Cambium Networks 50450M 5GHz Point to MultiPoint Multi User MIMO Access Point User Manual USERS MANUAL PART4

Cambium Networks Limited 5GHz Point to MultiPoint Multi User MIMO Access Point USERS MANUAL PART4

USERS MANUAL PART4

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Chapter 9: Operation
System information
Link Quality tab
The Link Quality tab provides information on the Subscriber’s UID, Link quality, Downlink, Uplink,
Beacon, ReReg, and the Uptime.
This data is refreshed based on the Link Quality Update Interval parameter configuration under the
Sessions Status page.
The Link Quality tab displays the calculated Link Quality Indicator (LQI) for the configured interval (Link
Quality Update Interval parameter).
Table 217 Link Quality tab attributes
Attribute
Meaning
Subscriber
See Table 212 on page 9-20.
Link Quality Indicator
This field displays quality of the link. It is calculated based on receive power,
modulation rate, re-registrations and beacon percentage.
Downlink - Quality
Index
This field displays the downlink quality in percentage. It is calculated based
on Downlink receiver power, modulation rate, and beacon percentage.
Downlink -Actual
Average Rate
This field displays the average Downlink modulation rate. For 450m, this field
specifies the SU-MIMO Modulation Rate.
Downlink - Expected
Rate
This field displays the expected modulation rate based on receive power in
Downlink.
Uplink - Quality Index
This field displays the uplink quality in percentage. It is calculated based on
Uplink receiver power and modulation rate.
Uplink -Actual
Average Rate
This field displays the average Uplink modulation rate.
Uplink - Expected
Rate
This field displays the expected modulation rate based on receive power in
Uplink.
Page 9-28
Chapter 9: Operation
System information
Beacon - Quality
Index
This field displays the beacon quality index. It is calculated based on beacon
percentage.
Beacon - Received
Percent
This field displays the received beacon percentage.
Re-Reg - Quality
Index
This field displays the re-registration quality. It is calculated based on the reregistration count.
Re-Reg Count
This field displays the number of re-registrations.
Uptime
This field displays the uptime of the device.
Viewing Remote Subscribers
This page allows to view the web pages of registered SMs or BHS over the RF link. To view the pages for
a selected SM/BHS, click its link. The General Status page of the SM opens.
Figure 193 Remote Subscribers page of AP
Interpreting messages in the Event Log
Each line in the Event Log of a module Home page begins with a time and date stamp. However, some of
these lines wrap as a combined result of window width, browser preferences and line length. You may
find this tab easiest to use if you expand the window till all lines are shown beginning with time and date
stamp.
Time and Date Stamp
The time and date stamp reflect one of the following:

GPS time and date directly or indirectly received from the CMM4.

NTP time and date from a NTP server (CMM4 may serve as an NTP server)

The running time and date that you have set in the Time & Date web page.
Page 9-29
Chapter 9: Operation
System information
Note
In the Time & Date web page, if you have left any time field or date field unset and clicked
the Set Time and Date button, then the time and date default to 00:00:00 UT :
01/01/00.
A reboot causes the preset time to pause or, in some cases, to run in reverse. Additionally, a
power cycle resets the running time and date to the default 00:00:00 UT : 01/01/00.
Thus, whenever either a reboot or a power cycle has occurred, must reset the time and date
in the Time & Date web page of any module that is not set to receive sync.
Event Log Data Collection
The collection of event data continues through reboots and power cycles. When the buffer allowance for
event log data is reached, the system adds new data into the log and discards an identical amount of the
oldest data.
Each line that contains the expression WatchDog flags an event that was both:

considered by the system software to have been an exception

recorded in the preceding line.
Conversely, a Fatal Error () message flags an event that is recorded in the next line. Some exceptions
and fatal errors may be significant and require either operator action or technical support.
Figure 194 Event log data
Messages that Flag Abnormal Events
The messages listed below flag abnormal events and, case by case, may signal the need for corrective
action or technical support.
Table 218 Event Log messages for abnormal events
Event Message
Meaning
Page 9-30
Chapter 9: Operation
System information
Expected LUID = 6
Actual LUID = 7
Something is interfering with the control messaging of the module. Also
ensure that you are using shielded cables to minimize interference. Consider
trying different frequency options to eliminate or reduce interference.
FatalError()
The event recorded on the line immediately beneath this message triggered
the Fatal Error ().
Loss of GPS Sync
Pulse
Module has lost GPS sync signal.
Machine Check
Exception
This is a symptom of a possible hardware failure. If this is a recurring
message, begin the RMA process for the module.
RcvFrmNum =
0x00066d
ExpFrmNum =
0x000799
Something is interfering with the control messaging of the module. Also
ensure that you are using shielded cables to minimize interference. Consider
trying different frequency options to eliminate or reduce interference.
System Reset
Exception -- External
Hard Reset
The unit lost power or was power cycled.
System Reset
Exception -- External
Hard Reset WatchDog
The event recorded on the preceding line triggered this WatchDog message.
Messages that Flag Normal Events
The messages listed below record normal events and typically do not signal a need for any corrective
action or technical support.
Table 219 Event Log messages for normal events
Event Message
Meaning
Acquired GPS Sync
Pulse.
Module has acquired GPS sync signal.
FPGA Features
Type of encryption.
FPGA Version
FPGA (JBC) version in the module.
GPS Date/Time Set
Module is now on GPS time.
Reboot from Webpage
Module was rebooted from management interface.
Software Boot Version
Boot version in the module.
Software Version
The software release and authentication method for the unit.
System Log Cleared
Event log was manually cleared.
Page 9-31
Chapter 9: Operation
System information
Viewing the Network Interface
In any module, the LAN1 Network Interface section of this tab displays the defined Internet Protocol
scheme for the Ethernet interface to the module. In SM/BHS devices, this page also provides an RF
Public Network Interface section, which displays the Internet Protocol scheme defined for network access
through the master device (AP/BHM).
Figure 195 Network Interface tab of the AP
Figure 196 Network Interface tab of the SM
Viewing the Layer 2 Neighbors
In the Layer 2 Neighbors tab, a module reports any device from which it has received a message in Link
Layer Discovery Protocol within the previous two minutes. Given the frequency of LLDP messaging, this
means that the connected device will appear in this tab 30 seconds after it is booted and remain until two
minutes after its shutdown.
Figure 197 Layer 2 Neighbors page
Page 9-32
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
System statistics
This section describes how to use the system statistics pages to manage the performance of the
PMP/PTP 450 Platform Family link.
Viewing the Scheduler statistics
The Statistics > Scheduler page is applicable for all modules (AP/SM/BHM/BHS) and the parameters
are displayed as shown below:
Table 220 Scheduler tab attributes
Page 9-33
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Attribute
Meaning
Transmit Unicast Data
Count
Total amount of unicast packets transmitted from the radio
Transmit Broadcast
Data Count
Total amount of broadcast packets transmitted from the radio
Transmit Multicast
Data Count
Total amount of multicast packets transmitted by the radio
Receive Unicast Data
Count
Total amount of unicast packets received by the radio
Receive Broadcast
Data Count
Total amount of broadcast packets received by the radio
Receive Multicast
Data Count
Total amount of multicast packets received by the radio
Transmit Control
Count
Amount of radio control type messages transmitted (registration requests and
grants, etc.)
Receive Control Count
Amount of radio control type messages received (registration requests and
grants, etc.)
In Sync Count
Number of times the radio has acquired sync. When GPS synchronization is
used it is number of times GPS sync acquired. For the SM, it is the number of
times the SM successfully obtained sync with an AP.
Out of Sync Count
Number of times the radio lost same sync lock
Overrun Count
Number of times FPGA frame has overrun its TX Frame
Underrun Count
Number of times FPGAs TX Frame aborted prematurely
Receive Corrupt Data
Count
Number of times a corrupt packet has been received at the FPGA.
Receive Corrupt
Control Data Count
Number of times a corrupt control data packet has been received at the
FPGA.
Receive Bad
Broadcast Control
Count
Number of times the radio has received an invalid control message via
broadcast (SM only).
Rcv LT Start
Number of Link Test Start messages received. A remote radio has requested
that this radio start a link test to it.
Rcv LT Start HS
Number of Link Test Start Handshake messages received. This radio
requested that a remote radio start a link test and the remote radio has sent a
handshake back acknowledging the start.
Page 9-34
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Rcv LT Result
This radio received Link Test results from the remote radio under test. When
this radio initiates a link test, the remote radio will send its results to this radio
for display.
Xmt LT Result
This radio transmitted its link test results to the remote radio under test. When
the remote radio initiates a link test, this radio must send its results to the
remote radio for display there.
Frame Too Big
This statistics indicates the number of packets received and processed by the
radios which were greater than max packet size 1700 bytes.
Bad Acknowledgment
This statistics indicates the number of packets received as bad
acknowledgment. It is for engineering use only.
Bad Fragment
This statistic indicates number of fragments tagged internally as bad. It is for
engineering use only.
VC Clear Error Count
This statistic indicates number of times VC clear failed.
Rx No Buffer Count
Currently unused
Scheduler Error
This error is incremented when the scheduler cannot send or get scheduled
to send a packet. t is also general called a “VC Error”.
Viewing list of Registration Failures statistics
SM Registration Failures page of AP
The SM Registration Failures tab identifies SMs that have recently attempted and failed to register to this
AP. With its time stamps, these instances may suggest that a new or transient source of interference
exists.
Table 221 SM Registration Failures page attributes - AP
Attribute
Meaning
Status 17 Flag 0
No response was received from the AAA server and hence SM is trying to
send a session request again.
Page 9-35
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
BHS Registration Failures page of BHM
Table 222 BHS Registration Failures page attributes - BHM
Attribute
Meaning
Status 17 Flag 0
No response was received from the AAA server and hence SM is trying to
send a session request again.
There is a list of flags from 0 to 20 as shown in Table 223 and the “Flags” can be ignored.
Table 223 Flags status
Flag
Meaning
Flag
Meaning
Normal
11
AP Lite Limit Reached
Out of Range
12
Only Ver 9.5+ Allowed
No Luids
13
Temporary Data VC for AAA
BH ReRange
14
AAA Authentication Failure
Auth Fail
15
Registration Grant Reject
Encrypt Fail
16
Blank
Power Adjust
17
AAA Session Retry
No VCs
18
AAA Reauth Failure
Reserve VC Fail
19
RegReq at zero power
Activate VC Fail
20
RegReq no time ref
10
Hi VC Setup Fail
Page 9-36
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Interpreting Bridging Table statistics
If NAT (network address translation) is not active on the SM/BHS, then the Bridging Table page provides
the MAC address of all devices that are attached to registered SMs/BHS (identified by LUIDs).
The SM/BHS management MAC addresses are also added in bridge table upon SMs/BHS registration.
These entries will be remove automically from the table once SMs/BHS is de-registered. This alleviates
the arp cache > bridge cache timeout problems.
The bridging table allows data to be sent to the correct module as follows:

For the AP/BHM, the uplink is from RF to Ethernet. Thus, when a packet arrives in the RF interface to
the AP/BHM, the AP/BHM reads the MAC address from the inbound packet and creates a bridging
table entry of the source MAC address on the other end of the RF interface.

