beautypg.com

Best practices guide – Polycom H340 User Manual

Page 6

background image

6

© 2010 Polycom, Inc. All rights reserved. POLYCOM

®

, the Polycom “Triangles” logo and the names and marks associated with Polycom’s products are trademarks and/or service marks of Polycom, Inc.

and are registered and/or common law marks in the United States and various other countries. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners. No portion hereof may be reproduced or

transmitted in any form or by any means for any purpose other than the recipient’s personal use without the express written permission of Polycom

Deploying SpectraLink e340, h340 and i640 Wireless Telephones

BEST PRACTICES GUIDE

October 2010

to allow lower transmission rates in order to maximize coverage area. If a site requires configuring the APs to only

negotiate at the higher rates, the layout of the WLAN must account for the reduced coverage and additional APs will

be required to ensure seamless overlapping coverage.

SpectraLink handsets perform Dynamic Channel Assessment (DCA) in between the transmission of packets to learn

about neighboring APs. It takes about one second for a DCA cycle to complete for a standard three channel

deployment for 802.11b. In order to ensure a DCA cycle can complete within the assessment area (see Figure 1), a

person moving through the assessment area must be within the area for at least 4-5 seconds to make sure the DCA

starts and ends within the assessment area. Failure to complete the DCA cycle within the assessment area can lead

to lost network connectivity resulting in a hard handoff, lost audio, choppy audio or potentially a dropped call.

Figure 1 - Dynamic Channel Assessment (DCA)

The handset compares the signal strength of neighboring APs to determine whether to roam from the current AP. In

order to roam, the handset has to determine whether other APs are either five decibels (dB) (for any first attempt

associating with an AP) or ten decibels stronger (to roam back to the previous AP) than the current AP’s signal. In

most cases the handset only needs five decibels of signal difference between APs to make a decision to roam. But to

prevent ‘ping-pong’ behavior the separation needs to be ten decibels higher for the handset to return to the

previously associated AP. This behavior requires that the assessment area must have at least a ten decibel

difference to enable good roaming behavior for all cases.

Corners and doorways pose a particular design issue. The shadowing of corners can cause steep drop-offs in signal

coverage. Make sure to have adequate cell overlap at and around corners so that the audio stream is not impacted

by a user going around corners. This may require placement of AP at corner locations to ensure appropriate cover

and prevent RF shadows.

This manual is related to the following products: