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Summary of Contents for Acrowave AcroLAN AAP-1100E Series

  • Page 2 Connect The Power Pack ………………………………….. 17 Connect Serial Cable ……………………………………….. 18 Open Terminal Program ……………………………………. 19 Configuration Change ………………………………………. 21 2.3 Verifying the Operation of the Acrowave Access Point ……….28 Chapter 3 Access Point Management ……………………….……..30 3.1 Starting a Configuration Tool………………………………………31 Access Point Connection.
  • Page 4 AcroLAN Access Point User’s Guide Version 2000.12.10 Appendix Cell Planning (Radio Range) …………………………….. 46 Appendix A Appendix B Technical Specification …………………………………… 48 Appendix C Channel Allocation ……………………………..…………. 50 Copyright© Acrowave Systems 2000 DOC – xxx - yyy Page 3 of 3...
  • Page 5 You can determine whether your equipment is causing interference by turning it off. If the interference stops, the Acrowave equipment or one of its peripheral devices probably caused it. If the equipment causes interference to radio or television reception, try to correct the interference by using one or more of the following measures: •...
  • Page 6 POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. AcroLAN, the Acrowave logo are registered trademarks of Acrowave Systems Co., Ltd. or its affiliates in the Korea, U.S. and certain other countries. All other trademarks mentioned in this document are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership relationship between Acrowave and any of its resellers.
  • Page 7: Chapter 1 Introduction To The Wireless Lan

    WLAN and the wired network infrastructure. A single access point can support a small group of users and can function within a range of less than one hundred Copyright© Acrowave Systems 2000 DOC – xxx - yyy Page 6 of 6...
  • Page 8 (NIC), and an access point (AP), which acts as a bridge between the wireless and wired networks. An access point usually Copyright© Acrowave Systems 2000 DOC – xxx - yyy Page 7 of 7...
  • Page 9 Independent Basic Service Set (IBSS) Figure 1. Ad Hoc Mode " Infrastructure Mode In infrastructure mode, the wireless network consists of at least one access Copyright© Acrowave Systems 2000 DOC – xxx - yyy Page 8 of 8...
  • Page 10 They handle low power signals and “hand off” users as they roam through a given geographic area. The 802.11 MAC layer is responsible for how a client associates with an access point. Copyright© Acrowave Systems 2000 DOC – xxx - yyy Page 9 of 9...
  • Page 11 “channel reuse,” taking care to set up each access point on an 802.11 DSSS channel that does not overlap with a channel used by a neighboring access point. Backbone Network Access Point (AP) Inter-Cell Roaming Figure 3. Roaming Copyright© Acrowave Systems 2000 DOC – xxx - yyy Page 10 of 10...