For the SM/BHS, the uplink is from Ethernet to RF. Thus, when a packet arrives in the Ethernet
interface to one of these modules, the module reads the MAC address from the inbound packet and
creates a bridging table entry of the source MAC address on the other end of the Ethernet interface.
Figure 198 Bridging Table page
The Bridging Table supports up to 4096 entries.
Interpreting Translation Table statistics
When Translation Bridging is enabled in the AP, each SM keeps a table mapping MAC addresses of
devices attached to the AP to IP addresses, as otherwise the mapping of end-user MAC addresses to IP
addresses is lost. (When Translation Bridging is enabled, an AP modifies all uplink traffic originating from
registered SMs such that the source MAC address of every packet is changed to that of the SM which
bridged the packet in the uplink direction.)
Page 9-37
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Figure 199 Translation Table page of SM
Interpreting Ethernet statistics
The Statistics > Ethernet page reports TCP throughput and error information for the Ethernet connection
of the module. This page is applicable for all modules (AP/SM/BHM/BHS).
The Ethernet page displays the following fields.
Table 224 Ethernet tab attributes
Attribute
Meaning
Ethernet Link
Detected
1 indicates that an Ethernet link is established to the radio, 0 indicates that no
Ethernet link is established
Page 9-38
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Ethernet Link Lost
This field indicates a count of how many times the Ethernet link was lost.
Undersized Toss
Count
This field indicates the number of packets that were too small to process and
hence discarded.
inoctets Count
This field displays how many octets were received on the interface, including
those that deliver framing information.
inucastpkts Count
This field displays how many inbound subnetwork-unicast packets were
delivered to a higher-layer protocol.
Innucastpkts Count
This field displays how many inbound non-unicast (subnetwork-broadcast or
subnetwork-multicast) packets were delivered to a higher-layer protocol.
indiscards Count
This field displays how many inbound packets were discarded without errors
that would have prevented their delivery to a higher-layer protocol. (Some of
these packets may have been discarded to increase buffer space.)
inerrors Count
This field displays how many inbound packets contained errors that prevented
their delivery to a higher-layer protocol.
inunknownprotos
Count
This field displays how many inbound packets were discarded because of an
unknown or unsupported protocol.
outoctets Count
This field displays how many octets were transmitted out of the interface,
including those that deliver framing information.
outucastpkts Count
This field displays how many packets for which the higher-level protocols
requested transmission to a subnetwork-unicast address. The number
includes those that were discarded or not sent.
outnucastpkts Count
This field displays how many packets for which the higher-level protocols
requested transmission to a non-unicast (subnetwork-broadcast or
subnetwork-multicast) address. The number includes those that were
discarded or not sent.
outdiscards Count
This field displays how many outbound packets were discarded without errors
that would have prevented their transmission. (Some of these packets may
have been discarded to increase buffer space.)
outerrrors Count
This field displays how many outbound packets contained errors that
prevented their transmission.
RxBabErr
This field displays how many receiver babble errors occurred.
TxHbErr
This field displays how many transmit heartbeat errors have occurred.
EthBusErr
This field displays how many Ethernet bus errors occurred on the Ethernet
controller.
CRCError
This field displays how many CRC errors occurred on the Ethernet controller.
RcvFifoNoBuf
This field displays the number of times no FIFO buffer space was able to be
allocated.
Page 9-39
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Note:
PMP 450 AP running in Gigabit Ethernet Mode displays error
“RcfFifoNoBuf” which indicates packet loss.
For 450 AP platforms, if ethernet auto-negotation is set to
Gigabit, then it is a known limitation that “RcfFifoNoBuf” error will
be seen. This issue is not seen if autonegotation is set to
100Mbps or lower, and the issue is not seen on 450i or 450m
AP's.
RxOverrun
This field displays how many receiver overrun errors occurred on the Ethernet
controller.
Late Collision
This field displays how many late collisions occurred on the Ethernet
controller. A normal collision occurs during the first 512 bits of the frame
transmission. A collision that occurs after the first 512 bits is considered a late
collision.
Caution
A late collision is a serious network problem because the frame being
transmitted is discarded. A late collision is most commonly caused by
a mismatch between duplex configurations at the ends of a link
segment.
RetransLimitExp
This field displays how many times the retransmit limit has expired.
TxUnderrun
This field displays how many transmission-underrun errors occurred on the
Ethernet controller.
CarSenseLost
This field displays how many carrier sense lost errors occurred on the
Ethernet controller.
No Carrier
This field displays how many no carrier errors occurred on the Ethernet
controller.
Page 9-40
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Interpreting RF Control Block statistics
The Statistics > Radio page is applicable for all module (AP/SM/BHM/BHS). The Radio page of the
Statistics page displays the following fields.
Table 225 Radio (Statistics) page attributes – RF Control Block
Attribute
Meaning
inoctets Count
This field displays how many octets were received on the interface, including
those that deliver framing information.
inucastpkts Count
This field displays how many inbound subnetwork-unicast packets were
delivered to a higher-layer protocol.
Innucastpkts Count
This field displays how many inbound non-unicast (subnetwork-broadcast or
subnetwork-multicast) packets were delivered to a higher-layer protocol.
indiscards Count
This field displays how many inbound packets were discarded without errors
that would have prevented their delivery to a higher-layer protocol. This stat is
pegged whenever corrupt data is received by software or whenever the RF
Software Bridge queue is full.
Corrupt data is a very unusual event because all packets are CRC checked
by hardware before being passed into software.
The likely case for indiscards is if the RF bridge queue is full. If this is the
case the radio is most likely PPS limited due to excessive small packet traffic
or a problem at the Ethernet interface. If there is a problem at the Ethernet
interface there is likely to be discards at the Ethernet as well.
inerrors Count
This field displays how many inbound packets contained errors that prevented
their delivery to a higher-layer protocol.
inunknownprotos
Count
This field displays how many inbound packets were discarded because of an
unknown or unsupported protocol.
Page 9-41
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
outoctets Count
This field displays how many octets were transmitted out of the interface,
including those that deliver framing information.
outucastpkts Count
This field displays how many packets for which the higher-level protocols
requested transmission to a subnetwork-unicast address. The number
includes those that were discarded or not sent.
outnucastpkts Count
This field displays how many packets for which the higher-level protocols
requested transmission to a non-unicast (subnetwork-broadcast or
subnetwork-multicast) address. The number includes those that were
discarded or not sent.
outdiscards Count
This field displays how many outbound packets were discarded without errors
that would have prevented their transmission. (Some of these packets may
have been discarded to increase buffer space.)
outerrrors Count
This field displays how many outbound packets contained errors that
prevented their transmission.
Page 9-42
Interpreting Sounding statistics for AP
In the AP GUI, sounding statistics can be found under Statistics > Radio.
Table 226 Radio (Statistics - AP) page attributes - Sounding
Attribute
Meaning
reference SF
Spatial Frequency of VC. Values 0 to 1023 are valid and value 2048 is considered as invalid.
soundingState
Different types of Sounding states are:

UNKNOWN: VC has recently registered to the AP but not registered with the channel manager yet.

NEW: VC has been registered with the channel manager and will soon transition to ASSESSING.

ASSESSING: AP will instruct SM to take the channel measurements. Channel estimates and spatial
frequencies will be calculated.

TRACKING: Valid measurements resulted in good channel estimates and spatial frequency. This VC can
now be used for MU-MIMO.

INVALID: Inconsistent measurements resulting in no channel estimate or spatial frequency. This VC cannot
be used for MU-MIMO and it will ultimately be re-assessed.
Page 9-1
Chapter 9: Operation
soundingFault
System statistics
Generally if VC is UNTRUSTED, this means something went wrong. The fault codes can help to describe what is
wrong with this channel (If VC is TRACKING this will generally indicate 0 (SOUNDING_FAULT_NONE)).
Error codes are:

SOUNDING_FAULT_VC_CEST: Channel Estimate Error, could be due to issues with the channel..

SOUNDING_FAULT_NULLING_SNR: Channel Estimate Error, could be due to issues with the channel.

SOUNDING_FAULT_SM_ERROR: SM returned Error code when taking channel measurements.

SOUNDING_FAULT_CHANNEL_DISTORTION: Channel Distortion is beyond tolerance, could be due to
issues with the channel.

SOUNDING_FAULT_UNSTABLE_SF: Inconsistent Spatial Frequency, could be due to issues with the
channel.

SOUNDING_FAULT_SF_DEVIATION: Inconsistent Spatial Frequency, could be due to issues with the
channel.

SOUNDING_FAULT_INTERNAL_ERROR: Could be due to incompatible software (AP – SM), or other
catastrophic software issue.
mumimoVetoCount
If excessive channel distortion is observed during condensed nulling (tracking state) this count will increment and
VC will transition back to assessing state.
channelDistortion
Channel distortion readings.
nullingSNR
Signal to noise ratio of condensed nulling error response.
cnResponseCountSM
The SM adds a counter to the CN (Condensed Nulling) response. This indicates how many responses were sent
by that SM.
cnResponseCountAP
The AP increments a count for each CN response received.
missedTagCount
This is the number of CN responses transmitted by SM but not received at AP.
Page 9-2
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Page 9-3
Interpreting Sounding statistics for SM
In the SM GUI, sounding statistics can be found under Statistics > Radio.
The top section, RF Control Block Statistics, is applicable to the SM communicating to any AP (450, 450i,
or 450m), and it is always visible. The bottom section, Sounding Statistics, is visible only if the SM is
communicating with a 450m AP.
Table 227 Radio (Statistics - SM) page attributes - Sounding
Attribute
Meaning
Responses
Number of sounding responses (full VC assessments or condensed nulling)
sent from the SM to the AP
Responses
Suppressed
Number of sounding requests suppressed by the SM.
The reason why a sounding response is suppressed is because the error
calculated during the sounding process is lower than the threshold set by the
AP. In this case, the SM does not need to transmit a sounding response to
the AP
Errors
Number of errors in the sounding process at the SM
Examples of events that count as errors:

Sounding type is not supported

IQ capture not enabled: for example, if sounding requested too soon after
SM boot

IQ capture did not complete

Sounding processing took too long
Version Mismatch
Number of sounding requests with mismatched version numbers
The Sounding Acquisition Command contains a version number. The SM
checks its own version number and flags any mismatch. Currently, AP and
SMs use V1.
Max Request Interval
Largest time between two sounding requests received from the 450m AP
Avg Request Interval
Average time between two sounding requests received from the 450m AP
Page 9-1
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
The following attributes are applicable only for 450m:
Attribute
Meaning
mumimoVetoCount
If excessive channel distortion is observed during condensed nulling (tracking
state) this count will increment and VC will transition back to assessing state.
channelDistortion
Channel distortion readings.
nullingSNR
Signal to noise ratio of condensed nulling error response.
cnResponseCountSM
The SM adds a counter to the CN (Condensed Nulling) response. This
indicates how many responses were sent by that SM.
cnResponseCountAP
The AP increments a count for each CN response received.
missedTagCount
This is the number of CN responses transmitted by SM but not received at
AP.
Interpreting VLAN statistics
The Statistics > VLAN page provides a list of the most recent packets that were filtered because of
VLAN membership violations. It is applicable for all modules (AP/SM/BHM/BHS).
Table 228 VLAN page attributes
Attribute
Meaning
Unknown
This must not occur. Contact Technical Support.
Only Tagged
The packet was filtered because the configuration is set to accept only
packets that have an 802.1Q header and this packet did not.
Ingress
When the packet entered through the wired Ethernet interface, the packet
was filtered because it indicated an incorrect VLAN membership.
Page 9-2
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Local Ingress
When the packet was received from the local TCP/IP stack, the packet was
filtered because it indicated an incorrect VLAN membership. This must not
occur. Contact Technical Support.
Egress
When the packet attempted to leave through the wired Ethernet interface, the
packet was filtered because it indicated an incorrect VLAN membership.
Local Egress
When the packet attempted to reach the local TCP/IP stack, the packet was
filtered because it indicated an incorrect VLAN membership.
Page 9-3
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Interpreting Data VC statistics
The Statistics > Data VC page displays information about Virtual Channel (VC) used in data
communications. This page is applicable for all modules (AP/SM/BHM/BHS).
The Data VC tab displays the fields as explained in Table 229.
Table 229 Data VC page attributes
Attribute
Meaning
Subscriber
This field displays the LUID (logical unit ID), MAC address and Site Name of
the SM/BHS. As each SM or BHS registers to the AP/BHM, the system
assigns an LUID of 2 or a higher unique number to the SM/BHS. If a SM/BHS
loses registration with the AP/BHM and then regains registration, the SM/BHS
retains the same LUID.
VC
This field displays the virtual channel number. Low priority channels start at
VC18 and count up. High priority channels start at VC255 and count down. If
one VC is displayed, the high-priority channel is disabled. If two are
displayed, the high-priority channel is enabled.
CoS
This field displays the Class of Service for the virtual channel. The low priority
channel is a CoS of 00 and the high priority channel is a CoS of 01. CoS of 02
through 07 are not currently used.
Inbound Statistics,
octets
This field displays how many octets were received on the interface, including
those that deliver framing information.
Inbound Statistics,
ucastpkts
This field displays how many inbound subnetwork-unicast packets were
delivered to a higher-layer protocol.
Inbound Statistics,
nucastpkts
This field displays how many inbound non-unicast (subnetwork-broadcast or
subnetwork-multicast) packets were delivered to a higher-layer protocol.
Inbound Statistics,
discards
This field displays how many inbound packets were discarded without errors
that would have prevented their delivery to a higher-layer protocol. Inbound
discard statistics are incremented similar to the indiscards stat on the RF
control block stats page. The sum of all data VC indiscards must be close to
the RF control block in discards. If indiscards are evenly distributed across
SMs, then the radio is PPS limited due to either excessive small packet
transmissions, or a problem at the Ethernet link. If indiscards are contained to
one or a few SMs, then there is likely a problem at or underneath the SM
which is incrementing the count.
Page 9-4
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Inbound Statistics,
errors
This field displays how many inbound packets contained errors that prevented
their delivery to a higher-layer protocol.
Inbound Statistics,
QPSK frgmts
This field displays how many inbound fragments were received via the QPSK
modulation scheme.
Inbound Statistics, 16QAM frgmts
This field displays how many inbound fragments were received via the 16QAM modulation scheme.
Inbound Statistics, 64QAM frgmts
This field displays how many inbound fragments were received via the 64QAM modulation scheme.
Inbound Statistics,
256-QAM frgmts
This field displays how many inbound fragments were received via the 256QAM modulation scheme.
Outbound Statistics,
octets
This field displays how many octets were transmitted out of the interface,
including those that deliver framing information.
Outbound Statistics,
ucastpkts
This field displays how many packets for which the higher-level protocols
requested transmission to a subnetwork-unicast address. The number
includes those that were discarded or not sent.
Outbound Statistics,
nucastpkts
This field displays how many packets for which the higher-level protocols
requested transmission to a non-unicast (subnetwork-broadcast or
subnetwork-multicast) address. The number includes those that were
discarded or not sent.
Outbound Statistics,
discards
This field displays how many outbound packets were discarded without errors
that would have prevented their transmission. Outbound discard statistics are
incremented if a VC is not active when a packet is ready to send. This is a
rare condition.
Outbound Statistics,
errors
This field displays how many outbound packets contained errors that
prevented their transmission.
Queue Overflow
This is a count of packets that were discarded because the queue for the VC
was already full. If Queue Overflows are being seen across most or all SMs,
then there is either an interferer local to the AP or the APs RF link is at
capacity. If Queue Overflows are being seen at one or only a few SMs, then it
is likely that there is a problem with those specific links whether it is
insufficient signal strength, interferer, or a problem with the actual SM
hardware.
High Priority Queue
This is a count of packets that were received on high priority queue.
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System statistics
Interpreting Throughput statistics
The 450 Platform Family has a Statistics > Throughput page which shows historical information about
sector or backhaul throughput and packet discards. This page is applicable for AP and BHM modules.
This information can be useful to identify an overloaded sector or heavy bandwidth users. This page also
shows the user throughput in terms of data rate (kbps) and packet rate (packets per second, or PPS), as
well as the average packet size during the sample period.
Operators may set the AP/BHM to send an SNMP trap when it detects an RF overload condition based
on a configurable threshold.
The following configuration parameters are available on the Throughput tab GUI pane and a radio reboot
is not required when configuring these parameters:
Table 230 RF overload Configuration attributes – AP/BHM
Attribute
Meaning
Throughput Monitoring
This enables or disables the monitoring of sector throughput and packet
discards. This parameter is disabled by default.
SNMP Trap on RF
Overload
This enables or disables the sending of an SNMP trap when an AP/BHM
overload condition is reached (based on Downlink RF Overload Threshold).
Downlink RF Overload
Threshold
This parameter determines the overload threshold in percent of packets
discarded that triggers the generation of an SNMP trap.
Downlink RF Link
Status
This field displays the status of the capacity of the RF link.
Time Period Length
These two configuration parameters determine what set of collection samples
to show on the GUI display. The Time Period Length can be set from one to
three hours. Time Period Ending allows the operator to set the end time for
the set of collection samples to display.
Time Period Ending
Below the configuration settings are three tables that display the statistics that are collected.
Board Performance statistics
This table contains a row that corresponds to each 1 minute statistics collection interval. Each row
contains the following data aggregated for the entire AP/BHM:
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System statistics

