CTS 057: Hallway Design

Clear To Send: Wireless Network Engineering - A podcast by Rowell Dionicio and François Vergès - Mondays

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In this episode I want to talk about Hallway Design or lack of it. This was inspired by a #WIFIQ that Lee Badman threw out there. I’ll tell you now, I don’t like hallway design. What is Hallway Design? In a #WIFIQ thread, Jake Snyder said, “There is a difference between sticking APs in the hallway and hallway design.” And that’s true. He makes a very good point. The former is the act of randomly placing them in the hallway in hopes that you get fantastic coverage for the users in the rooms. Negatives of Hallway Wi-Fi * Low SNR * Coverage holes * Negative RRM effect * Not designed for capacity * No one working in the hallway * Transmit power set at the highest if manually configuring * Channel overlap * Poor roaming decisions * Lots of omnidirectional APs in the hallway Designing Wi-Fi With Hallway In Mind * Plan on the number of APs that will be placed in hallway * Important to help facilitate roaming * Signal propagates far in the hallway * Lower transmit power or use thresholds * Number of APs that can hear each other will have a negative effect * Consider RRM in the design * Transmit power levels * Set thresholds – don’t allow the AP to go too high or too low * Place APs where the users are * Higher SNR * Better data rates * Plan for roaming * Wi-Fi calling now available, users will walk out of their workspace * Use building obstacles to help attenuate the signal * Use a proper channel plan Links and Resources * Podcast Topic Survey – www.cleartosend.net/survey * What is SNR * Article by Blake Krone – Love Thy Patch – Read it on Airheads, http://community.arubanetworks.com/t5/Technology-Blog/Love-Thy-Patch/ba-p/270937

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