Hi guys,
We have a new network here with lots of cheap Nanobridge M2s.
We've had lots of fun with this. It has worked well as long as we are only a few miles apart. Recently, however, we've tried longer links of 8, 11, and 20 miles. While they all have reasonable signal levels ranging from -69 to -80, I continue to suffer from LQ 90-100, NLQ 0-20. The other end does agree and reports LQ 0, NLQ 100.
My troubles sound very much like this: http://www.aredn.org/content/nanobridge-m5-issue
Because of the findings of the thread listed above, I've tried a few different power levels to no avail. I've also tried distance levels equal to and greater than the actual distance. I haven't been as methodical on trying different settings on the end that reports zero simply because I've always been at the end that reports 100.
Any help for this newbie would be greatly appreciated. I've linked support data below.
Thanks!
-neal
Support data from zero end: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B2bOti4a1NXlaURXUjBLcnRrbks0Zk1sOGgxUU9qTVBnT1ln
Support data from 100 end:https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B2bOti4a1NXlNVNwUTlsWjZxbWc
The NSM2 devices, at times can achieve good links at 10+ miles, but they generally do not perform well at this distance in my experience. RF rich environments, which is any metro area, they're not going to be stable links out this far. For the 10+ mile distances, take a look at the NanoBridge M5 devices. These are also excellent price and can be sourced online for 5-packs at ~$50 each. The nightly builds and next release will also support he PowerBeam M5 devices PBE-M5-300 and PBE-M5-400 to consider as well.
why 5Ghz vs 2Ghz? More channel options and less noise (better performance)... It's also inefficient to run everything all on one channel in an area. I know this is counter intuitive to the the benefits of a 'mesh'. But because this is all built on top of 802.11 RF links, the performance can stay at a crawl if every devices is on the same channel. I work to build in redundant paths, but with multiple RF channels to scale up data capacity. 3Ghz is good too, with many channel options, just more $$s. It's not the band per se, it's having choices of clear and multiple channels to use.
Joe AE6XE
Thanks for the quick response, Joe.
I completely understand what you're saying. The reason I have trouble giving up on it is because the signal levels on these long perfect line of sight links are actually better than my shorter links that have more in the fresnel zone. I have no problems getting 100/100 on links in the upper 70s, but the links I'm having trouble with are often -69 to -73. One of the ones that reports zero packets is out in the country miles from anything.
Based on the other thread, is it not possible that the AREDN GUI is trying to write some distance or TX power levels that the radio does not accept?
I've got so many people bad mouthing mesh that I was really hoping this would work. I just don't understand why my strongest RF paths can be 100 % in one direction and 0% in the other.
How hard is it to re-load the Ubiquiti firmware that I have on file? I'd like to try the path with that and once it comes up I'll just use it for a dtd link.
Here's a picture to give you an idea of the local RF environment. This radio hears me at -73 which is better than any of my 100/100 links, but decodes no packets while I decode 100% at the other end:
The device in the other thread is a Ubiquiti device designed and built for the EU. It is an unknown entity. The NBM2 certified for US part 15 are known devices. We do known, e.g. 3Ghz bottom band edge, that the device will taper off the power output going to this band edge a little. Maybe there is a bit of this happening with 2Ghz devices too. However, the other thread was about not even getting power in the near field or local proximity within yards and miles--very different symptoms.
It is possible to tftp load the AirOS back in from AREDN (no sysupgrade path). But this will not enable the use of ch -2 and generally move the link into more noise. The environment (other signals, microwaves, home wifi, ...) in 2Ghz seems to be a bigger factor than in 3Ghz and 5Ghz. Let' just say, I've started to shy away from 2Ghz more as I found it simply hasn't worked as well compared to the other bands for me in our local RF rich environment. Your environment and mileage may vary...
What channel width are you using? Going to 5Mhz bumps up the SNR 3dB from 10Mhz and may help. I don't think anyone is able to use 20Mhz channels at these distances, at least I've not heard of anyone able to do this on 2Ghz.
I've not looked at the support dumps just yet...
Joe AE6XE
My other links that have less signal strength are running 20 Mhz and have no trouble supporting our VOIP PBX.
The SNR looks fine and you should be receiving packets, just the higher level IP layer may think the broadcast is going to someone else. Basically, go back to out-of-box determination of the network settings to confirm everything works.