Ethernet Throughput - Statistics collected at the Ethernet port:
o kbps in – average throughput over the collection interval in Kbps into the AP/BHM on the
Ethernet Interface
o kbps out – average throughput over the collection interval in Kbps out of the AP/BHM on the
Ethernet Interface
o PPS in – average packets per second over the collection interval into the AP/BHM on the
Ethernet Interface
o PPS out – average packets per second over the collection interval out of the AP/BHM on the
Ethernet Interface

RF Throughput - Statistics collected at the RF Interface:
o kbps in – average throughput over the collection interval in Kbps into the AP/BHM on the RF
Interface
o kbps out – average throughput over the collection interval in Kbps out of the AP/BHM on the RF
Interface
o PPS in – average packets per second over the collection interval into the AP/BHM on the RF
Interface
o PPS out – average packets per second over the collection interval out of the AP/BHM on the RF
Interface

Aggregate Through Board – Sum of bidirectional data transferred through (not originating or
terminating at) the AP/BHM:
o kbps – average bidirectional throughput over the collection interval in Kbps
o PPS – average bidirectional packets per second over the collection interval
o Ave Pkt Size – Average Packet size over the collection interval of bidirectional data transferred
Board Throughput statistics
This table contains a row that corresponds to each one minute statistics collection interval. This table may
be used to determine if there are problems with any of the interfaces. For example, if the Ethernet in
packets is much higher than the RF out packets it could indicate a denial of service (DoS) attack on the
AP/BHM. Each row contains the following data aggregated for the entire AP/BHM:

Ethernet Statistics - Statistics collected at the Ethernet port:
o inOctets – Number of octets (bytes) received by the AP/BHM at the Ethernet Interface over the
collection interval
o outOctets – Number of octets (bytes) sent by the AP/BHM at the Ethernet Interface over the
collection interval
o inPkts – Number of packets received by the AP/BHM at the Ethernet Interface over the collection
interval
o outPkts – Number of packets sent by the AP/BHM at the Ethernet Interface over the collection
interval
o Discards (in/out) – Number of packets that had to be discarded by the AP/BHM at the respective
Ethernet Interface Queue

RF Statistics - Statistics collected at the RF Interface:
o inOctets – Number of octets (bytes) received by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface over the
collection interval
o outOctets – Number of octets (bytes) sent by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface over the collection
interval
o inPkts – Number of packets received by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface over the collection
interval
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outPkts – Number of packets sent by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface over the collection interval
Discards (in/out) – Number of packets that had to be discarded by the AP/BHM at the respective
RF Interface Queue during the collection interval
Discards % (in/out) – Percent of the total packets received / transmitted that had to be discarded
during the collection interval
LUID RF Throughput statistics
This table contains a row that corresponds to each active LUID served by the AP/BHM. Note that an LUID
may be assigned 1 or 2 VCs. If the LUID is assigned 2 VCs, then the data in the table is the sum of the
activity for both VCs. This table may be used to determine which LUIDs are experiencing overload so that
corrective action can be taken (i.e. fixing a poor RF link or moving a heavily loaded link to a less
congested AP/BHM). Each row contains counters and statistics related to the RF Interface that are
updated once per minute:

Inbound Statistics - Statistics collected at the RF Interface for the Uplink:
o octets – Number of octets (bytes) received by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface for this LUID over
the collection interval
o pkts – Number of packets received by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface for this LUID over the
collection interval
o Ave Pkt Size – Average size of the packets received by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface for this
LUID over the collection interval
o discards – Number of packets received by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface for this LUID over the
collection interval that had to be discarded because the RF In Queue was full
o discards % – Percent of the total packets received by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface for this
LUID over the collection interval that had to be discarded because the RF In Queue was full

Outbound Statistics - Statistics collected at the RF Interface for the Downlink:
o octets – Number of octets (bytes) transmitted by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface for this LUID
over the collection interval
o pkts – Number of packets transmitted by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface for this LUID over the
collection interval
o Ave Pkt Size – Average size of the packets transmitted by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface for
this LUID over the collection interval
o discards – Number of packets to be transmitted by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface for this LUID
over the collection interval that had to be discarded because the RF Out Queue was full
o discards % – Percent of the total packets to be transmitted by the AP/BHM at the RF Interface
for this LUID over the collection interval that had to be discarded because the RF Out Queue was
full.
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Interpreting Overload statistics
The Statistics > Overload page displays statistics on packet overload and resultant packet discards.
Unlike the other fields, the Total Packets Overload Count is expressed in only this page. It is not a count
of how many packets have been lost, but rather of how many discard events (packet loss bursts) have
been detected due to overload condition.
This statistics page is applicable for all modules (AP/SM/BHM/BHS) and explained in Table 231.
Table 231 Overload page attributes – AP/SM/BHM/BHS
Attribute
Meaning
Total Packets
Overload Count
This field represents the sum of all RF and Ethernet in/out discards.
Ethernet In Discards
This field represents the number of packets tossed due to the Ethernet queue
being full. If a climb in this stat accompanies a climb in RF Out Discards stat,
then most likely the board is at RF capacity either due to traffic exceeding the
RF pipe, or interference temporarily limiting the RF throughput. If this stat
climbs without the RF Out Discards stat climbing, then the radio is most likely
PPS limited.
Ethernet Out Discards
This field represents the number of packets tossed due to an Ethernet out
overload. This stat must not climb in normal operation because the Ethernet
link is much higher capacity than the RF link. If this stat is incrementing, then
either the Ethernet link is established at a low speed (i.e. 10Mbps – half
duplex), or there is a problem with cabling/Ethernet hardware.
RF In Discards
This field indicates the number of packets tossed due to no resources
available within the radio to process them. This stat also must not be
increasing because the system is designed to shed packets on the RF Out
interface. If this stat is incrementing the board, it is most likely congested due
to high PPS rate in combination with an Ethernet Out problem, which limits
packet flow off the device.
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RF Out Discards
System statistics
This field indicates the number of packets tossed due to RF link at capacity.
This stat will increase whenever the RF link is at capacity. When the internal
FPGA RF input queue overflows, this stat is incremented. If this stat is seen
to be incrementing at the AP, then the sector is congested. If seen at the SM,
the number of Contention Slots must be looked at to ensure that enough
Contention Slots are allocated to allow for bandwidth requests to be seen at
the AP.
Note
450m Overload:
The 450m Series AP is designed to handle high load in terms of high throughput and high
PPS. In terms of throughput, 450m is designed to achieve 3x or more throughput
improvement over 450 and 450i Series products. In terms of packets per second (PPS),
450m is designed to handle up to 100k PPS.
Overload occurs when the offered load exceeds the above limits. When overload occurs,
450m will start discarding packets and TCP throughput will degrade due to packet loss.
It’s worth noting that Frame Utilization statistics (Statistics > Frame Utilization tab: Frame
Utilization: Downlink and Uplink) are not necessarily indicative of overload condition. They
show how much the TDD frame is utilized. High frame utilization depends on:

High traffic during busy periods: those statistics will be close to 100% and almost all
slots will be utilized. In this case if the Overload statistics show that packets are
discarded then this is an indication of overload condition.

High percentage of VCs with low modulation with moderate traffic. Those VCs will
require more slots to service them (due to low modulation) and the frame utilization will
be high. In this case the TDD frame is fully utilized but the system is at low capacity and
is not in an overload condition.
450m has higher PPS than 450 and 450i and supports higher throughput through spatial
multiplexing, therefore when a 450m replaces an overloaded 450 or 450i AP the 450m will
not be overloaded under the same conditions but the frame utilization may still show close to
100%; this should not alarm the customer. The overload statistics shall be monitored on
450m to see if it is overloaded or not.
Interpreting DHCP Relay statistics
The Statistics > DHCP Relay page displays requests and replies received, relayed and discarded when
the AP is configured as a DHCP relay. Typically, in a working DHCP relay configuration a one-to-one ratio
is established between requests and replies that are received and relayed. This statistics page is only
applicable for PMP (AP and SM modules) and it is explained in Table 232.
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Table 232 DHCP Relay page attributes – AP/SM
Attribute
Meaning
Requests Received
This field represents the number of DHCP relay requests received by the AP.
Requests Relayed
This field represents the number of DHCP relay requests relayed by the AP.
Requests Discarded
This field represents the number of DHCP relay requests discarded by the AP
due to errors in the request.
Replies Received
This field represents the number of DHCP relay replies received by the AP.
Replies Relayed
This field represents the number of DHCP relay replies relayed by the AP.
Replies Discarded
This field represents the number of DHCP relay replies discarded by the AP
due to errors in the reply.
Untrusted Message
Discards
This field indicates messages that were discarded because the message
already contained Option 82 information with no Relay Agent specified.
Max Hop Exceeded
Discards
This field indicates messages that have been relayed too many times,
exceeding the max hop count (16).
Invalid Relay Agent
Address Discards
This field indicates messages that have been discarded because the
message relay agent address is already in place (relay agent address does
not equal address of the AP).
Relay Info Exceeding
Max Message Size
(DHCP message
relayed without Option
82)
This field indicates DHCP messages too large to fit Option 82 data. These
messages are sent on without Option 82 information.
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System statistics
Interpreting Filter statistics
The Statistics > Filter page displays statistics on packets that have been filtered (dropped) due to the
filters set on the Protocol Filtering page. The filter page of SM is explained in Table 233.
Table 233 Filter page attributes - SM
Attribute
Meaning
PPPoE Count
Number of PPPoE packets filtered.
All IPv4 Count
Number of IPv4 packets filtered.
All Other IPv4 Count
Any IPv4 message that was not SMB, SNMP, Bootp, Multicast or one of
the user defined filters, that was filtered out.
SMB Count
Number of IPv4 Server Message Block (file sharing) packets filtered.
SNMP Count
Number of IPv4 SNMP packets filtered.
Bootp Client Count
Total number of IPv4 DHCP requests filtered.
Bootp Server Count
Total number of IPv4 DHCP replies filtered.
IPv4 Multicast Count
Number of IPv4 Multicast messages filtered.
All IPv6 Count
Number of IPv6 messages filtered.
All Other IPv6 Count
Any IPv6 message that was not SMB, SNMP, Bootp, Multicast or one of
the user defined filters, that was filtered out.
IPv6 SMB Count
Number of IPv6 Server Message Block (file sharing) packets filtered
IPv6 SNMP Count
Number of IPv6 SNMP messages filtered
IPv6 Bootp Client Count
Total number of IPv6 DHCP replies filtered
IPv6 Bootp Server Count
Total number of IPv6 DHCP replies filtered
IPv6 Multicast Count
Number of IPv6 Multicast messages filtered
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System statistics
ARP Count
Total number of ARP packets filtered.
All other Count
The count of any messages that did not fit above that were filtered out
User Defined Port1 Count
Number of packets defined by the user port1 that were filtered.
User Defined Port2 Count
Number of packets defined by the user port2 that were filtered.
User Defined Port3 Count
Number of packets defined by the user port3 that were filtered.
Viewing ARP statistics
The Statistics > ARP page in a SM module correlated the IP address of the Ethernet-connected device
to its MAC address and provides data about the connection.
Figure 200 ARP page of the SM
Viewing NAT statistics
When NAT is enabled on a SM, statistics are kept on the Public and Private (WAN and LAN) sides of the
NAT and displayed on the Statistics > NAT Stats page. The NAT page of SM is explained in Table 234.
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System statistics
Table 234 NAT page attributes - SM
Attribute
Meaning
Private NAT Statistics,
Packet In Count
This field represents the number of packets received on the SM’s
LAN/Ethernet interface
Private NAT Statistics,
Packet Out Count
This field represents the number of packets sent from the SM’s
LAN/Ethernet interface
Private NAT Statistics,
Packet Out Toss Count
This field represents the number of packets that we not sent from the
SM’s LAN/Ethernet interface due to addressing issues.
Private NAT Statistics,
Out of Resources Count
This field represents the number of times the NAT table for the SM’s
LAN/Ethernet interfaces has been filled.
Private NAT Statistics,
Failed Hash Insert Count
This field represents the number of times that the device failed to insert an
address binding into the NAT hash table.
Public NAT Statistics,
Packet In Count
This field represents the number of packets received on the SM’s
WAN/wireless interface
Public NAT Statistics,
Packet Out Count
This field represents the number of packets sent from the SM’s
WAN/wireless interface
Public NAT Statistics, Out
of Resources Count
This field represents the number of packets that we not sent from the
SM’s WAN/wireless interface due to addressing issues.
Public NAT Statistics,
Failed Hash Insert Count
This field represents the number of times the NAT table for the SM’s
WAN/wireless interfaces has been filled.
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System statistics
Viewing NAT DHCP Statistics
The Statistics > NAT DHCP page displays NAT enabled DHCP client statistics. This is statistics page is
applicable for SM only.
When NAT is enabled on a SM with DHCP client (DHCP selected as the Connection Type of the WAN
interface) and/or DHCP Server, statistics are kept for packets transmitted, received and tossed, as well as
a table of lease information for the DHCP server (Assigned IP Address, Hardware Address and Lease
Remained/State).
Table 235 NAT DHCP Statistics page attributes - SM
Attribute
Meaning
PktXmt Count
Represents the number of DHCP packets transmitted from the client
PktRcv Count
This field represents the number of DHCP packets received by the client
PktToss
ARPUnresolved
Overflow Count
This field represents the number of packets tossed due to failed attempts to
resolve an IP address into a physical MAC address
PktToss Unsupported
MsgType Count
This field represents the number of packets tossed due to the receipt of an
unsupported message type (cannot be interpreted by DHCP client)
PktToss XID
Mismatch Count
The field represents the number of packets that were tossed due to a
transaction ID mismatch
PktToss NoSID Count
This field represents the number of packets that were tossed due to lack of a
DHCP session ID
PktToss SID
Mismatch Count
Represents the number of packets tossed due to a session ID mismatch
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Chapter 9: Operation
Failure to Reset Client
Count
System statistics
This field represents the number of times the DHCP client was unable to be
reset (resulting in no IP address being served).
Interpreting Sync Status statistics
The Statistics > Sync Status page of AP is only displayed when the Sync Input is set to AutoSync or
AutoSync+Free Run.
The Sync Status page is explained in Table 236.
Table 236 Sync Status page attributes - AP
Attribute
Meaning
Sync Pulse Source
This field indicates the status of the synchronization source:

