In 24 GHz using Parabolic you can omit sync if you have at least 30 Degree between. In 38 we alway get the same frequency from our regulator on the same tower. So this is not a real sign for working GPS. It is the narrow beamwidth which make it work.Airfiber gps sync is awesome. I am able to use the exact same channel with the antennas 1 ft apart and still pull full bandwidth.
They way UBNT gps sync works is they use gps to sync the 2 airfibers and offset the wave length a little bit so they cant see each other.
Mikrotik are you able to do GPS sync yet?
You're dreaming. Even systems with gps we are using are not specified for channel reuse. Gps sync does not take away the work to place antennas in a way to have clean spectrum. Sync reduce problems but do not solve them.Sync for multipoint is most important. Yeah I have used parabolics but that's for back hauls. I am fine there. We have about 200mbps top going over our back hauls so parabolics are a must. Back to GPS sync, we need it.
Microtik could use have a master ap that sends out sync beacons and the apps that can see that ap would sync with that signal. That way all those aps would be on same channel. We could group 10 towns with one channel. Then have another master sync for another group of 10 towns. Microtik may be able to do this with there existing wireless chip sets. Also all aps would transmit at same time and receive at same time. Clients would sync to ap of course that's it. Nv3 is what they should call it.
You tested UBNT and compared with and without sync?Your not too otomistic. Ubiquiti has already done it for multipoint. I know mikrotik can do it. Just waiting for them to do it.
What is the gain using the 5GHz Sync? Are you able to reuse the same frequency on the same tower?only 5ghz and airfiber airsync works
+1
You're dreaming. Even systems with gps we are using are not specified for channel reuse. Gps sync does not take away the work to place antennas in a way to have clean spectrum. Sync reduce problems but do not solve them.
Of course I want MT to offer sync but I dont expect too much.
What is the gain using the 5GHz Sync? Are you able to reuse the same frequency on the same tower?only 5ghz and airfiber airsync works
No. The normal way sync works is that all APs send and receive at the same time.GPS Sync would reduce overall throughput?
If I understand correctly for example;
Sector A has 10 clients,
Sector B has 60 clients,
Sector C has 20 clients,
Sector D has 30 clients,
Sector A has after having received responses from its 10 Clients has then to wait, so has Sector C & D to wait until Sector B has received responses from its 60 clients, before all the Sectors can respond in sync?
All the AP’s will have the performance of the sector with the highest number of registered clients?
Throughput takes a nosedive when syncing AP’s + Ptp’s links
By the way I don’t need Sync as I use AP’s + PtP with good RF screening and carefully select frequencies.
OK thanks for that but does that not confirm my example for all APs to send & receive, the AP with 10 clients must wait till the AP with 60 clients has finished listening to the 60 clients and then all the APs can send then?
No. The normal way sync works is that all APs send and receive at the same time.
Each AP using a different Frequency can send in parallel. Problem is that the TX/RX Ratio has to be fixed
for all radios at all sites to use the effect of GPS-Sync.
So you can decide to do e.g. a 50:50 rate in your network. So if your modulation allows 100MBit TDD you
never get more than 50 down or 50 up on all radios at all sites. No radio will give you 70MBit down as it
would need to exceed the TX Time frame to do this.
If you use a synced radio to connect 2 towers you get a problem. Which side is the AP? One side sends with the
CPEs ...
No AP waits for another. Every AP waits for the AP TX-Timeslot. If one AP has 60 clients he has to use this fixed timeslot to send to all of them. When timeslot ends he has to wait for the next TX Timeslot.OK thanks for that but does that not confirm my example for all APs to send & receive, the AP with 10 clients must wait till the AP with 60 clients has finished listening to the 60 clients and then all the APs can send then?
No. The normal way sync works is that all APs send and receive at the same time.
Each AP using a different Frequency can send in parallel. Problem is that the TX/RX Ratio has to be fixed
for all radios at all sites to use the effect of GPS-Sync.
So you can decide to do e.g. a 50:50 rate in your network. So if your modulation allows 100MBit TDD you
never get more than 50 down or 50 up on all radios at all sites. No radio will give you 70MBit down as it
would need to exceed the TX Time frame to do this.
If you use a synced radio to connect 2 towers you get a problem. Which side is the AP? One side sends with the
CPEs ...
"Full duplex N for P2P"? So 2 dual chain antennas on each client and in tower? Looks a bit expensive, ackward and not so esthetic....Mikrotik either needs GPS sync or needs Full duplex wireless N for point to multipoint. If we had dual nstreme for point to multipoint there is no need for GPS. Right?
Thanks WirelessRudy I was confused by the reply?............................................
No AP waits for another. Every AP waits for the AP TX-Timeslot. If one AP has 60 clients he has to use this fixed timeslot to send to all of them. When timeslot ends he has to wait for the next TX Timeslot.
So in a typical residential environment you will not choose 50:50. You will do something like 80:20.
Does this mean and picking numbers at random...........In TDMA environment each AP is assigning tx/rx time slots to each station and aren't necessarily of the same length between AP's, thus the tx/rx is different too.
Meaning the time slots are continously variable in length.Media access in Nv2 network is controlled by Nv2 Access Point. Nv2 AP divides time in fixed size "periods" which are dynamically divided in downlink (data sent from AP to clients) and uplink (data sent from clients to AP) portions, based on queue state on AP and clients. Uplink time is further divided between connected clients based on their requirements for bandwidth. At the begginning of each period AP broadcasts schedule that tells clients when they should transmit and the amount of time they can use.
In order to allow new clients to connect, Nv2 AP periodically assigns uplink time for "unspecified" client - this time interval is then used by fresh client to initiate registration to AP. Then AP estimates propagation delay between AP and client and starts periodically scheduling uplink time for this client in order to complete registration and receive data from client.
Nv2 implements dynamic rate selection on per-client basis and ARQ for data transmissions. This enables reliable communications across Nv2 links.
Just read the documentation for 802.16e (Physical Layer of WiMAX) and you will see how a TDMA/Synced system works.Taken from manual:Meaning the time slots are continously variable in length.Media access in Nv2 network is controlled by Nv2 Access Point. Nv2 AP divides time in fixed size "periods" which are dynamically divided in downlink (data sent from AP to clients) and uplink (data sent from clients to AP) portions, based on queue state on AP and clients. Uplink time is further divided between connected clients based on their requirements for bandwidth. At the begginning of each period AP broadcasts schedule that tells clients when they should transmit and the amount of time they can use.
In order to allow new clients to connect, Nv2 AP periodically assigns uplink time for "unspecified" client - this time interval is then used by fresh client to initiate registration to AP. Then AP estimates propagation delay between AP and client and starts periodically scheduling uplink time for this client in order to complete registration and receive data from client.
Nv2 implements dynamic rate selection on per-client basis and ARQ for data transmissions. This enables reliable communications across Nv2 links.
Time slot assigned to a client at long distance has to be longer than close client. It will increase latency but distant client need opportunity to send answer and AP has to wait for it.... So, even with same amount of clients AP1 can have time slots that are longer than AP2. Imaging AP1 has client at 20km, when sync'd AP2 will than have to act like it also has client at 20km, even if AP2 only has clients up to 100m !
Time slot for high bandwidth requiring client is also assigned more often than for low use/idle client of same AP.
So here again, if AP2 is now to sync with AP1 which has one high bandwidth requiring client, AP2 has to sync its clients to the same 'long' slots of this AP1 client. Which could unneccesarily create extra latency in AP2 network.
(The Tx/Rx sequence itself can be sync'd. If the length of the slots are set the same (and be 'fixed' to that length) than AP1 with 2 clients can sync with AP2 with 3 clients, example;
|AP1aTx|AP1aRx|AP1bTx|AP1bRX|AP1bTx|AP1bRx|AP1bTx|AP1bTx|AP1bRx|AP1?Rx|AP1aTx|AP1aRx etc. etc.
|AP2aTx|AP2aRx|AP2bTx|AP2bRx|AP2cTx|AP2cRx|AP2?Rx |AP2aTx|AP2aRx|AP2bTx|AP2bRx|AP2cTx etc. etc.
"AP1?Rx" or "AP2?Rx" are slots where AP listens to possible new station.)
The more I read about the working of NV2 (TDMA) the more I actually wonder how ubnt (and others) are dealing with this? Maybe they work with a fixed length time slot assignment for all connected AP's and averaging between AP with little usage/short range clients and big usage/long range client. So big usage/long range clients will see lower throughput (because more 'slots' needed than actually is ideal, thus more overhead) while low usage/short range clients get higher latency than actually could be achieved without sync.
Maybe because the 'n' protocol with its high connection rates masquerades the poorer performance of their sync'd system. User won't notice and they have the sales tool!
Well put and how often have we seen sales omitting vital information or data that should be included for consideration before purchase?....................................
I think sync is overrated. Theoratically is looks fine but there are too many negatives to deal with.
Imho ubnt uses it more as a sales tool than that it actually improves their 'many AP's on a tower' setups.
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Airfiber gps sync is awesome. I am able to use the exact same channel with the antennas 1 ft apart and still pull full bandwidth.
They way UBNT gps sync works is they use gps to sync the 2 airfibers and offset the wave length a little bit so they cant see each other.
Mikrotik are you able to do GPS sync yet?
I am curious back in March you say "...gps is awesome.." and now "....Its not worth it.." so what is the final verdict 24GHZ is crap, and sync in not as good as the marketing says it is?I agree 24ghz is crap in rain. Its not worth it. I have 12 airfibers.
This depends on country and rain conditions. We're limited to 100mW EiRP in 24GHz so we found no link where AirFiber would be useful for us. 8km in 24GHz sounds like "It never rains in Southern California" ).Airfiber is a great product for backhaul and we are currently using a few in the varying distances of 6km-8km without any problems. You cant ever find a product in the same price range giving you 600mbit throuput. It opens up a wide range of possibilities for us WISPs due to the cost effectiveness.
So please do not confuse the things and spread false information. If you have anything else on the same 24ghz band giving equivalent throuput and same price range, than I am ready to hear your comparison (I doubnt that such a thing exists). Until then, AF rocks and is a big plus for the WISP industry.
On the other hand, I completely agree that 802.11ac has to be the focus of Mikrotik. Mt has to be the first releasing it for PtMP fixed applications for us WISPs.
If Airfibre is a good product, then you would have no problems in posting here actual throughtput results and not the sales promo material, also I would like to see actual throughtput levels during heavy and prolonged rain showers?Airfiber is a great product for backhaul and we are currently using a few in the varying distances of 6km-8km without any problems. You cant ever find a product in the same price range giving you 600mbit throuput. It opens up a wide range of possibilities for us WISPs due to the cost effectiveness.
So please do not confuse the things and spread false information. If you have anything else on the same 24ghz band giving equivalent throuput and same price range, than I am ready to hear your comparison (I doubnt that such a thing exists). Until then, AF rocks and is a big plus for the WISP industry.
On the other hand, I completely agree that 802.11ac has to be the focus of Mikrotik. Mt has to be the first releasing it for PtMP fixed applications for us WISPs.
I've been tempted to buy these units because hell, their promo rocks... But as a good pro I started to investigate in the product and link caracteristics. I was suprised that although they sell them in Europe, with the low power we can use here it renders the stuff almost useless.Airfiber is a great product for backhaul and we are currently using a few in the varying distances of 6km-8km without any problems. You cant ever find a product in the same price range giving you 600mbit throuput. It opens up a wide range of possibilities for us WISPs due to the cost effectiveness.
So please do not confuse the things and spread false information. If you have anything else on the same 24ghz band giving equivalent throuput and same price range, than I am ready to hear your comparison (I doubnt that such a thing exists). Until then, AF rocks and is a big plus for the WISP industry.
