Hi.
Can’t find anyone stating what the max distance is on the 60Ghz frequency.
Mikrotik says 2.4km but is it running on 5Ghz or 60Ghz?
/Patricio
Try to use 66960 As far as I Know, cube pro supports it. It can be used at far large distantThanks for answering!
I was thinking about max distance during perfect clear line of sight conditions, is it 2.4km as they promote them?
I accept decrease in performance due to weather (failing over to 5Ghz).
Is it still max 6-700m in 60Ghz?
/Patricio
The farthest I have gone with MikroTik 60GHz radios is 800m (LHG to Cube). A pair of Cube Pros might work on 66960 around the 1km mark, but I haven't tried that. I'd consider something larger with higher frequencies if you need more than 1km. nRay would be a good bet between 1-2km.I was thinking about max distance during perfect clear line of sight conditions, is it 2.4km as they promote them?
I accept decrease in performance due to weather (failing over to 5Ghz).
Is it still max 6-700m in 60Ghz?
Are you sure Wave -client supports a "Bridge-mode"?The farthest I have gone with MikroTik 60GHz radios is 800m (LHG to Cube). A pair of Cube Pros might work on 66960 around the 1km mark, but I haven't tried that. I'd consider something larger with higher frequencies if you need more than 1km. nRay would be a good bet between 1-2km.
I have deployed a number of Ubiquiti Gigabeam (Plus & LR) and AF60 links between 1-2km. Beyond 2km, I've been deploying AF60-LR radios, and have the longest link record for those radios at 27km (it worked for a little while).
With Ubiquiti's new Wave LR radios gaining PTP support (3.2.0b), you get both long range 60GHz and 5GHz failover, and they're cheaper than AF60-LR with better gain.
The problem with the Cube's (and every 60ghz product on the market to date) is the 5ghz radio is so low powered and gimped that its entirely self defeating. The 60ghz vastly exceeds the 5ghz output power over distance. So where the 5ghz kinda sorta works ok enough (200m) its stupid because the 60ghz will not ever go down in any weather condition at that distance, unless there's something physically in the wayThanks for answering!
I was thinking about max distance during perfect clear line of sight conditions, is it 2.4km as they promote them?
I accept decrease in performance due to weather (failing over to 5Ghz).
Is it still max 6-700m in 60Ghz?
/Patricio
That's kind of a generic question for a year-old post. What exactly are you needing?Hi,
any another experience with 60 Ghz for long distances?
Thank you
Hi. What frequantcy is that? 66960?My longest link with cube60pro ac is 1287.21 m
distancecube60pro.PNG
Are you shure about that? nRay works muuuuuuch better at 66960. Cube should be the sameThe maximum throughput of Cube 60G ac devices (500 meters) is significantly higher at frequencies 58320, 60480 and 62640 MHz
Since Cube 60G ac and Cube 60Pro ac are different devices.Are you shure about that? nRay works muuuuuuch better at 66960. Cube should be the same
66960 is not more efficient it has less atmosphere signal loss. Oxigen makes signal hard to pass bellow 66960
Perhaps 66960 is a more efficient frequency
I have them bridging a road on an industrial estate - approx. 25 meters apart. Sometimes an unusually tall lorry might get in the way. The 5GHz backup is pretty useful IMO, better than nothing. I think I saw about 400mbps throughput when I last tested it. That's good enough for what we're doing for now anyway.
The only purpose for the 5ghz is
A) Marketing wank to sell more units
B) Management traffic backup
B can be ever so slightly useful if the 60ghz link goes down and you need to mac-telnet in etc. But don't for a second believe its actually useful for actual traffic failure, its total rubbish and not even remotely close to a substitute for a dedicated 5ghz radio for failover
Personally i'd much rather they scrap the 5ghz and just put a 2nd ethernet port with PoE passthrough. That way you can power a nanobeam/powerbeam/force300/whatever AND have the Cube radio do its own private OSPF/BFD failover and treated as a single un-interrupted ethernet port by the routers or switches on each end, far far far more practical and beneficial
frequency: 66960
tx-mcs: 5
tx-phy-rate: 1251.0Mbps
signal: 40
rssi: -59
tx-sector: 34
tx-sector-info: left 2.2 degrees, up 0.8 degrees
distance: 2331.45m
tx-packet-error-rate: 0%
frequency: 66960
tx-mcs: 5
tx-phy-rate: 1251.0Mbps
signal: 40
rssi: -67
tx-sector: 35
tx-sector-info: left 0.8 degrees, up 0.8 degrees
distance: 2324.99m
tx-packet-error-rate: 2%
frequency: 66960
tx-mcs: 5
tx-phy-rate: 1251.0Mbps
signal: 40
rssi: -70
tx-sector: 35
tx-sector-info: left 0.8 degrees, up 0.8 degrees
distance: 2603.67m
tx-packet-error-rate: 0%
connected: yes
frequency: 66960
tx-mcs: 2
tx-phy-rate: 770.0Mbps
signal: 20
rssi: -71
tx-sector: 35
tx-sector-info: left 0.8 degrees, up 0.8 degrees
distance: 2954.8m
tx-packet-error-rate: 0%