maybe I was getting some interference, but the results were the same. The SNR always stays better than 30db, and is sometimes as good as 36db. Both units are running max power.
Airlink.ubnt.com shows this link with 21MB/s throughput at 5MHz, 84MB/s at 20MHz.
Given that the ping times go through the roof, I'm guessing I'm getting a bunch of retransmits? Any other ideas or things I should try?
I've tried moving to different channels thinking that maybe I was getting some interference, but the results were the same. The SNR always stays better than 30db, and is sometimes as good as 36db. Both units are running max power.
Airlink.ubnt.com shows this link with 21MB/s throughput at 5MHz, 84MB/s at 20MHz.
Given that the ping times go through the roof, I'm guessing I'm getting a bunch of retransmits? Any other ideas or things I should try?
Andre
The max theoretical for 802.11n mode (coming very soon in AREDN), is 130Mbps (20Mhz) or 32.5Mbps (5Mhz). Once we upgrade to OpenWRT Chaos Calmer, this number will go to 144Mbps (20Mhz)
The distance value can make a significance difference...
Live and learn.
Thanks,
Mike
Just doing some "market research".... how did you determine the distance to your furthest node?
Did you use Google maps to pin the two points?
Did you estimate? etc...
Last year in AZ, I was trying nanostation M2 to rocket M2 and had good success with IP phone and full motion video at 5 miles, but could not get it to work at 7.8 miles.
Is the M2 a different animal or would changing the distance parameter on it make the 7.8 miles workable?
Thanks
Vance Kc8rgo
Recently, a new mesh user put up a NS M2 on ch -2 and connected to a Rocket M2 with 120 deg sector panel at ~40 miles. Here's a live view of this link--look for AF6YN. It's a marginal link and she picked up a NanoBridge M3, and now has 100% LQ.
Joe AE6XE
I'm documenting this here so that one day when I don't remember why I did what I did, I'll stumble across this posting.
Symptoms:
LQ is 100% but ping times go through the roof when trying to send traffic across the mesh. Throughput is limited.
Possible Cause:
Did you set the distance parameter correctly?
Here's a good summary of the not-so-mysterious distance parameter:
This comes from: http://community.ubnt.com/t5/Installation-Troubleshooting/Setting-ACK-Distance/td-p/1131379
While that's an incomplete thread, the description is the best one I've found so far.
If you're looking for the internals and the impacts, look here: http://www.air-stream.org.au/technical-references/ack-timeouts-and-effects-distance-links
This talks about not only changing the ACK distance parameter, but also changing the slottime based on physical distance. I've not done any additional research into slottime, so I'm just including it for thoroughness - no recommendations being made or implied.
Another good thread to read is this one, where Ken and Joe dive into details: http://www.aredn.org/content/distance-parameter
So now the question of what do you really set this parameter to in the AREDN gui? Opinion, conjecture, and tribal knowledge all point to 1.2 times the actual point-to-point distance in meters between nodes that can see each other on rf.
Stay meshed, my friends.
73, Mike KG9DW
Mike,
Thanks for the detailed description... as a moderator I took the opportunity to correct your last sentence from: "...point-to-point distance in km between nodes..." to read: "...point-to-point distance in meters between nodes...".
Thanks,
Andre, K6AH