This depends on country and rain conditions. We're limited to 100mW EiRP in 24GHz so we found no link where AirFiber would be useful for us. 8km in 24GHz sounds like "It never rains in Southern California" ).Airfiber is a great product for backhaul and we are currently using a few in the varying distances of 6km-8km without any problems. You cant ever find a product in the same price range giving you 600mbit throuput. It opens up a wide range of possibilities for us WISPs due to the cost effectiveness.
So please do not confuse the things and spread false information. If you have anything else on the same 24ghz band giving equivalent throuput and same price range, than I am ready to hear your comparison (I doubnt that such a thing exists). Until then, AF rocks and is a big plus for the WISP industry.
On the other hand, I completely agree that 802.11ac has to be the focus of Mikrotik. Mt has to be the first releasing it for PtMP fixed applications for us WISPs.
All I can say bla bla bla blaOh yeah, just noticed the subject title again "Mikrotik GPS Sync just like Airfiber"
Airfiber is a typicall example of the sales of ubnt. A first everyone things "Yes, that's what I need! Finally an avordable compact easy to install one package high troughput link!" .......
Well, in Europe and probably other countries the max. EIRPP is very limited so it can only be used at short ranges. Where 802.11a/n-a/c can do almost the same.
And you better be not living in a rainy climate. 24Ghz is very, very fulnerable to rain..... it completely destroys the link even at relative short distances.... Waste of money.
And yes, because you only have very limited bandwidth available, to re-use the freq. sync can do a bit of help here, especially if taken in consideration we also mainly speak about backhaul links. These can all run in sync without the scetched issues that might arise in P2MP AP's on a tower.
If u dont like it dont buy itI've been tempted to buy these units because hell, their promo rocks... But as a good pro I started to investigate in the product and link caracteristics. I was suprised that although they sell them in Europe, with the low power we can use here it renders the stuff almost useless.Airfiber is a great product for backhaul and we are currently using a few in the varying distances of 6km-8km without any problems. You cant ever find a product in the same price range giving you 600mbit throuput. It opens up a wide range of possibilities for us WISPs due to the cost effectiveness.
So please do not confuse the things and spread false information. If you have anything else on the same 24ghz band giving equivalent throuput and same price range, than I am ready to hear your comparison (I doubnt that such a thing exists). Until then, AF rocks and is a big plus for the WISP industry.
Than I found several guys even on the ubn forum that really warned for the 'rain issue' here so decided it was yet again ubnt stuff presented in a cloud of optimistic promises....
And 600Mb over 6-8km's? Can you show us some real data? Because even their own info doesn't really promise this... In one of the website's .pdfs they talk about 500Mb at 3,5miles..... Above that range speeds drops dramatically. And no rain!
NTP ist not accurate. Atheros Ethernet has no sync capability as far as I now. This would need custom Ethernet chip.maybe it is stupid question... why do we need a gps sync? What about some kind of sync over ethernet on the same place? What about sync over time (NTP) Is it really so hard to make it work? Lets say that it will be necesary just to set up place A, or place B on RB and common ntp server....
GPS works on measuring distances between your location on the earth's globe towards the several sattelites. By now measuring the time differences in the time it takes for a signal to reach each of the sattelites, it can calculate your location on the globe. (very simplistic explanation. Actually also the difference in speed of the signal is measured. They make use of the doppler effect.)maybe it is stupid question... why do we need a gps sync? What about some kind of sync over ethernet on the same place? What about sync over time (NTP) Is it really so hard to make it work? Lets say that it will be necesary just to set up place A, or place B on RB and common ntp server....
If only doing a local tower sync it would be a smarter Installation doing it together with Ethernet cabling.So. although other methods might be available. In cost/quality nothing beats the time signal of a GPS sattelite.
"with Ethernet cabling"? How do you see that? To interconnect the antennas? But you still need some clock to steer the sync process. So either you have a separate device with clock that is able to steer each of the connected radios. Or you must have each radio connected to a clock.If only doing a local tower sync it would be a smarter Installation doing it together with Ethernet cabling.So. although other methods might be available. In cost/quality nothing beats the time signal of a GPS sattelite.
So you dont need GPS-Antenna. In most cases a local tower sync is enough for unlicensed bands as you cant
control signal from foreign devices on other towers.
We have a gear which does this with seperate RJ45 connectors connected together with a kind of switch which needs no power (just passive interconnection). Some other gear have a central POE-Unit which gives time sync over the ethernet cable."with Ethernet cabling"? How do you see that? To interconnect the antennas? But you still need some clock to steer the sync process. So either you have a separate device with clock that is able to steer each of the connected radios. Or you must have each radio connected to a clock.If only doing a local tower sync it would be a smarter Installation doing it together with Ethernet cabling.So. although other methods might be available. In cost/quality nothing beats the time signal of a GPS sattelite.
So you dont need GPS-Antenna. In most cases a local tower sync is enough for unlicensed bands as you cant
control signal from foreign devices on other towers.
So, yet again the option of a separate time measurement device is needed. >>> GPS.
Now I don't know how the gps in ubnt for instance are connected to the radios but I presume with coax to eliminate radio interferences on the signal. Better would be fibre but yeah, I presume it can be done with (shielded) utp cable as well...
Interesting. Apart from some other reserves I have against sync this one is new to me..I learned gps sync is not good to use in some environments. If you have bad weather it actually hurts your network more than helping. I found that using full duplex links that use seperate frequencies work the best. Now I am talking about backhauls. I am not talking about PTMP.
Yes why would weather have a effect on GPS sync, perhaps a issue with signal fade margin on the GPS receiverInteresting. Apart from some other reserves I have against sync this one is new to me..I learned gps sync is not good to use in some environments. If you have bad weather it actually hurts your network more than helping. I found that using full duplex links that use seperate frequencies work the best. Now I am talking about backhauls. I am not talking about PTMP.
Why would bad weather have a bad influence on the GPS sync? Syncd antennas like with ubnt are steered from within one GPS device? So the sync of the radios takes place no matter what weather, and since the GPS time signal usually is only used to continiously update the build-in precise clock, a short drop in communication with a sattelite due bad weather would'n hurt the clock, let alone the sync...
