Advanced, Two leds, Three leds – Ubiquiti Networks Rockeac User Manual
Page 18: Four leds, Six leds
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Chapter 3: Wireless
airOS®7 User Guide
Ubiquiti Networks, Inc.
Note:
The “-” character is outside of the field and
should not be used for the signal strength value
specification.
The following tables list the default threshold values for
devices with two, three, four, or six LEDs.
Two LEDs
LED
Default Threshold Value
1
-94 dBm
2
-65 dBm
Three LEDs
LED
Default Threshold Value
1
- 94 dBm
2
-77 dBm
3
-65 dBm
Four LEDs
LED
Default Threshold Value
1
-94 dBm
2
-80 dBm
3
-73 dBm
4
-65 dBm
Six LEDs
LED
Default Threshold Value
1
-94 dBm
2
-88 dBm
3
-82 dBm
4
-77 dBm
5
-71 dBm
6
-65 dBm
Advanced
The Advanced section configures advanced wireless
settings. Only technically advanced users who have
sufficient knowledge about WLAN technology should use
the advanced wireless settings. These settings should not
be changed unless you know the effects the changes will
have on the device.
Aggregation Frames
This option allows the device to
send multiple frames per single access to the medium
by combining frames together into one larger frame. It
creates the larger frame by combining smaller frames
with the same physical source, destination endpoints, and
traffic class (QoS) into one large frame with a common
MAC header. To specify the number of frames that will
be combined in the new larger frame, use the slider. The
default is 32.
airMAX Station Priority
(Available in Station PTMP mode
only.) It defines the number of time slots (or amount of
airtime) assigned to each client. By default the AP gives
all active clients the same amount of time. However, if the
clients are configured with different priorities, the AP will
give clients more or less time, depending on the priority.
Note:
airMAX Station Priority only functions in
Station PTMP mode only.
airMAX Station Priority options include:
•
High
4 time slots (4:1 ratio)
•
Medium
3 time slots (3:1 ratio)
•
Base
2 time slots (Default setting for clients; 2:1 ratio)
•
Low
1 time slot (1:1 ratio)
Clients with a higher priority have access to more of the
AP’s airtime, providing higher possible throughput and
lower latency when sharing with other active clients.
For example, if there are 3 clients, 1 set to Base, 1 set to
Medium, and 1 set to High, the Base client will get 2 time
slots, the Medium client will get 3 time slots, and the High
client will get 4 time slots.