So the claim that weather would have an bad impact need some more explanations....? I really can't imagine how..
No, because the signal from the sattelite updates the clock the moment it notice that the clock in the earth device is not synchrone with the sattelite clock. But if there is no signal, or a poor one not enough to communicate time stamps, the build-in clock of the GPS device is just running and in case of radio sync, it can still be used.Yes why would weather have a effect on GPS sync, perhaps a issue with signal fade margin on the GPS receiverInteresting. Apart from some other reserves I have against sync this one is new to me..I learned gps sync is not good to use in some environments. If you have bad weather it actually hurts your network more than helping. I found that using full duplex links that use seperate frequencies work the best. Now I am talking about backhauls. I am not talking about PTMP.
Why would bad weather have a bad influence on the GPS sync? Syncd antennas like with ubnt are steered from within one GPS device? So the sync of the radios takes place no matter what weather, and since the GPS time signal usually is only used to continiously update the build-in precise clock, a short drop in communication with a sattelite due bad weather would'n hurt the clock, let alone the sync...
So the claim that weather would have an bad impact need some more explanations....? I really can't imagine how..
Cambium ePMP 1000 and Radwin 5000 are both Atheros based systems that have a fully functional GPS sync.NTP ist not accurate. Atheros Ethernet has no sync capability as far as I now. This would need custom Ethernet chip.
I learned gps sync is not good to use in some environments. If you have bad weather it actually hurts your network more than helping. I found that using full duplex links that use seperate frequencies work the best. Now I am talking about backhauls. I am not talking about PTMP.
Well sure its true gps time can show 0.00000001 accuracyNTP ist not accurate. Atheros Ethernet has no sync capability as far as I now. This would need custom Ethernet chip.maybe it is stupid question... why do we need a gps sync? What about some kind of sync over ethernet on the same place? What about sync over time (NTP) Is it really so hard to make it work? Lets say that it will be necesary just to set up place A, or place B on RB and common ntp server....
You dont need the exact time/date but you need a signal on the APs which is synced exactly.Well sure its true gps time can show 0.00000001 accuracyNTP ist not accurate. Atheros Ethernet has no sync capability as far as I now. This would need custom Ethernet chip.maybe it is stupid question... why do we need a gps sync? What about some kind of sync over ethernet on the same place? What about sync over time (NTP) Is it really so hard to make it work? Lets say that it will be necesary just to set up place A, or place B on RB and common ntp server....
but аs I understand we dont need accurate time we dont care if its 5pm or 9am all wee need two antenna A and B to get sync and thats all.
Why it cant be done with another software mechanism? why we need GPS time?
well there actually is. each uses a proprietary technology, so every new player needs to "invent a wheel of their own"There's no need to reinvent the wheel. Cambium, Radwin, etc. already do GPS sync with Atheros chipsets.
And can we ask when is Mikrotik going to "invent a wheel of their own" or will they borrow wheels for nowwell there actually is. each uses a proprietary technology, so every new player needs to "invent a wheel of their own"There's no need to reinvent the wheel. Cambium, Radwin, etc. already do GPS sync with Atheros chipsets.
My guess: It will not happen. You would see much more progress in the wireless part of ROS if they hired a wireless engineer. And they need a wireless engineer to do such stuff like gps sync.The interest me too!
we will buy 8 pieces Cambium EPMP 1000, only because GPS Sync!
but we prefer mikrotik!
and wecan wait, if it does not take too long.
Anything GPS sync will be proprietary, but they are working on an 802.11 mode for non-sync operations. The radios that have GPS are more expensive than many radios, but they work. None of the ePMP have 256 QAM, only standard N. Since you're not off to a good start, I'm not going to put a lot of faith into your NAT statement, but would be interested in hearing your observations.My guess: It will not happen. You would see much more progress in the wireless part of ROS if they hired a wireless engineer. And they need a wireless engineer to do such stuff like gps sync.The interest me too!
we will buy 8 pieces Cambium EPMP 1000, only because GPS Sync!
but we prefer mikrotik!
and wecan wait, if it does not take too long.
E.g. there are channel lists. If you use them you'll see that regulations are not respected. You see nv2 improvements in 5.24 and then in 6.9. So there is not a lot of effort in this direction.
We wait until the first usable 802.11ac gear appears and then we will walk into this direction. This will be this year. If MT makes it happen we are happy, if not we have to shop elsewhere. EPMP is 11n based but proprietary. So I would wait at the moment. The expensive line has 256QAM but is expensive and the CPEs are weak so they suffer from poor NAT-Speed.
I meant 450 with expensive,256QAM and weak CPEs. ePMP is 11n based so something that MT should have done for a while now but is not willing/able to do. That's what will make me think MT will be late with 802.11ac too and will force us to go away with the wireless part of our network.Anything GPS sync will be proprietary, but they are working on an 802.11 mode for non-sync operations. The radios that have GPS are more expensive than many radios, but they work. None of the ePMP have 256 QAM, only standard N. Since you're not off to a good start, I'm not going to put a lot of faith into your NAT statement, but would be interested in hearing your observations.My guess: It will not happen. You would see much more progress in the wireless part of ROS if they hired a wireless engineer. And they need a wireless engineer to do such stuff like gps sync.The interest me too!
we will buy 8 pieces Cambium EPMP 1000, only because GPS Sync!
but we prefer mikrotik!
and wecan wait, if it does not take too long.
E.g. there are channel lists. If you use them you'll see that regulations are not respected. You see nv2 improvements in 5.24 and then in 6.9. So there is not a lot of effort in this direction.
We wait until the first usable 802.11ac gear appears and then we will walk into this direction. This will be this year. If MT makes it happen we are happy, if not we have to shop elsewhere. EPMP is 11n based but proprietary. So I would wait at the moment. The expensive line has 256QAM but is expensive and the CPEs are weak so they suffer from poor NAT-Speed.
Sorry for the misunderstanding. By expensive line, I thought you meant the GPS sync radios of the ePMP line as they're $500 vs. $100 for the integrated or standard connectorized versions.I meant 450 with expensive,256QAM and weak CPEs. ePMP is 11n based so something that MT should have done for a while now but is not willing/able to do. That's what will make me think MT will be late with 802.11ac too and will force us to go away with the wireless part of our network.
We're watching the market and see what happens.
Is the real issue with Mikrotik a lack of professional staff or does it go much further?...........................
My guess: It will not happen. You would see much more progress in the wireless part of ROS if they hired a wireless engineer. And they need a wireless engineer to do such stuff like gps sync.
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I can guess only. Looking at new products (CCR, ...) it looks like MT concentrates on Routing market. They seem to not have enough staff to do other things like Dude and Wireless in parallel. Looking at ePMP this is a thing MT could have done for a while. It is Atheros Stuff MT is used to for a much longer time.Is the real issue with Mikrotik a lack of professional staff or does it go much further?...........................
My guess: It will not happen. You would see much more progress in the wireless part of ROS if they hired a wireless engineer. And they need a wireless engineer to do such stuff like gps sync.
.....................................................
As a WISP I place reliability paramount, performance second, price third and cannot understand why Mikrotik does not concentrate its efforts at a market (wisp) which has long term customers that purchase in volume, if they produce the products requested.
And maybe "Made for Mikrotik" is another market consideration for Mikrotik when deciding what new features and products are introduced, this something other manufacturers don't have to worry about.
I can guess only. Looking at new products (CCR, ...) it looks like MT concentrates on Routing market. They seem to not have enough staff to do other things like Dude and Wireless in parallel. Looking at ePMP this is a thing MT could have done for a while. It is Atheros Stuff MT is used to for a much longer time.
I dont know the sales numbers MT has in different markets. May be they make more money doing routing stuff?
This is Antenna/Frequeny dependent. E.g. in 38GHz you can use the same frequency for ptp without sync when there are 30degree between.I just woke up. Maybe that has something do it with it. Maybe I can clarify. Lets say you have a tower with many backhauls. It would be nice to use the same frequency for all of them. For example using the new AR9882 chip. I wonder if that chip will allow us to sync the same frequency so the wave length dont match. So we can reuse the same frequency. The airfiber 24ghz does something like this. Correct me if I am wrong. But it works great in production for me.
Dallas
What sectors do you suggest?I had some time I thought I'd like ubnt products. But the more you work with it, the more you find it is limited and not performing to it`s promises.
Just a simple example; All ubnt devices have http access built in or some 'nobody really knows how it works' telnet.
But if you have to work on a network wher you have ip conflicts or no ip networking in place.... try to access your units...
Hell I'm glad MT has winbox. Very easy and very fast GUI that works without the need of IP connectivity.
"If you don't like it, don't buy it." Why not? Product lines are ever changing and to learn what is possible, and what not, you need to buy the stuff. So now and than I buy something from ubnt that looks interesting enough to do. If of use I use it, but so far most of their stuff end up in my waste bin...
Another example; Study the Airmax sector antennas and for what sector they are sold for. Than study their very poor quality radio patterns, and compare them agains any other vendor of antennes.
Where everybody uses 3dB antenna fading to tell you what working sector it has, ubnt uses 6dB. If you than try to interpolate it to 3dB you really see they are actually performing much poorer. Even according their own graphs!
And than look at their vertical beam range. Really not an antenna you want in a high tower or on a mountain top. It will have a very limited working pattern on the ground...
I tried 3 times to setup a sector with these Airmax sectors. 3 times I learned a cheaper sector from almost any other vendor that give me true data, is performing much better... so, if you want some cheap airmax sectors... I have to start digging in my bin....
But don't tell it on.. all my competitors work with their stuff. Which makes me King in network performances in my region....
Imho it is the technicians that will go for MT (or Motorola, Aruba, Cisco or whatever) where the sales dept. will go for ubnt. So who is smartest in the end... only time will tell....
No NV3, no GPS sync, no powerfull x core cpu, why?
GPS... in what use?eactly and thats Why PTP called "gap-filler" for most applications, thus.
GPS may work in some conditions, but may cause more troubles than help in really many others. and not always only technical, but legal troubles aswell.
more like "GPS? what for ??!"GPS... in what use?eactly and thats Why PTP called "gap-filler" for most applications, thus.
GPS may work in some conditions, but may cause more troubles than help in really many others. and not always only technical, but legal troubles aswell.
What a lot of bull is written here.... both in facts as in language usage....eactly and thats Why PTP called "gap-filler" for most applications, thus.
GPS may work in some conditions, but may cause more troubles than help in really many others. and not always only technical, but legal troubles aswell.
and no, second version of IEEE1588 is Much more accurate and easy to use. its used both over RF backhaul and fiber in Very many countries in cases when they can't or not wan't to use GPS, inlcuding very long links sometimes.
you may "beleive" in whatever you prefer, its your right, but networking had Nothing with Religion "in general".
full-scale GPS thing is may be bulkier in terns of silicon or front-end, but if you need just sync or paging/messaging - its much simpler to implement. in fact you will suprised to find How Much portion of devices with major SoC suppliers - may already had ninja-support within(*approved by NSA, NRO and CIA offices here and here, stamp you finger here and put you blood here, then*).
and so far 10ns-40ns time accuracy usual for PTP - i find more than enough for practical use in RF links or fiber.
if you need better instrumental accuracy, then probably GPS become not good source aswell(poor clocks in satellites, inaccurate software and other issues) and generally other kind and grade of sync/time suggested, Much more expensive, geenrally/sadly
The "bull" in my previous message was related to your language and some negatives GPS might have etc.so, basically GPS had no (real)advantages over PTP, right ? same feature, more overhead(both silicon and software), more troubles(technical, legal, others) without any kind of benefits.
marketing/PR bs you used in, wrapped - didn't counts for. "widely used". oh yeah. tell that to someone in places where not even one of Navstar sattelites seen
same 10ns accuracy, but no IP and political troubles, no need for extra-silicon or firmware quirks/hacks - what not to like in PTPv2, compared to GPS ? :=)
If only doing a local tower sync it would be a smarter Installation doing it together with Ethernet cabling.So. although other methods might be available. In cost/quality nothing beats the time signal of a GPS sattelite.
So you dont need GPS-Antenna. In most cases a local tower sync is enough for unlicensed bands as you cant
control signal from foreign devices on other towers.
I learned gps sync is not good to use in some environments. If you have bad weather it actually hurts your network more than helping. I found that using full duplex links that use seperate frequencies work the best. Now I am talking about backhauls. I am not talking about PTMP.
"with Ethernet cabling"? How do you see that? To interconnect the antennas? But you still need some clock to steer the sync process. So either you have a separate device with clock that is able to steer each of the connected radios. Or you must have each radio connected to a clock.If only doing a local tower sync it would be a smarter Installation doing it together with Ethernet cabling.So. although other methods might be available. In cost/quality nothing beats the time signal of a GPS sattelite.
So you dont need GPS-Antenna. In most cases a local tower sync is enough for unlicensed bands as you cant
control signal from foreign devices on other towers.
So, yet again the option of a separate time measurement device is needed. >>> GPS.
Now I don't know how the gps in ubnt for instance are connected to the radios but I presume with coax to eliminate radio interferences on the signal. Better would be fibre but yeah, I presume it can be done with (shielded) utp cable as well...
Anything short of a CCR1009 is getting to be too little for a tower router.Well, he ho, if MT would come out with something like a rb750sync I wouldn't mind. But with some other improvements and wishes I vent on this forum re upgrade of the rb750UP and now putting sync also in it would probably outprice these boxes. Let alone that if we would have something like MT-only sync on a single tower, we will still fall back towards the other disadvantages that sync is not making it the holy grail for wisps. (other wisp's devices, other nearbye towers, private radio's etc.)
But yeah, in towers full of your own MT stuff I'll guess syncing all these radios might improve overall performance of your radios. How MT actually can do it is up to them. I think GPS based technology will be the cheapest and fastest implementable. But maybe they have smart technicians that can do better than that......
I wasn't real sure what you were meaning by PTP, but I see that it's just an updated version of 1588. 1588 is fairly common.thats why aside GPS sync and NTP is PTP introduced to fill gap between.
usually nodes in Telco - support Both GPS and PTP for obvious reasons. and control nodes and routers - rely on SNTP aswell.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precision_Time_Protocol meant. other PTP protocols exist, but Wastly less popular, as i can see)
What a lot of bull is written here.... both in facts as in language usage....eactly and thats Why PTP called "gap-filler" for most applications, thus.
GPS may work in some conditions, but may cause more troubles than help in really many others. and not always only technical, but legal troubles aswell.
and no, second version of IEEE1588 is Much more accurate and easy to use. its used both over RF backhaul and fiber in Very many countries in cases when they can't or not wan't to use GPS, inlcuding very long links sometimes.
you may "beleive" in whatever you prefer, its your right, but networking had Nothing with Religion "in general".
full-scale GPS thing is may be bulkier in terns of silicon or front-end, but if you need just sync or paging/messaging - its much simpler to implement. in fact you will suprised to find How Much portion of devices with major SoC suppliers - may already had ninja-support within(*approved by NSA, NRO and CIA offices here and here, stamp you finger here and put you blood here, then*).
and so far 10ns-40ns time accuracy usual for PTP - i find more than enough for practical use in RF links or fiber.
if you need better instrumental accuracy, then probably GPS become not good source aswell(poor clocks in satellites, inaccurate software and other issues) and generally other kind and grade of sync/time suggested, Much more expensive, geenrally/sadly
1. "GPS is a much more accurate timing signal than radio based time transmissions. The GPS timing signal is typically accurate to 10 nanoseconds. However, most gps receivers lose timing accuracy in the interpretation of the signal. A typical GPS receiver with a pulse per second output can provide an accuracy of 100 nanoseconds to 1 microsecond.", just google it and you get this info for instance...
2. The time doesn't have to be accurate for sync purposes, it has to be the same 'heartbeat' all over the sync'd units. And the start 'beat' has to be the same. Any drift in time between sync'd units have to be corrected by a clock that has the same 'beat' for all devices in same sync. For this purpose GPS works perfect.
3. GPS equipment is widely available and used. There are probably more GPS devices nowadays than wifi..... meaning the knowledge to work with GPS and use it for any kind of purpose should be around and widely available. If MT has to 'invent their own new wheel' to use it, they will have no problems finding examples or just buy that technology from any specialist. The wide availability and use also makes it cheap.
Anybody writing "pool clocks in satellites" is not having any understanding in how satellites actually work. Without a atomic clock reference they can't work for what they are made for and become useless. So a 'poor clock satellite' is a non existing thing. It would be junk flying around the globe....
Imho it serves no purpose to discuss any other form of time sync than GPS because GPS time is almost the most accurate time mankind can produce and nowadays probably also be far the cheapest clock mankind can buy....
Let us better try to persuade MT to start making GPS sync available in their product line.
With new profesional antennas on the market (RF elements to name one) and the new 720Mhz cpu high power 802.11ac NetMetals we already reduced interferences a lot in our networks while at the same time increased average throughput to clients and/or can serve more clients per AP.
All we want now is sync so we can re-use more frequencies, special on towers where we have several backhauls and AP's that all want their own frequency now.....
So MT, when can we hear something about GPS sync?
so, basically GPS had no (real)advantages over PTP, right ? same feature, more overhead(both silicon and software), more troubles(technical, legal, others) without any kind of benefits.
marketing/PR bs you used in, wrapped - didn't counts for. "widely used". oh yeah. tell that to someone in places where not even one of Navstar sattelites seen
same 10ns accuracy, but no IP and political troubles, no need for extra-silicon or firmware quirks/hacks - what not to like in PTPv2, compared to GPS ? :=)
I do not completely agree on that.Local only is a waste of time. Syncing multiple towers is critical.
I do not completely agree on that.Local only is a waste of time. Syncing multiple towers is critical.
I have one tower that has 5 backhauls and 5 AP's. Its amidst a valley with many more towers from me and others.
This tower of myself needs 5 x 40Mhz channel and 5 x 20Mhz channel. Each available channel will also receive some signal from distant radios.
I can make the whole thing work by using high to very high gain antennas to create narrow beams and very high signals (-35 to -45dBm range) and by using the professional dome or carrier class antennas from RF elementes for my AP's that are all shielded pretty much from co-tower interference and remote channel interferences. Clients are fit with antennas that at least receives -70dBm but preferrably below -65. But sometimes we need to change frequencies just because some tool decided to use same as me or very close to it. It's a hell of a puzzle to find a new frequency. I always also need to look at the other end not to interfere with radio's on my other towers....(And some clients are 'looking' at one tower but get signal from another tower at the same strength if it was an omni-cpe)
If I could use sync only in this tower it would make my life much easier because I could basically use just 2 (1x 40 and 1x 20Mhz band) or 4 frequencies instead of the 10 different ones I need now. If I could do one other tower of mine the same again I would free a lot of spectrum. Since I have 60+ radio's all in theoratical 'hearing' range where the competition adds another 40 or so spectrum is short. Off course it would be better to have more towers of mine sync'd but I can't do them all anyway since some are inter connected to at least two other towers of mine so I still need to play with the frequencies.
But the puzzle would become much simpler by one fully sync'd tower, much but less simpler with 2 towers, more but even lesser with 3 etc. etc.
Radwin has a local solution where gps can be added.I do not completely agree on that.Local only is a waste of time. Syncing multiple towers is critical.
I have one tower that has 5 backhauls and 5 AP's. Its amidst a valley with many more towers from me and others.
This tower of myself needs 5 x 40Mhz channel and 5 x 20Mhz channel. Each available channel will also receive some signal from distant radios.
I can make the whole thing work by using high to very high gain antennas to create narrow beams and very high signals (-35 to -45dBm range) and by using the professional dome or carrier class antennas from RF elementes for my AP's that are all shielded pretty much from co-tower interference and remote channel interferences. Clients are fit with antennas that at least receives -70dBm but preferrably below -65. But sometimes we need to change frequencies just because some tool decided to use same as me or very close to it. It's a hell of a puzzle to find a new frequency. I always also need to look at the other end not to interfere with radio's on my other towers....(And some clients are 'looking' at one tower but get signal from another tower at the same strength if it was an omni-cpe)
If I could use sync only in this tower it would make my life much easier because I could basically use just 2 (1x 40 and 1x 20Mhz band) or 4 frequencies instead of the 10 different ones I need now. If I could do one other tower of mine the same again I would free a lot of spectrum. Since I have 60+ radio's all in theoratical 'hearing' range where the competition adds another 40 or so spectrum is short. Off course it would be better to have more towers of mine sync'd but I can't do them all anyway since some are inter connected to at least two other towers of mine so I still need to play with the frequencies.
But the puzzle would become much simpler by one fully sync'd tower, much but less simpler with 2 towers, more but even lesser with 3 etc. etc.
Are there any products currently available in the fixed wireless market today local sync only? I think every form of fixed wireless sync in use today is GPS based. There must be a reason for that.
Maybe I should rephrase that. Anything other than GPS based sync as an end-game is a waste of time.
yep. 1588v2 as most widely-used and efficient version of PTP.I wasn't real sure what you were meaning by PTP, but I see that it's just an updated version of 1588. 1588 is fairly common.thats why aside GPS sync and NTP is PTP introduced to fill gap between.
usually nodes in Telco - support Both GPS and PTP for obvious reasons. and control nodes and routers - rely on SNTP aswell.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precision_Time_Protocol meant. other PTP protocols exist, but Wastly less popular, as i can see)
you must be new to Telco(outside NA), then.What legal and political issues? Most equipment can use GPS and GLONASS.
If GPS in devices in your jurisdiction is a crime, I think you have bigger issues ahead of you than ROS. GPS and GLONASS are supported in most every mobile phone.yep. 1588v2 as most widely-used and efficient version of PTP.I wasn't real sure what you were meaning by PTP, but I see that it's just an updated version of 1588. 1588 is fairly common.thats why aside GPS sync and NTP is PTP introduced to fill gap between.
usually nodes in Telco - support Both GPS and PTP for obvious reasons. and control nodes and routers - rely on SNTP aswell.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precision_Time_Protocol meant. other PTP protocols exist, but Wastly less popular, as i can see)
and yes its "fairly common"(in fact - MORE than GPS sync in telco), but NOT supported by RouterOS aswell as GPS sync, yet.
you must be new to Telco(outside NA), then.What legal and political issues? Most equipment can use GPS and GLONASS.
in many installations - both having Navstar enabled or even having GPS-enabled devices in infrastructure - is crime.
same ~ about GLONASS in NATO-controlled countries/regions.
its also somewhat not EMI-resistant much(atleast civilian channels) to be used in surprisingly big portion of installations.
so, no, GPS isn't "magic bullet" or even thing you can rely on. its simply to use(if you had support for or had Rights to use it), but its only advantage, which not worth it, basically, cuz 1588v2 imply same 10ns sync accuracy without all that headache.
That's a stupid statement.you must be new to Telco(outside NA), then.What legal and political issues? Most equipment can use GPS and GLONASS.
in many installations - both having Navstar enabled or even having GPS-enabled devices in infrastructure - is crime.
same ~ about GLONASS in NATO-controlled countries/regions.
its also somewhat not EMI-resistant much(atleast civilian channels) to be used in surprisingly big portion of installations.
so, no, GPS isn't "magic bullet" or even thing you can rely on. its simply to use(if you had support for or had Rights to use it), but its only advantage, which not worth it, basically, cuz 1588v2 imply same 10ns sync accuracy without all that headache.
Still more emotions that facts......can we're strip emotions or personan offences and talk bout topic and facts:
1588v2: no need for extra-silicon, simpler code, no IP and political issues, less "blackboxed" things in solution
gps sync: "simplicity" (ony When/IF someone invest TREMENDOUS efforts into implementing support of it)
same 10ns accuracy, same usage, comparable adoption(some sites - used both).
so far, all BTS/base stations, fiber backbone, p2p and p2mp RF links - used 1588v2 as far as i can see, including those with GPS-sync enabled hardware and firmware and disabled GPS sync.
you opinions - maybe differ from mine aswell as experience, but thats not give you "supernatural" and exclusive ability/super-power to both opress others or dictate/manipulat mikrotik devlopers about their priorities and roadmap.
if you like - mikrotik products - fine. if you don't - there is plenty of other vendors on market.
you had you opinion, you shared it, you heard. and even had feedback(sometimes "nicer" than mine and less polar), but there is NO need(in my opinion) to out-cru/shot about again and again and again, trolling others.
The whole thread is based on ... nothing. MT never did GPS and never built a radio. UBNT hired a crew of radio experts from Motorola to do this radio. It is far superior to standard WiFi based radios. You get most out of small channels and it performs very good with other radios near by as it has better neighboring channel rejection.Still more emotions that facts......can we're strip emotions or personan offences and talk bout topic and facts:
1588v2: no need for extra-silicon, simpler code, no IP and political issues, less "blackboxed" things in solution
gps sync: "simplicity" (ony When/IF someone invest TREMENDOUS efforts into implementing support of it)
same 10ns accuracy, same usage, comparable adoption(some sites - used both).
so far, all BTS/base stations, fiber backbone, p2p and p2mp RF links - used 1588v2 as far as i can see, including those with GPS-sync enabled hardware and firmware and disabled GPS sync.
you opinions - maybe differ from mine aswell as experience, but thats not give you "supernatural" and exclusive ability/super-power to both opress others or dictate/manipulat mikrotik devlopers about their priorities and roadmap.
if you like - mikrotik products - fine. if you don't - there is plenty of other vendors on market.
you had you opinion, you shared it, you heard. and even had feedback(sometimes "nicer" than mine and less polar), but there is NO need(in my opinion) to out-cru/shot about again and again and again, trolling others.
To what are you actually referring? A specific radio? Or just their radios in general? And what is the connection to the sync issue in making this last remark?UBNT hired a crew of radio experts from Motorola to do this radio. It is far superior to standard WiFi based radios. You get most out of small channels and it performs very good with other radios near by as it has better neighboring channel rejection.
Airfiber as said in $subject. The other radios are atheros based.To what are you actually referring? A specific radio? Or just their radios in general? And what is the connection to the sync issue in making this last remark?UBNT hired a crew of radio experts from Motorola to do this radio. It is far superior to standard WiFi based radios. You get most out of small channels and it performs very good with other radios near by as it has better neighboring channel rejection.
thats basically all of them, enumerated, plus portion of cellphone infrastructure gear/stations manufacturers.UBNT first tried GPS sync on their AirMax radios and failed. They hired away some of the Motorola crew and got GPS sync right with their AirFiber line.
Cambium does GPS sync on Atheros chips as does Radwin. I know others have as well. Mimosa is doing it with Quantenna chips.
thats basically all of them, enumerated, plus portion of cellphone infrastructure gear/stations manufacturers.UBNT first tried GPS sync on their AirMax radios and failed. They hired away some of the Motorola crew and got GPS sync right with their AirFiber line.
Cambium does GPS sync on Atheros chips as does Radwin. I know others have as well. Mimosa is doing it with Quantenna chips.
so as you can see "GPS sync" isn't "magic bullet", or widely-adopted in telco/it.
how much "afwully large" was translated to "common people's math" ?thats basically all of them, enumerated, plus portion of cellphone infrastructure gear/stations manufacturers.UBNT first tried GPS sync on their AirMax radios and failed. They hired away some of the Motorola crew and got GPS sync right with their AirFiber line.
Cambium does GPS sync on Atheros chips as does Radwin. I know others have as well. Mimosa is doing it with Quantenna chips.
so as you can see "GPS sync" isn't "magic bullet", or widely-adopted in telco/it.
That's an awfully large percent of units shipped in our industry.
I would guess well over a third, possibly even a half.how much "afwully large" was translated to "common people's math" ?thats basically all of them, enumerated, plus portion of cellphone infrastructure gear/stations manufacturers.
so as you can see "GPS sync" isn't "magic bullet", or widely-adopted in telco/it.
That's an awfully large percent of units shipped in our industry.
"7%"? "12%"? i don't think its bigger than 20%. ~avg
and several GPSsyn-enabled/aware devices/solutions - installed/used without it as i explained above/before for reasons told before aswell and some others.
Besides, it is not even true. PTP (1588) is only a way to distribute time sync over ethernet, and those installationsHowever, I'm done with this GPS vs. 1588 thing.... it's taking away from the core issue of Mikrotik not having sync.
yep. regardles how its carried - over fiber, copper, RF or open air lazer links - its "just works".Besides, it is not even true. PTP (1588) is only a way to distribute time sync over ethernet, and those installationsHowever, I'm done with this GPS vs. 1588 thing.... it's taking away from the core issue of Mikrotik not having sync.
contain a reference clock that itself is usually synchronized to GPS. So you can call a PTP installation GPS synced as well,
PTP is only a distribution mechanism not a synchronization source. Similar to a distributed PPS line.
thats quite short and quite old article which despite highlight basic issues and conclusions about sync and PTP, referenced only for obsolete version of 802.1AS and PTP IEEE 1588v1. IEEE1588v2 had Much better parformance and had Resolved most of issues restricted its usage as main PTP for both 3G, LTE and 5g networks aswell as long-link fiber and open air laser links