Searching indicates that the unit is searching for a GPS fix

Timing Port/UGPS indicates that the module is receiving sync via the
timing AUX/SYNC timing port

Power Port indicates that the module is receiving sync via the power port
(Ethernet port).
Sync Pulse Status
This field indicates synchronization source pulse status.
Sync Pulse Status –
Timing Port/UGPS
This field indicates synchronization pulse status over Timing Port/UGPS port.
Sync Pulse Status Power Port
This field indicates synchronization pulse status over power port.
UGPS Power Status
This field indicates UGPS power up status (on or off).
This information may be helpful in a decision of whether to climb a tower to diagnose a perceived antenna
problem.
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System statistics
Interpreting PPPoE Statistics for Customer Activities
The page can be access under Statistics > PPPoE of SM GUI.
When the PPPoE feature is enabled on the SM, PPPoE statistics provide data about activities of the
customer.
The PPPoE Statistics of SM is explained in Table 237.
Table 237 PPPoE Statistics page attributes - SM
Attribute
Meaning
IP address
This field displays the IP address of the PPPoE session initiator (situated
below the SM)
PPPoE Session
Status
This field displays the operational status of the PPPoE Session
PPPoE AC Name
This field displays access concentrator name used in the PPPoE session
PPPoE Service Name
This field displays the PPPoE service name associated with the PPPoE
server in use
PPPoE Session ID
This field displays the current PPPoE session ID
PPPoE Session
Uptime
This field displays the total session uptime for the PPPoE session
PPPoE Session Idle
Time
This field displays the total idle time for the PPPoE session
PPPoE Session MTU
This field displays Maximum Transmission Unit configured for the PPPoE
session
Primary DNS Address
This field displays the primary DNS server used by the PPPoE session
Secondary DNS
Address
This field displays the secondary DNS server used by the PPPoE session
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System statistics
PPPoE Control Bytes
Sent
Displays the total number of PPPoE session control bytes sent from SM
PPPoE Control Bytes
Received
This field displays the total number of PPPoE session control bytes received
by the SM
PPPoE Data Session
Bytes Sent
This field displays the total number of PPPoE data session (non-control/nonsession management user data) sent by the SM
PPPoE Data Session
Bytes Received
This field displays the total number of PPPoE data session (non-control/nonsession management user data)
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System statistics
Interpreting Bridge Control Block statistics
The Statistics > Bridge Control Block page displays statistics of Bridge FEC, Bridge ratio and Bridge
error. The page is applicable for all modules (AP/SM/BHM/BHS). The Bridge Control Block Statistics page
is explained in Table 238.
Table 238 Bridge Control Block page attributes – AP/SM/BHM/BHS
Attribute
Meaning
Bridge FEC Stats
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System statistics
FEC bin
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets received by the bridge
control block on the Main Ethernet interface
FEC bout
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets sent by the bridge
control block on the Main Ethernet interface
FEC btoss
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets tossed out by the bridge
control block on the Main Ethernet interface
FEC btosscap
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets tossed out at the Main
Ethernet interface due to MIR cap being exceeded.
FEC uin
This field indicates the number of unicast packets received by the bridge
control block on the Main Ethernet interface
FEC uout
This field indicates the number of unicast packets sent by the bridge control
block on the Main Ethernet interface
FEC utoss
This field indicates the number of unicast packets tossed by the bridge control
block on the Main Ethernet interface
FEC utosscap
This field indicates the number of unicast packets tossed out at the Main
Ethernet interface due to MIR cap being exceeded.
Bridge Eth Aux Stats
FEC bin
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets received by the bridge
control block on the Aux Ethernet interface
FEC bout
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets sent by the bridge
control block on the Aux Ethernet interface
FEC btoss
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets tossed out by the bridge
control block on the Aux Ethernet interface
FEC btosscap
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets tossed out at the Aux
Ethernet interface due to MIR cap being exceeded.
FEC uin
This field indicates the number of unicast packets received by the bridge
control block on the Aux Ethernet interface
FEC uout
This field indicates the number of unicast packets sent by the bridge control
block on the Aux Ethernet interface
FEC utoss
This field indicates the number of unicast packets tossed by the bridge control
block on the Aux Ethernet interface
FEC utosscap
This field indicates the number of unicast packets tossed out at the Aux
Ethernet interface due to MIR cap being exceeded.
Bridge Radio Stats
RF bin
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets received by the bridge
control block on the radio interface
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RF bout
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets sent by the bridge
control block on the radio interface
RF btoss
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets tossed by the bridge
control block on the radio interface
RF btosscap
This field indicates the number of broadcast packets tossed out at the radio
interface due to MIR cap being exceeded.
RF uin
This field indicates the number of unicast packets received by the bridge
control block on the radio interface
RF uout
This field indicates the number of unicast packets sent by the bridge control
block on the radio interface
RF utoss
This field indicates the number of unicast packets tossed by the bridge control
block on the radio interface
RF utosscap
This field indicates the number of unicast packets tossed out at the radio
interface due to MIR cap being exceeded.
Bridge Error Stats
ErrNI1QSend
This field indicates that a packet which was sourced from the radio network
stack interface 1 (Ethernet interface) could not be sent because the radio
bridge queue was full. The packet was tossed out.
ErrNI2QSend
This field indicates that a packet which was sourced from the radio network
stack interface 2 (RF interface) could not be sent because the radio bridge
queue was full. The packet was tossed out.
ErrBridgeFull
This field indicates the total number of times the bridging table was full and
could not accept new entries.
ErrSendMsg
This field displays the error message from bridge core call back routine.
ErrApFecQSend
This field indicates that a packet which was received on the Ethernet interface
could not be processed because the radio bridge queue was full and packet
was tossed out.
ErrApRfQSend
This field indicates that a packet which was received on the RF interface
could not be processed because the radio bridge queue was full. The packet
was tossed out.
Note:
PMP 450m Series AP does not support Aux port in current release of 15.0/15.0.0.1.
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Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Interpreting Pass Through Statistics
The Statistics > Pass Through Statistics page displays radius related statistics. The page is applicable
for PMP 450 Platform Family - AP only. The Pass Through Statistics page is explained in Table 239.
Table 239 Pass Through Statistics page attributes – AP
Attribute
Meaning
IdentityReqSent
This field indicates the number of EAP Identity requests sent through
the AP with respect to an SM.
PktsEncapsulated
This field indicates no of packets received from the SM which are
encapsulated by the AP.
PktsDecasulated
This field indicates no of packets received from the radius server and
are decapsulated by the AP with respect to an SM
AccessAcceptRcvd
This field indicates no of RADIUS Access Accept message received
by the AP with respect to an SM.
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Interpreting SNMPv3 Statistics
The Statistics > SNMPv3 Statistics page displays all SNMPv3 related statistics. The page is applicable
for all type of ODUs of PMP 450 Platform. The SNMPv3 Statistics page is explained in Table 240.
Table 240 SNMPv3 Statistics page attributes – AP
Attribute
Meaning
Statistics for
snmpMPDStats group
SNMP Message Processing and Dispatching RFC 3412
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snmpUnknownSecurityMod
els
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because they referenced a securityModel that was not
known to or supported by the SNMP engine.
snmpInvalidMsgs
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because there were invalid or inconsistent components
in the SNMP message.
snmpUnknownPDUHandler
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because the PDU contained in the packet could not be
passed to an application responsible for handling the pduType, e.g.
no SNMP application had registered for the proper
combination
of the contextEngineID and the pduType.
usmStatsUnsupportedSecL
evels
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because they requested a securityLevel that was
unknown to the SNMP engine or otherwise unavailable.
usmStatsNotInTimeWindow
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because they appeared outside of the authoritative
SNMP engine's window.
usmStatsUnknownUserNa
mes
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because they referenced a user that was not known to
the SNMP engine.
usmStatsUnknownEngineI
Ds
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because they referenced a snmpEngineID that was not
known to the SNMP engine.
usmStatsWrongDigests
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because they didn't contain the expected digest value.
usmStatsDecryptionErrors
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because they could not be decrypted.
snmpTargetSpinLock
This object is used to facilitate modification of table entries in the
SNMP-TARGET-MIB module by multiple managers.
snmpUnavailableContexts
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because the context contained in the message was
unavailable.
snmpUnknownContexts
The total number of packets received by the SNMP engine which
were dropped because the context contained in the message was
unknown.
usmUserSpinLock
The use of usmUserSpinlock is to avoid conflicts with another SNMP
command generator application which may also be acting on the
usmUserTable.
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vacmViewSpinLock
An advisory lock used to allow cooperating SNMP Command
Generator applications to coordinate their use of the Set operation in
creating or modifying views.
snmpEngineBoots
It is a count of the number of times the SNMP engine has rebooted/re-initialized since snmpEngineID was last configured
snmpEngineTime
which is the number of seconds since the snmpEngineBoots counter
was last incremented
time since engine is up
Interpreting syslog statistics
The Statistics > Syslog Statistics page displays statistics of syslog messages. The page is applicable
for all modules (AP/SM/BHM/BHS). The Syslog Statistics page is explained in Table 241.
Table 241 Syslog statistics page attributes – AP/SM/BH
Attribute
Meaning
Syslog Server
This displays dotted decimal or DNS name (if the DNS is enabled) of
the syslog server address.
Syslog Server Port
The syslog server port (default 514) to which syslog messaging is
sent.
Syslog Status
This indicates status of syslog messaging. It can be Enable or
Disabled based on configuration
Syslog Message
Transmissions
This field indicates the count of syslog messages sent to UDP layer.
Syslog Message Dropped
This field indicates the count of dropped syslog messages.
Interpreting Frame Utilization statistics
The Frame Utilization Statistics is a feature helps user to understand how effectively the RF channel is
being utilized. This feature allows to check Time Division Duplex (TDD) frame utilization pattern and
diagnose for any excessive usage in uplink or downlink direction.
This forms the first step of identifying the TDD frame utilization information. If the user finds excessive
utilization based on this stats, the second step would be to take several actions like sectorization, tuning
the uplink/downlink ratio etc. to improve RF channel utilization. Efficient use of the TDD frame will help to
achieve optimum performance of link.
Page 9-25
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Note
The backhauls (BHM and BHS) will have only the downlink scheduler based statistics
Table 242 Frame utilization statistics for PMP 450m AP
Page 9-26
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Page 9-27
Chapter 9: Operation
Attribute
System statistics
Meaning
Frame Utilization Interval
Statistics Display interval
This allows to configure timer interval to monitor and display the
frame utilization statistics. It can be configured for 1 minute (low
interval), 5 minutes (medium interval) or 15 minutes (high interval)
based on requirement.
MU-MIMO Utilization
Spatial Utilization
This is a table (32 rows) that lists frame utilization for each spatial
frequency (SF) range with following information:

Spatial frequency: Range of spatial frequency for each bin.
Each bin includes 32 consecutive spatial frequency values.

Azimuth (degrees): Azimuth range in degrees corresponding to
the spatial frequencies of the bin. The zero degree azimuth is
boresight.
Note:
Some SF ranges correspond to multiple azimuth ranges.
This is due to the fact that for some spatial frequencies
the AP generates beams in multiple azimuth directions.
The SM can be physically located in any of the azimuth
ranges.
Spatial Utilization

Instantaneous (%): Frame utilization for the SF bin, updated
every 500 ms. The frame utilization percentage accounts for all
traffic, both sector mode and MU-MIMO transmissions.

Total (%): Average utilization in the SF bin for the past 1/5/15
minutes, as selected in the Statistics Display Interval.

Max (%): Maximum Instantaneous utilization in the 1/5/15 minute
interval

Min (%): Minimum Instantaneous utilization in the 1/5/15 minute
interval

VCs in Range: List of VCs with spatial frequency falling in the
bin.
Note:
The size of each SF bin is smaller than the beam
generated by the AP during a MU-MIMO transmission.
This means that when a VC in a bin is scheduled for a
MU-MIMO transmission, the adjacent bins also receive
the signal, and the transmission is counted towards their
utilization as well. Bins with consistent low utilization
indicate the areas of the sector where more SMs could
be installed, or the customers that could be offered
higher data plans.
Page 9-28
Chapter 9: Operation
Grouping
Instantaneous Distribution
System statistics
This specifies the distribution of group size for the past 1/5/15
minutes. For each group size, from 0 to 7, the table shows the
percentage of slots using that group size.

A group size of 0 corresponds to unused slots.

A group size of 1 corresponds to sector mode transmissions
(ungrouped).

A group size of 2 to 7 corresponds to MU-MIMO transmissions.
This table is updated every 500 ms and displays the following:

Group: Each row corresponds to the top (most active) 1, 2, 4, 8,
16, 32, 64, 128, and 256 VCs.

Median Slot Count: Median value of the average number of slots
scheduled for the VCs in each group in the past 500 ms.

VCs in Group: List of VCs belonging to each bin where each bin
includes all VCs listed in preceding rows along with the VCs
listed in the corresponding row.
For example, the row labeled “Top 32 VCs” considers up to 32
VCs, which are: one VC listed in “Top VC” row, plus one VC
listed in “Top 2 VCs” row, plus 2 VCs listed in “Top 4 VCs” row,
plus four VCs listed in “Top 8 VCs” row, plus 8 VCs listed in “Top
16 VCs” rows, plus up to 16 VCs listed in “Top 32 VCs” row. If
the number of VCs in the sector is less than 32, this row will
include less than 16 VCs; if the number of VCs in the sector is
equal to or greater than 32, this row will include 16 VCs.
Note:
For best MU-MIMO operation, the distribution of the
median values in this table should be as close to flat as
possible. If many VCs are equally active, there is a
higher probability of being able to group their
transmissions. If only a few VCs are active, the
probability of grouping transmissions is lower, and both
the Average MU-MIMO Group size and the Multiplexing
Gain are expected to be lower.
Average MU-MIMO Group
Size
This specifes the average number of users in the MU-MIMO groups
formed in the last 1/5/15 minutes.
Sector Utilization
This specifes the average of the 32 values of the Spatial Utilization
table.
MU-MIMO Utilization
This specifies the portion of the Sector Utilization used for MU-MIMO
transmissions.
SU-MIMO Utilization
This specifies the portion of the Sector Utilization used for SU-MIMO
transmissions.
Page 9-29
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Canopy MAC
Acknowledgment Utilization
This specifies the portion of the Sector Utilization used for
acknowledgments transmission.
Broadcast/Multicast
Utilization
This specifies the portion of the Sector Utilization used for broadcast
and multicast transmissions.
Multiplexing Gain
This specifies the ratio between the number of logical slots and the
number of physical slots used.
A physical slot is an OFDM symbol. In non MU-MIMO mode, each
logical slot is sent during one physical slot. In MU-MIMO mode a
number of logical slots are sent during a physical slot, equal to the
number of VCs in the group. A logical slot carries new information; if
data is repeated in a group, because some VCs have more data to
send then others, then the repeated transmissions are not counted as
a logical slots.
Without MU-MIMO operation, the multiplexing gain would always be
equal to 1.
With MU-MIMO operation, this number accounts for parallel
transmissions to multiple users in the MU-MIMO group.
The difference between the Average MU-MIMO Group Size and the
Multiplexing Gain is that the Average MU-MIMO Group Size only
considers the MU-MIMO groups, and it averages the number of VCs
in the Group. The Multiplexing Gain also considers non MU-MIMO
transmissions, which are counted as groups of size 1.
Frame Utilization
Downlink
This indicates the percentage of downlink data slots used against the
maximum number of slots possible in the configured interval.
Uplink
This indicates the percentage of uplink data slots used against the
maximum number of uplink slots possible in the configured interval.
Bandwidth Requests
The "Bandwidth Request" is a message sent from the SM to the AP
asking to be scheduled for bandwidth to send in the uplink. This gets
transmitted in the unscheduled portion of the uplink. Unscheduled
uplink is defined as Contention Slots + unscheduled uplink slots.
Since this is sent in the unscheduled portion of the uplink, it will result
in collisions when SMs randomly pick the same slot.
The "Bandwidth Request Missed" metrics are to add data to know
how many of requests are colliding. If it is near 100%, then near all of
the SM’s bandwidth requests are getting through to the AP, so this a
is near perfect scenario. If it is significantly less than that, you may be
experiencing uplink latency as your SMs are attempting to request
bandwidth and are unable to do so.
Also note that if it is consistently at 100% the AP may be able to
reduce its contention slots to a lower value and gain more data slots.
Page 9-30
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Downlink Counts
Total
This indicates the sum of all downlink data slots used in the
configured interval.
Per Frame Average
This indicates the average data per frame in the downlink traffic.
Low Priority
The number of downlink data slots used for low priority downlink
traffic.
High Priority
The number of downlink data slots used for high priority downlink
traffic.
Broadcast/Multicast
The number of downlink data slots used for broadcast and multicast
traffic.
Canopy MAC
Acknowledgements
The number of downlink data slots used as ACKs.
Registration Messages
The number of downlink data slots used for registration messages.
Uplink Counts
Total
This indicates the sum of all uplink data slots used in configured
interval.
Per Frame Average
This indicates the average data per frame in the uplink traffic.
Low Priority
The number of uplink data slots used for low priority uplink traffic.
High Priority
The number of uplink data slots used for high priority uplink traffic.
Canopy MAC
Acknowledgements
The number of uplink data slots used as ACKs.
Contention Slots
The number of (reserved contention slots + unscheduled symbols
that can be used as contention slots) Contention slots configured by
the operator.
Contention Slots Average
Per Frame
It is the average number of contention slots in a frame for the last
duration. Duration is 1/5/15 mins.
Bandwidth Requests
Received
This indicates the number of Bandwidth Requests received from
SMs.
Bandwidth Requests
Missed
This indicates how many of Bandwidth Requests are colliding.
Maximum possible counts
Downlink
This indicates the maximum possible downlink data slots in the
configured interval. This is based on the configuration of Channel
Bandwidth, Frame period, uplink/downlink allocation, contention slots
and configured Statistics Display interval.
Page 9-31
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Uplink
This indicates the maximum possible uplink data slots in the
configured interval. This is based on the configuration of Channel
Bandwidth, Frame period, uplink/downlink allocation, contention slots
and configured Statistics Display interval.
Contention
This indicates the maximum possible contention slots.
Packet Discard counts
Ethernet indiscards
This indicates the number of Ethernet packets discarded in the IN
queue.
Ethernet outdiscards
This indicates the number of Ethernet packets discarded in the OUT
queue.
Radio indiscards
This indicates the number of packets discarded over radio in the IN
queue.
Radio outdiscards
This indicates the number of packets discarded over radio in the OUT
queue.
Page 9-32
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Table 243 Frame utilization statistics for 450/450i/450m
Attribute
Meaning
Frame Utilization Interval
Statistics Display interval
This allows to configure timer interval to monitor and display the
frame utilization statistics. It can be configured for 1 minute (low
interval), 5 minutes (medium interval) or 15 minutes (high interval)
based on requirement.
Frame Utilization
Page 9-33
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Downlink
This indicates the percentage of downlink data slots used against the
maximum number of slots possible in the configured interval.
Uplink
This indicates the percentage of uplink data slots used against the
maximum number of uplink slots possible in the configured interval.
Bandwidth Requests
The "Bandwidth Request" is a message sent from the SM to the AP
asking to be scheduled for bandwidth to send in the uplink. This gets
transmitted in the unscheduled portion of the uplink. Unscheduled
uplink is defined as Contention Slots + unscheduled uplink slots.
Since this is sent in the unscheduled portion of the uplink, it will result
in collisions when SMs randomly pick the same slot.
The "Bandwidth Request Missed" metrics are to add data to know
how many of requests are colliding. If it is near 100%, then near all of
the SM’s bandwidth requests are getting through to the AP, so this a
is near perfect scenario. If it is significantly less than that, you may be
experiencing uplink latency as your SMs are attempting to request
bandwidth and are unable to do so.
Also note that if it is consistently at 100% the AP may be able to
reduce its contention slots to a lower value and gain more data slots.
Downlink Counts
Total
This indicates the sum of all downlink data slots used in the
configured interval.
Per Frame Average
This indicates the average data per frame in the downlink traffic.
Low Priority
The number of downlink data slots used for low priority downlink
traffic.
High Priority
The number of downlink data slots used for high priority downlink
traffic.
Broadcast/Multicast
The number of downlink data slots used for broadcast and multicast
traffic.
Canopy MAC
Acknowledgements
The number of downlink data slots used as ACKs.
Registration Messages
The number of downlink data slots used for registration messages.
Uplink Counts
Total
This indicates the sum of all uplink data slots used in configured
interval.
Per Frame Average
This indicates the average data per frame in the uplink traffic.
Low Priority
The number of uplink data slots used for low priority uplink traffic.
High Priority
The number of uplink data slots used for high priority uplink traffic.
Page 9-34
Chapter 9: Operation
System statistics
Canopy MAC
Acknowledgements
The number of uplink data slots used as ACKs.
Contention Slots
The number of (reserved contention slots + unscheduled symbols
that can be used as contention slots) Contention slots configured by
the operator.
Contention Slots Average
Per Frame
It is the average number of contention slots in a frame for the last
duration. Duration is 1/5/15 mins.
Bandwidth Requests
Received
This indicates the number of Bandwidth Requests received from
SMs.
Bandwidth Requests
Missed
This indicates how many of Bandwidth Requests are colliding.
Maximum possible counts
Downlink
This indicates the maximum possible downlink data slots in the
configured interval. This is based on the configuration of Channel
Bandwidth, Frame period, uplink/downlink allocation, contention slots
and configured Statistics Display interval.
Uplink
This indicates the maximum possible uplink data slots in the
configured interval. This is based on the configuration of Channel
Bandwidth, Frame period, uplink/downlink allocation, contention slots
and configured Statistics Display interval.
Contention
This indicates the maximum possible contention slots.
Packet Discard counts
Ethernet indiscards
This indicates the number of Ethernet packets discarded in the IN
queue.
Ethernet outdiscards
This indicates the number of Ethernet packets discarded in the OUT
queue.
Radio indiscards
This indicates the number of packets discarded over radio in the IN
queue.
Radio outdiscards
This indicates the number of packets discarded over radio in the OUT
queue.
Page 9-35
Chapter 9: Operation
Radio Recovery
Radio Recovery
This section describes:

How to recover a PMP/PTP 450i and PMP 450m Series ODUs from configuration errors or software
image corruption

How to override a PMP/PTP 450 Series ODUs from forgotten IP address and password to factory
default
Radio Recovery Console– PMP/PTP 450i/450b and
PMP 450m
Recovery mode allows to restore IP address and password. Also, it allows new main application software
to be loaded even when the integrity of the existing main application software image has been
compromised. The most likely cause of an integrity problem with the installed main application software is
where the power supply has been interrupted during a software upgrade.
Note
When Recovery has been entered through a power on/off/on cycle, the ODU will revert to
normal operation if no web access has been made to the unit within 30 seconds. This
prevents the unit remaining inadvertently in recovery following a power outage.
Options in recovery mode are:

Boot with normal operation

Boot with default Canopy system software settings

Load a previous SW image
The last most recent software images loaded to the board are retained. However the factory image is not
retained.
Boot with default Canopy system software settings (similar to the hardware Default Plug based on 450
Platforms Family).
Note
The unit may enter recovery console automatically, in response to some failures.
Note
Once the unit has entered recovery, it will switch back to normal operation if no access has
been made to the recovery web page within 30 seconds.
Use below procedure to enter in recovery console manually.
Page 9-36
Chapter 9: Operation
Radio Recovery
Page 9-37
Chapter 9: Operation
Radio Recovery
Procedure 35 Radio Recovery Console
Apply power to PSU for at least 10 seconds.
Remove power from the PSU, and then re-apply it as soon as the power indicator light goes
out (about 1 - 2 seconds).
When the unit is in recovery mode, access the web interface by entering the default IP
address 169.254.1.1. The Recovery Image Warning page is displayed.
Review the Boot Selection (Table 244).
Select a recovery option
Figure 201 Recovery Options page
Table 244 Recovery Options attributes
Attribute
Meaning
Boot Selection
Boot – Default Mode: Use this option to temporarily set the IP and Ethernet
attributes to factory defaults until the next reboot.
Boot – Normal: Use this option to reboot the unit.
IP address, Netmask,
Gateway
These fields display IP address, Netmask and Gateway of the radio while it is
in recovery or default mode.
Page 9-38
Chapter 9: Operation
Radio Recovery
Note
The radio enters recovery mode when a short power cycle is used. The radio will boot
normally if power has been removed for a longer period (typically 5 - 10 seconds).
Default Mode (or Default/Override Plug) - PMP/PTP 450
Series
The default modeallows to temporarily override some PMP/PTP 450 Series ODU settings and thereby
regain control of the module by powering the module on with the Default Plug inserted into the unit’s
synchronization (RJ11) port.
This override plug is needed for access to the module in any of the following cases:

You have forgotten either
o the IP address assigned to the ODU.
o the password that provides access to the ODU.

The ODU has been locked by the No Remote Access feature.

You want local access to a module that has had the 802.3 link disabled in the Configuration page.
You can configure the module such that, when it senses the override plug, it responds by either

resetting the LAN1 IP address to 169.254.1.1, allowing access through the default configuration
without changing the configuration, whereupon you will be able to view and reset any non-default
values as you wish.

resetting all configurable parameters to their factory default values.
Note
The Default Plug is available from Best-Tronics Manufacturing, Inc.
See http://www.best-tronics.com/cambium.htm as Part BT-0583 (RJ-11 Default Plug).
Alternatively, you can fabricate an override plug. See Override plug cable on page 5-15 for
pinout.
Page 9-39
Chapter 9: Operation
Radio Recovery
Using the Default/Override Plug
The following section details usage of the override plug to regain access to PMP/PTP 450 Series ODU.
Note
While the override plug is connected to a PMP/PTP 450 Series ODU, the ODU can neither
register nor allow registration of another ODU.
Note
Since the 900 MHz SM is based on the 450 Series, it only supports the "Default Plug" mode
of overriding.
Use below procedure to enter in default mode manually.
Procedure 36 Default mode
Insert the override plug into the RJ-11 GPS utility port of the module.
Power cycle by removing, then re-inserting, the Ethernet cable.
RESULT: The module boots with the default IP address of 169.254.1.1, password fields
blank, and all other configuration values as previously set.
Wait approximately 30 seconds for the boot to complete.
Remove the override plug.
Set passwords and IP address as desired.
Change configuration values if desired.
Click the Save Changes button.
Click the Reboot button.
Page 9-40
Chapter 10: Reference information
This chapter contains reference information and regulatory notices that apply to the 450 Platform Family
ODUs.
The following topics are described in this chapter:

Equipment specifications on page 10-2 contains specifications of the 450 Platform Family, ODU
specifications including RF bands, channel width and link loss.

Data network specifications on page 10-43 shows the 450 Platform Family Ethernet interface
specifications.

Compliance with safety standards on page 4-22 lists the safety specifications against which 450
Platform Family ODU has been tested and certified. It also describes how to keep RF exposure within
safe limits.

Country specific radio regulations on page 10-46 describes how the 450 Platform Family complies
with the radio regulations that are enforced in various countries.

Equipment Disposal on page 10-49 describes the Equipment Disposal system for Electronic and
Electric Equipment.
Page 10-1
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Equipment specifications
This section contains specifications of the AP, SM, BHM and BHS associated supplies required for 450
Platform Family installations.
Specifications for PMP 450m Series - AP
The PMP 450m AP conforms to the specifications listed in Table 245.
Table 245 PMP 450m Series - AP specifications
Category
Specification
Model Number
PMP 450m AP
Spectrum
Channel Spacing
Configurable on 2.5 MHz increments
Frequency Range
5150 to 5925 MHz
Channel Bandwidth
5, 10, 15, 20, and 40 MHz
Interface
MAC (Media Access
Control) Layer
Cambium Proprietary
Physical Layer
14x14 Multi-User MIMO OFDM
Ethernet Interface
100/1000BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated
(802.3 compliant)
Protocols Used
IPv4, UDP, TCP, IP, ICMP, Telnet, SNMP, HTTP, FTP
Network Management
HTTP, HTTPS, Telnet, FTP, SNMP v3
VLAN
802.1ad (DVLAN Q-in-Q), 802.1Q with 802.1p priority,
dynamic port VID
Sensitivity
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 5
MHz Channel
5.1 GHz
1x=-101.6 dBm, 2x=-96.2 dBm, 4x=-90.2 dBm, 6x=-84
dBm, 8x=-76.6 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x=-101.3 dBm, 2x=-96.3 dBm, 4x=-89.7 dBm, 6x=-83.3
dBm, 8x=-75.7 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x=-101.1 dBm, 2x=-96.8 dBm, 4x=-90 dBm, 6x=-83.9
dBm, 8x=-76.2 dBm
Page 10-2
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
10 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
15 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
20 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
5.8 GHz
1x=-101.6 dBm, 2x=-96.6 dBm, 4x=-89.9 dBm, 6x=-83.7
dBm, 8x=-76.3 dBm
5.1 GHz
1x=-99 dBm, 2x=-94.6 dBm, 4x=-87.8 dBm, 6x=-81.6 dBm,
8x=-74.6 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x=-98.8 dBm, 2x=-93.8 dBm, 4x=-87.6 dBm, 6x=-81.4
dBm, 8x=-73.6 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x=-98.1 dBm, 2x=-94.1 dBm, 4x=-87.5 dBm, 6x=-81.5
dBm, 8x=-73.8 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x=-98.5 dBm, 2x=-93.6 dBm, 4x=-87.5 dBm, 6x=-81.2
dBm, 8x=-73.7 dBm
5.1 GHz
1x=-97.3 dBm, 2x=-92.5 dBm, 4x=-86.3 dBm, 6x=-79.9
dBm, 8x=-72.9 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x=-96.7 dBm, 2x=-91.9 dBm, 4x=-85.7 dBm, 6x=-79.5
dBm, 8x=-72.5 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x=-96.2 dBm, 2x=-92.1 dBm, 4x=-85.5 dBm, 6x=-79.4
dBm, 8x=-72.4 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x=-97.2 dBm, 2x=-92.4 dBm, 4x=-85.5 dBm, 6x=-79.4
dBm, 8x=-72.5 dBm
5.1 GHz
1x=-96.3 dBm, 2x=-91.9 dBm, 4x=-85.3 dBm, 6x=-79.3
dBm, 8x=-71.3 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x=-95.8 dBm, 2x=-91.8 dBm, 4x=-84.8 dBm, 6x=-78.8
dBm, 8x=-71.8 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x=-95.1 dBm, 2x=-91.4 dBm, 4x=-84.8 dBm, 6x=-78.3
dBm, 8x=-71.1 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x=-95.8 dBm, 2x=-91.3 dBm, 4x=-84.7 dBm, 6x=-78.3
dBm, 8x=-70.8 dBm
Performance
Subscriber Per Sector
Up to 238
ARQ
Yes
Cyclic Prefix
1/16
Frame Period
2.5 ms
Page 10-3
Chapter 10: Reference information
Modulation Levels (Adaptive)
Equipment specifications
Modulation
Levels
MCS
SNR (in dB)
2x
QPSK
10
4x
16QAM
17
6x
64QAM
24
8x
256QAM
32
Latency
10 ms, typical (MU-MIMO introduces additional latency
only for the low priority traffic)
Maximum Deployment Range
Up to 40 miles (64 km)
GPS Synchronization
Yes, via Autosync (UGPS)
Quality of Service
Diffserv QoS
Link Budget
Antenna Beam Width
5 GHz
90° integrated sector (Dual polarity, H+V)
Antenna Gain
+14 dBi
Maximum Transmit
Power
+24 dBm combined
Physical
Data, Sync/AUX and
SFP port
RJ45

1000BASE-T Ethernet Data

AUX port for UGPS or PoE out to 802.3at
Antenna Connection
Integrated Sector Array
Surge Suppression (with
LPU)
EN61000-4-5: 1.2 us/50 us, 500 V voltage waveform
Recommended external surge suppressor:
Cambium Networks Model # C000065L007A
Mean Time Between
Failure
> 40 Years
Environmental
IP66, IP67
Temperature / Humidity
-40°C to +60°C (-40°F to +140°F)
0-95% non-condensing
Weight
Integrated
Approx. 14.2 kg (31 bs)
@90 mph / 144 kph
Page 10-4
460 N
Chapter 10: Reference information
Wind Loading – Front
Facing
Dimension (HxWxD)
Power Consumption
Equipment specifications
@110 mph /177 kph
Integrated
700 N
52 x 65 x 11 cm (20.3” x 25.7” x 4.4”)
70 W typical, 80 W peak
(up to 110 W max with AUX port PoE enabled)
Input Voltage
58 V, 1.7 A
Mounting
Pole mount with included brackets
Security
Encryption
56-bit DES, FIPS-197 128-bit AES
Page 10-5
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Specifications for PMP 450i Series - AP
The PMP 450i AP conforms to the specifications listed in Table 246.
Table 246 PMP 450i Series - AP specifications
Category
Specification
Model Number
PMP 450i AP
Spectrum
Channel Spacing
5, 7, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz Channel Bandwidth
Configurable on 2.5 MHz increments
Frequency Range
902 to 928 MHz
3300 - 3900 MHz
4900 - 5925 MHz
Channel Bandwidth
902 – 928
MHz
5, 7, 10, 15, and 20 MHz
3300 - 3900
MHz
5, 7, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz
4900 – 5925
MHz
5, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz
Interface
MAC (Media Access
Control) Layer
Cambium Proprietary
Physical Layer
2x2 MIMO OFDM
Ethernet Interface
10/100/1000BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated
(802.3 compliant)
Protocols Used
IPv4, UDP, TCP, IP, ICMP, Telnet, SNMP, HTTP, FTP
Network Management
HTTP, HTTPS, Telnet, FTP, SNMP v3
VLAN
802.1ad (DVLAN Q-in-Q), 802.1Q with 802.1p priority,
dynamic port VID
Sensitivity
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 5
MHz Channel
900 MHz
1x = -91.9 dBm, 2x = -86.7 dBm, 4x = -80.9 dBm, 6x = -75
dBm, 8x = -68.8 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -92.7 dBm, 2x = -88.7 dBm, 4x = -82.7 dBm, 6x = 75.8 dBm, 8x = -69 dBm
Page 10-6
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 7
MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
10 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
15 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
3.6 GHz
1x=-91 dBm, 2x=-86.1 dBm, 4x=-80.2 dBm, 6x=-73.1 dBm,
8x=-66 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -91.6 dBm, 2x = -87.6 dBm, 4x = -80.4 dBm, 6x = 73.2 dBm, 8x = -66 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -92 dBm, 2x = -87 dBm, 4x = -80.8 dBm, 6x = -73.7
dBm, 8x = -66.6 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -91.5 dBm, 2x = -87 dBm, 4x = -80.2 dBm, 6x = -73.1
dBm, 8x = -66 dBm
900 MHz
1x = -90 dBm, 2x = -85.9 dBm, 4x = -79.8 dBm, 6x = -73.6
dBm, 8x = -67.9 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x=-91.8 dBm, 2x=-87.7 dBm, 4x=-80.8 dBm, 6x=-74.7
dBm, 8x=-67.3 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x=-90 dBm, 2x=-87 dBm, 4x=-79.8 dBm, 6x=-73.8 dBm,
8x=-67.2 dBm
900 MHz
1x = -90.6 dBm, 2x = -85.2 dBm, 4x = -79.1 dBm, 6x = 73.2 dBm, 8x = -66.2 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x=-90.2 dBm, 2x=-86.2 dBm, 4x=-80 dBm, 6x=-73.1 dBm,
8x=-66.7 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x=-89.5 dBm, 2x=-85.7 dBm, 4x=-79.8 dBm, 6x=-72.8
dBm, 8x=-66.3 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -89.1 dBm, 2x = -85 dBm, 4x = -77.9 dBm, 6x = -71.8
dBm, 8x = -64.6 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -89.5 dBm, 2x = -85.4 dBm, 4x = -78.2 dBm, 6x = 72.2 dBm, 8x = -64.8 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -89.5 dBm, 2x = -84.7 dBm, 4x = -77.8 dBm, 6x = 71.6 dBm, 8x = -64 dBm
900 MHz
1x=-88.2 dBm, 2x=-83.2 dBm, 4x=-76.3 dBm, 6x=-70.2
dBm, 8x=-64.3 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x=-89 dBm, 2x=-84 dBm, 4x=-77.9 dBm, 6x=-72 dBm,
8x=-64.8 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x=-87.6 dBm, 2x=-83.7 dBm, 4x=-77.5 dBm, 6x=-71.6
dBm, 8x=-64.5 dBm
Page 10-7
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
20 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
30 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
4.9 GHz
1x = -87.2 dBm, 2x = -83 dBm, 4x = -75.8 dBm, 6x = -69.6
dBm, 8x = -62.6 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -87.2 dBm, 2x = -83.3 dBm, 4x = -76.2 dBm, 6x = 70.1 dBm, 8x = -63 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -87.7 dBm, 2x = -82.7 dBm, 4x = -75.5 dBm, 6x = 69.6 dBm, 8x = -62.4 dBm
900 MHz
1x = -86.99 dBm, 2x = -82 dBm, 4x = -75.9 dBm, 6x = 69.9 dBm, 8x = -62.9 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x=-87.4 dBm, 2x=-83 dBm, 4x=-76.9 dBm, 6x=-69.9 dBm,
8x=-63 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x=-86.4 dBm, 2x=-82.5 dBm, 4x=-76.4 dBm, 6x=-69.4
dBm, 8x=-62.9 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -86.1 dBm, 2x = -82.1 dBm, 4x = -74.8 dBm, 6x = 68.8 dBm, 8x = -61.7 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -86.6 dBm, 2x = -81.3 dBm, 4x = -75.5 dBm, 6x = 68.6 dBm, 8x = -62 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -85.8 dBm, 2x = -80.7 dBm, 4x = -74.6 dBm, 6x = 68.7 dBm, 8x = -61 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x=-85.6 dBm, 2x=-81.7 dBm, 4x=-74.5 dBm, 6x=-68 dBm,
8x=-61.5 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x=-85.5 dBm, 2x=-80.5 dBm, 4x=-74.4 dBm, 6x=-68.4
dBm, 8x=-61.5 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -84.1 dBm, 2x = -80 dBm, 4x = -73 dBm, 6x = -66.4
dBm, 8x = -59.6 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -84.5 dBm, 2x = -82 dBm, 4x = -75 3.5Bm, 6x = -67.4
dBm, 8x = -60.2 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -84.1 dBm, 2x = -80 dBm, 4x = -73 dBm, 6x = -66.5
dBm, 8x = -59.4 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x=-83.9 dBm, 2x=-79.5 dBm, 4x=-73 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-58.5 dBm
Page 10-8
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
40 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
3.6 GHz
1x=-82.8 dBm, 2x=-79 dBm, 4x=-73 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-59 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x=-83.9 dBm, 2x=-78.9 dBm, 4x=-72 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-56.6 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x=-83.7 dBm, 2x=-78.5 dBm, 4x=-72.4 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-58 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x=-83.8 dBm, 2x=-78.4 dBm, 4x=-72 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-57 dBm
Performance
ARQ
Yes
Cyclic Prefix
1/16
Frame Period
2.5 ms or 5.0 ms
Modulation Levels
(Adaptive)
Modulation
Levels
MCS
SNR (in dB)
2x
QPSK
10
4x
16QAM
17
6x
64QAM
24
8x
256QAM
32
Latency
3 - 5 ms
Maximum Deployment
Range
Up to 40 miles (64 km)
Up to 120 miles (190 km) for 900 MHz
GPS Synchronization
Yes, via Autosync (CMM4), via UGPS
Quality of Service
Diffserv QoS
Link Budget
Antenna Beam Width
900 MHz
65° sector antenna (Dual Slant)
3 GHz
90° sector for integrated (Dual polarity, slant +45° and 45°)
5 GHz
90° (3 dB roll off) sector for integrated (Dual polarity, H+V)
Page 10-9
Chapter 10: Reference information
Antenna Gain (Does not
include cable loss,
~1dB)
Equipment specifications
900 MHz
13 dBi
3 GHz
17 dBi integrated 90° sector or external
5 GHz
17 dBi integrated 90° sector or external
Transmit Power Range
40 dB dynamic range (to EIRP limit by region) (1 dB step)
Maximum Transmit
Power
+27 dBm combined output (for 5 GHz)
+25 dBm combined output (for 3 GHz)
+25 dBm combined output (for 900MHz)
Physical
Sync/AUX port
RJ45

10/100/100BASE-T Ethernet Data

PoE output (planned for future release)

Sync input or output (Connection and powering of
UGPS Sync input)
Antenna Connection
50 ohm, N-type (Connectorized version only)
Surge Suppression
EN61000-4-5
EN61000-4-5: 1.2 us/50 us, 500 V voltage waveform
Recommended external surge suppressor: Cambium
Networks Model # C000000L033A
Mean Time Between
Failure
> 40 Years
Environmental
IP66, IP67
Temperature / Humidity
-40°C to +60°C (-40°F to +140°F), 0-95% non-condensing
Weight
Wind Survival
Dimension(HxWxD)
Connectorized
Approx. 2.0 kg (4.5 lbs)
Integrated
Approx. 2.5 kg (5.5 lbs)
Connectorized
322 km/h (200 mi/h)
Integrated
200 km/h (124 mi/h)
Connectorized
26.0 x 13.4 x 6.4 cm (10.3” x 5.3” x 3.3”)
Integrated
37.0 x 37.0 x 6.3 cm (14.5” x 14.5” x 3.2”)
Power Consumption
15 W typical, 25 W max, 55 W max with Aux port PoE out
enabled
Input Voltage
48-59 V DC, 802.3at compliant
Mounting
Wall or Pole mount with Cambium Networks Model #
N000045L002A
Page 10-10
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Security
Encryption
56-bit DES, FIPS-197 128-bit AES
Page 10-11
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Specifications for PMP 450i Series - SM
The PMP 450i SM conforms to the specifications listed in Table 247.
Table 247 PMP 450i Series - SM specifications
Category
Specification
Model Number
PMP 450i SM
Spectrum
Channel Spacing
5, 7, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 Channel Bandwidth
Configurable on 2.5 MHz increments
Frequency Range
3300 – 3900 MHz
4900 - 5925 MHz
Channel Bandwidth
3300 – 3900
MHz
5, 7, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz
4900 – 5925
MHz
5, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz
Interface
MAC (Media Access
Control) Layer
Cambium Proprietary
Physical Layer
2x2 MIMO OFDM
Ethernet Interface
10/100/1000BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated
(802.3 compliant)
Protocols Used
IPv4, UDP, TCP, IP, ICMP, Telnet, SNMP, HTTP, FTP
Network Management
HTTP, HTTPS, Telnet, FTP, SNMP v2c and v3
VLAN
802.1ad (DVLAN Q-in-Q), 802.1Q with 802.1p priority,
dynamic port VID
Sensitivity
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 5
MHz Channel
3.5 GHz
1x = -92.6 dBm, 2x =-89.22 dBm, 4x = -83.19 dBm, 6x = 76.5 dBm, 8x = -69.1 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x = -92 dBm, 2x = -88.08 dBm, 4x = -82.3 dBm, 6x = 75.9 dBm, 8x = -68.6 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -92.5 dBm, 2x = -88.5 dBm, 4x = -81 dBm, 6x = -74.2
dBm, 8x = -66 dBm
Page 10-12
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 7
MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
10 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
15 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
20 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
5.4 GHz
1x = -93 dBm, 2x = -89.1 dBm, 4x = -81.5 dBm, 6x = -74.8
dBm, 8x = -67.4 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -92 dBm, 2x = -88.3 dBm, 4x = -80.8 dBm, 6x = -74
dBm, 8x = -66.2 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -92 dBm, 2x = -88.4 dBm, 4x = -81.4 dBm, 6x = 75.37 dBm, 8x = -68.1 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x = -91.02 dBm, 2x = -87.87 dBm, 4x = -80.82 dBm, 6x =
-73.6 dBm, 8x = -67.32 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -90.787 dBm, 2x = -86.6 dBm, 4x = -80.2 dBm, 6x = 73.52 dBm, 8x = -66.34 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x = -89.8 dBm, 2x = -86 dBm, 4x = -79.84 dBm, 6x = 72.92 dBm, 8x = -66 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -90.2 dBm, 2x = -85.2 dBm, 4x = -78.8 dBm, 6x = 71.4 dBm, 8x = -64.5 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -90 dBm, 2x = -85.8 dBm, 4x = -78.5 dBm, 6x = -72.2
dBm, 8x = -65.8 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -89.9 dBm, 2x = -84.9 dBm, 4x = -78.5 dBm, 6x = 71.2 dBm, 8x = -63.8 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -88.57 dBm, 2x = -84.5 dBm, 4x = -78.4 dBm, 6x = 71.47 dBm, 8x = -65.22 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x = -87.6 dBm, 2x = -84.1 dBm, 4x = -77.1 dBm, 6x = 71.03 dBm, 8x = -64.8 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -88.2 dBm, 2x = -83.1 dBm, 4x = -76.9 dBm, 6x = 70.5 dBm, 8x = -62.3 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -87.7 dBm, 2x = -83.9 dBm, 4x = -76.6 dBm, 6x = 70.4 dBm, 8x = -63 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -88 dBm, 2x = -82.9 dBm, 4x = -76.7 dBm, 6x = -69.4
dBm, 8x = -62.3 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -87 dBm, 2x = -83.45 dBm, 4x = -76.25 dBm, 6x = 70.33 dBm, 8x = -63.23 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x = -86.9 dBm, 2x = -82.9 dBm, 4x = -76.9 dBm, 6x = 69.8 dBm, 8x = -62.8 dBm
Page 10-13
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
20 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
30 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
30 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
40 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
4.9 GHz
1x = -87 dBm, 2x = -81.8 dBm, 4x = -75.8 dBm, 6x = -68.5
dBm, 8x = -61.4 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -87 dBm, 2x = -82.8 dBm, 4x = -75.6 dBm, 6x = -69.3
dBm, 8x = -61.6 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -85.9 dBm, 2x = -81.5 dBm, 4x = -74.8 dBm, 6x = 68.7 dBm, 8x = -61.2 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -86 dBm, 2x = -80.9 dBm, 4x = -75 dBm, 6x = -67.9
dBm, 8x = -61.1 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x = -85.5 dBm, 2x = -80.6 dBm, 4x = -74.5 dBm, 6x = 67.5 dBm, 8x = -61 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -84.9 dBm, 2x = -80.9 dBm, 4x = -73.2 dBm, 6x = 67.4 dBm, 8x = -59.3 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -85.2 dBm, 2x = -80.2 dBm, 4x = -74.1 dBm, 6x = 67.9 dBm, 8x = -59.8 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -84.9 dBm, 2x = -80 dBm, 4x = -73.2 dBm, 6x = -67.4
dBm, 8x = -59.4 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -83.2 dBm, 2x = -79 dBm, 4x = -72.4 dBm, 6x = -66
dBm, 8x = -58.4 dBm
3.6 GHz
1x = -82.5 dBm, 2x = -79 dBm, 4x = -71.3 dBm, 6x = -65.4
dBm, 8x = -58.3 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x=-84.2 dBm, 2x=-79.3 dBm, 4x=-72.3 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-56.8 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x=-84.2 dBm, 2x=-79.1 dBm, 4x=-73.1 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-56.9 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x=-83.6 dBm, 2x=-78.7 dBm, 4x=-72.5 dBm, 6x=-66.4
dBm, 8x=-56.3 dBm
Performance
ARQ
Yes
Cyclic Prefix
1/16
Page 10-14
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Frame Period
2.5 ms or 5.0 ms
Modulation Levels
(Adaptive)
Modulation Levels
MCS
SNR (in dB)
2x
QPSK
10
4x
16QAM
17
6x
64QAM
24
8x
256QAM
32
Latency
3 - 5 ms
Maximum Deployment
Range
Up to 40 miles (64 km)
GPS Synchronization
Yes, via Autosync (CMM4)
Quality of Service
Diffserv QoS
Link Budget
Antenna Beam Width
Antenna Gain (Does not
include cable loss,
~1dB)
10° azimuth for 23 dBi integrated antenna
5 GHz
+23 dBi H+V, integrated or external
3 GHz
+19 dBi dual slant, integrated or external
Transmit Power Range
40 dB dynamic range (to EIRP limit by region) (1 dB step)
Maximum Transmit
Power
+27 dBm combined output (for 5 GHz)
+25 dBm combined output (for 3 GHz)
Physical
Sync/AUX port
RJ45

10/100/1000BASE-T Ethernet Data

PoE output (planned for future release)

Sync input or output (Connection and powering of
UGPS Sync input)
Antenna Connection
50 ohm, N-type (Connectorized version only)
Surge Suppression
EN61000-4-5
EN61000-4-5: 1.2us/50us, 500 V voltage waveform
Recommended external surge suppressor: Cambium
Networks Model # C000000L033A
Mean Time Between
Failure
> 40 Years
Environmental
IP66, IP67
Page 10-15
Chapter 10: Reference information
Temperature / Humidity
Weight
Wind Survival
Dimension(HxWxD)
Equipment specifications
-40°C to +60°C (-40°F to +140°F), 0-95% non-condensing
Connectorized
Approx. 2.0 kg (4.5 lbs)
Integrated
Approx. 2.5 kg (5.5 lbs)
Connectorized
322 km/h (200 mi/h)
Integrated
200 km/h (124 mi/h)
Connectorized
26.0 x 13.4 x 6.4 cm (10.3” x 5.3” x 3.3”)
Integrated
31.0 x 31.0 x 6.4 cm (12” x 12” x 2.5”)
Power Consumption
15 W typical, 25 W max, 55 W max with Aux port PoE out
enabled
Input Voltage
48-59 V DC, 802.3at compliant
Mounting
Wall or Pole mount with Cambium Networks Model #
N000045L002A
Security
Encryption
56-bit DES, FIPS-197 128-bit AES
Page 10-16
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Specifications for PTP 450i Series - BH
The PTP 450i BH conforms to the specifications listed in Table 248.
Table 248 PTP 450i Series - BH specifications
Category
Specification
Model Number
PTP 450i BH
Spectrum
Channel Spacing
5, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz Channel Bandwidth
Configurable on 2.5 MHz increments
Frequency Range
Channel Bandwidth
4900 - 5925 MHz
4900 – 5925
MHz
5, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz
Interface
MAC (Media Access
Control) Layer
Cambium Proprietary
Physical Layer
2x2 MIMO OFDM
Ethernet Interface
10/100/1000BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated
(802.3 compliant)
Protocols Used
IPv4, UDP, TCP, IP, ICMP, Telnet, SNMP, HTTP, FTP
Network Management
HTTP, HTTPS, Telnet, FTP, SNMP v2c and v3
VLAN
802.1ad (DVLAN Q-in-Q), 802.1Q with 802.1p priority,
dynamic port VID
Sensitivity
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 5
MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 7
MHz Channel
900 MHz
1x = -92.2 dBm, 2x = -90.2 dBm, 4x = -83.2 dBm, 6x = 77.2 dBm, 8x = -71.2 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -93 dBm, 2x = -88.3 dBm, 4x = -82 dBm, 6x = -74.4
dBm, 8x = -67.9 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -93 dBm, 2x = -88.4 dBm, 4x = -81.3 dBm, 6x = -75.5
dBm, 8x = -67.8 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -93.2 dBm, 2x = -88.3 dBm, 4x = -80.8 dBm, 6x = 74.3 dBm, 8x = -66.8 dBm
900 MHz
1x = -91 dBm, 2x = -86 dBm, 4x = -80 dBm, 6x = -74 dBm,
8x = -67 dBm
Page 10-17
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
10 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
15 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
20 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
30 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
40 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
900 MHz
1x = -90 dBm, 2x = -84 dBm, 4x = -79 dBm, 6x = -73 dBm,
8x = -66 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -90 dBm, 2x = -85 dBm, 4x = -78.6 dBm, 6x = 72.5dBm, 8x = -65 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -87.6 dBm, 2x = -82.5 dBm, 4x = -76.5 dBm, 6x = 70.5 dBm, 8x = -61.5dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -89.9 dBm, 2x = -84.8 dBm, 4x = -78.5 dBm, 6x = 71.4 dBm, 8x = -64 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -88 dBm, 2x = -83.9 dBm, 4x = -76.9 dBm, 6x = -70.7
dBm, 8x = -63.6 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -88 dBm, 2x = -84.2 dBm, 4x = -76.9 dBm, 6x = -70.8
dBm, 8x = -62.7 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -87.8 dBm, 2x = -82.8 dBm, 4x = -6.6 dBm, 6x = 69.3
dBm, 8x = -62.1 dBm
900 MHz
1x = -86 dBm, 2x = -82 dBm, 4x = -75 dBm, 6x = -69 dBm,
8x = -62 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -86.9 dBm, 2x = -82.5 dBm, 4x = -75.7 dBm, 6x = 69.4 dBm, 8x = -62.3 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -84.5 dBm, 2x = -80.5 dBm, 4x = -73.4 dBm, 6x = 66.4 dBm, 8x = -56.4 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -85.8 dBm, 2x = -81.7 dBm, 4x = -75 dBm, 6x = -68.4
dBm, 8x = -61.2 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -85 dBm, 2x = -80.7 dBm, 4x = -73.7 dBm, 6x = -66.5
dBm, 8x = -60 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -85.3 dBm, 2x = -80.5 dBm, 4x = -74.2 dBm, 6x = 67.2 dBm, 8x = -60 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -84.6 dBm, 2x = -80 dBm, 4x = -73,3 dBm, 6x = -66.5
dBm, 8x = -59.1 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x=-84.1 dBm, 2x=-79.3 dBm, 4x=-73 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-58.8 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x=-84.5 dBm, 2x=-79.4 dBm, 4x=-73.3 dBm, 6x=-66.5
dBm, 8x=-58 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x=-84 dBm, 2x=-79 dBm, 4x=-72 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm, 8x=58 dBm
Performance
ARQ
Yes
Cyclic Prefix
1/16
Frame Period
2.5 ms or 5.0 ms
Page 10-18
Chapter 10: Reference information
Modulation Levels
(Adaptive)
Equipment specifications
Modulation Levels
MCS
SNR (in dB)
2x
QPSK
10
4x
16QAM
17
6x
64QAM
24
8x
256QAM
32
Latency
3 - 5 ms
Maximum Deployment
Range
Up to 40 miles (64 km)
GPS Synchronization
Yes, via Autosync (CMM4)
Quality of Service
Diffserv QoS
Link Budget
Antenna Beam Width
Antenna Gain (Does not
include cable loss,
~1dB)
900 MHz
37° azimuth for 12 dBi Yagi antenna
5 GHz
10° azimuth for 23 dBi integrated antenna
900 MHz
12 dBi Yagi antenna
5 GHz
+23 dBi H+V, integrated or external
Transmit Power Range
40 dB dynamic range (to EIRP limit by region) (1 dB step)
Maximum Transmit
Power
+27 dBm combined output
Physical
Sync/AUX port
RJ45

10/100/1000BASE-T Ethernet Data

PoE output

Sync input or output (Connection and powering of
UGPS Sync input)
Antenna Connection
50 ohm, N-type (Connectorized version only)
Surge Suppression
EN61000-4-5
EN61000-4-5: 1.2us/50us, 500 V voltage waveform
Recommended external surge suppressor: Cambium
Networks Model # C000000L033A
Mean Time Between
Failure
> 40 Years
Environmental
IP66, IP67
Temperature / Humidity
-40°C to +60°C (-40°F to +140°F), 0-95% non-condensing
Page 10-19
Chapter 10: Reference information
Weight
Wind Survival
Dimension(HxWxD)
Equipment specifications
Connectorized
Approx. 2.0 kg (4.5 lbs)
Integrated
Approx. 2.5 kg (5.5 lbs)
Connectorized
322 km/h (200 mi/h)
Integrated
200 km/h (124 mi/h)
Connectorized
26.0 x 13.4 x 6.4 cm (10.25” x 5.25” x 3.25”)
Integrated
31.0 x 31.0 x 6.4 cm (12” x 12” x 2.5”)
Power Consumption
15 W typical, 25 W max, 55 W max with Aux port PoE out
enabled
Input Voltage
48-59 V DC, 802.3at compliant
Mounting
Wall or Pole mount with Cambium Networks Model #
N000045L002A
Security
Encryption
56-bit DES, FIPS-197 128-bit AES
Page 10-20
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Specifications for PMP 450b Series - SM
The PMP 450b SM conforms to the specifications listed in Table 247.
Table 249 PMP 450b Series - SM specifications
Category
Specification
Model Number
PMP 450b SM
Spectrum
Channel Spacing
Configurable in 2.5 MHz increments
Frequency Range
4900 - 5925 MHz
Channel Bandwidth
5, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz
Interface
MAC (Media Access
Control) Layer
Cambium Proprietary
Physical Layer
2x2 MIMO OFDM
Ethernet Interface
100/1000BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated
(802.3 compliant)
Protocols Used
IPv4, UDP, TCP, IP, ICMP, Telnet, SNMP, HTTP, FTP
Network Management
HTTP, HTTPS, Telnet, FTP, SNMP v2c and v3
VLAN
802.1ad (DVLAN Q-in-Q), 802.1Q with 802.1p priority,
dynamic port VID
Sensitivity
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 5
MHz Channel
4.9 GHz
1x = -92.5 dBm, 2x = -88.5 dBm, 4x = -81 dBm, 6x = -74.2
dBm, 8x = -66 dBm
5.1 GHz
1x = -93 dBm, 2x = -89.1 dBm, 4x = -81.5 dBm, 6x = -74.8
dBm, 8x = -67.4 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x = -92 dBm, 2x = -88.3 dBm, 4x = -80.8 dBm, 6x = -74
dBm, 8x = -66.2 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -93 dBm, 2x = -89.1 dBm, 4x = -81.5 dBm, 6x = -74.8
dBm, 8x = -67.4 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -92 dBm, 2x = -88.3 dBm, 4x = -80.8 dBm, 6x = -74
dBm, 8x = -66.2 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -90.2 dBm, 2x = -85.2 dBm, 4x = -78.8 dBm, 6x = 71.4 dBm, 8x = -64.5 dBm
Page 10-21
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
10 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
15 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
20 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
5.1 GHz
1x = -90 dBm, 2x = -85.8 dBm, 4x = -78.5 dBm, 6x = -72.2
dBm, 8x = -65.8 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x = -89.9 dBm, 2x = -84.9 dBm, 4x = -78.5 dBm, 6x = 71.2 dBm, 8x = -63.8 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -90 dBm, 2x = -85.8 dBm, 4x = -78.5 dBm, 6x = -72.2
dBm, 8x = -65.8 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -89.9 dBm, 2x = -84.9 dBm, 4x = -78.5 dBm, 6x = 71.2 dBm, 8x = -63.8 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -88.2 dBm, 2x = -83.1 dBm, 4x = -76.9 dBm, 6x = 70.5 dBm, 8x = -62.3 dBm
5.1 GHz
1x = -87.7 dBm, 2x = -83.9 dBm, 4x = -76.6 dBm, 6x = 70.4 dBm, 8x = -63 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x = -88 dBm, 2x = -82.9 dBm, 4x = -76.7 dBm, 6x = -69.4
dBm, 8x = -62.3 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -87.7 dBm, 2x = -83.9 dBm, 4x = -76.6 dBm, 6x = 70.4 dBm, 8x = -63 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -88 dBm, 2x = -82.9 dBm, 4x = -76.7 dBm, 6x = -69.4
dBm, 8x = -62.3 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -87 dBm, 2x = -81.8 dBm, 4x = -75.8 dBm, 6x = -68.5
dBm, 8x = -61.4 dBm
5.1 GHz
1x = -87 dBm, 2x = -82.8 dBm, 4x = -75.6 dBm, 6x = -69.3
dBm, 8x = -61.6 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x = -85.9 dBm, 2x = -81.5 dBm, 4x = -74.8 dBm, 6x = 68.7 dBm, 8x = -61.2 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -87 dBm, 2x = -82.8 dBm, 4x = -75.6 dBm, 6x = -69.3
dBm, 8x = -61.6 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -85.9 dBm, 2x = -81.5 dBm, 4x = -74.8 dBm, 6x = 68.7 dBm, 8x = -61.2 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x = -84.9 dBm, 2x = -80.9 dBm, 4x = -73.2 dBm, 6x = 67.4 dBm, 8x = -59.3 dBm
Page 10-22
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
30 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
40 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
5.1 GHz
1x = -85.2 dBm, 2x = -80.2 dBm, 4x = -74.1 dBm, 6x = 67.9 dBm, 8x = -59.8 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x = -84.9 dBm, 2x = -80 dBm, 4x = -73.2 dBm, 6x = -67.4
dBm, 8x = -59.4 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -85.2 dBm, 2x = -80.2 dBm, 4x = -74.1 dBm, 6x = 67.9 dBm, 8x = -59.8 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -84.9 dBm, 2x = -80 dBm, 4x = -73.2 dBm, 6x = -67.4
dBm, 8x = -59.4 dBm
4.9 GHz
1x=-84.2 dBm, 2x=-79.3 dBm, 4x=-72.3 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-56.8 dBm
5.1 GHz
1x=-84.2 dBm, 2x=-79.1 dBm, 4x=-73.1 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-56.9 dBm
5.2 GHz
1x=-83.6 dBm, 2x=-78.7 dBm, 4x=-72.5 dBm, 6x=-66.4
dBm, 8x=-56.3 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x=-84.2 dBm, 2x=-79.1 dBm, 4x=-73.1 dBm, 6x=-66 dBm,
8x=-56.9 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x=-83.6 dBm, 2x=-78.7 dBm, 4x=-72.5 dBm, 6x=-66.4
dBm, 8x=-56.3 dBm
Performance
ARQ
Yes
Cyclic Prefix
1/16
Frame Period
2.5 ms or 5.0 ms
Modulation Levels
(Adaptive)
Modulation Levels
MCS
SNR (in dB)
2x
QPSK
10
4x
16QAM
17
6x
64QAM
24
8x
256QAM
32
Latency
3 - 5 ms
Page 10-23
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Maximum Deployment
Range
Up to 40 miles (64 km)
GPS Synchronization
Yes, via Autosync (CMM4)
Quality of Service
Diffserv QoS
Link Budget
Antenna Beam Width
15° azimuth for 17 dBi integrated antenna
30° elevation for 17 dBi integrated antenna
Antenna Gain (Does not
include cable loss,
~1dB)
5 GHz
+17 dBi H+V, integrated
Transmit Power Range
40 dB dynamic range (to EIRP limit by region) (1 dB step)
Maximum Transmit
Power
+27 dBm combined output
Physical
Sync/AUX port
RJ45

100/1000BASE-T Ethernet Data

PoE output (planned for future release)

Sync input or output (Connection and powering of
UGPS Sync input)
Antenna Connection
50 ohm, N-type (Connectorized version only)
Surge Suppression
EN61000-4-5
EN61000-4-5: 1.2us/50us, 500 V voltage waveform
Mean Time Between
Failure
> 40 Years
Environmental
IP55
Temperature / Humidity
-40°C to +60°C (-40°F to +140°F), 0-95% non-condensing
Weight
Integrated
Approx. 0.5 kg (1.1 lb. including mounting bracket)
Wind Survival
Integrated
190 km/h (118 mi/h)
Dimension(HxWxD)
Integrated
12.4 x 25.1 x 11.9 cm (4.9” x 9.9” x 4.7”)
Power Consumption
9 W nominal, 12 W peak
Input Voltage
20 - 32 V DC,
Mounting
Wall or Pole mount
Security
Page 10-24
Chapter 10: Reference information
Encryption
Equipment specifications
56-bit DES, FIPS-197 128-bit AES
Page 10-25
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Specifications for PMP 450 Series - AP
The PMP 450 AP conforms to the specifications listed in Table 250.
Table 250 PMP 450 Series - AP specifications
Category
Specification
Model Number
PMP 450 AP
Spectrum
Channel Spacing
5, 7, 10, 15, 20 and 30 MHz Channel Bandwidth
Configurable on 2.5 MHz increments
Frequency Range
Channel Bandwidth
2.4 GHz
2400 – 2483.5 MHz
3.5 GHz
3300 – 3600 MHz
3.65 GHz
3500 – 3850 MHz
5 GHz
5470 – 5875 MHz
3.5 and 3.65 GHz
5, 7, 10, 15, 20 and 30 MHz
2.4 and 5 GHz
5, 10, 15, 20 and 30 MHz
OFDM Subcarriers
512 FFT
Interface
MAC (Media Access
Control) Layer
Cambium Proprietary
Physical Layer
2x2 MIMO OFDM
Ethernet Interface
10/100/1000BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto
negotiated (802.3 compliant)
Protocols Used
IPv4, UDP, TCP, IP, ICMP, Telnet, SNMP, HTTP, FTP,
TFTP, RADIUS
Network Management
HTTP, HTTPS, Telnet, FTP, SNMP v3, TFTP, Syslog
VLAN
802.1ad (DVLAN Q-in-Q), 802.1Q with 802.1p priority,
dynamic port VID
Sensitivity
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 5
MHz Channel
2.4 GHz
1x = -92 dBm, 2x = -87.8 dBm, 4x = -80.4 dBm, 6x = 74.4 dBm, 8x = -66.5 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -92.4 dBm, 2x = -88.3 dBm, 4x = -81.3 dBm, 6x =
-75.3 dBm, 8x = -67.7 dBm
Page 10-26
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 7
MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
10 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
15 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
20 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
3.65 GHz
1x = -91 dBm, 2x = -86.1 dBm, 4x = -80.2 dBm, 6x = 73.1 dBm, 8x = -66 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -88.7 dBm, 2x = -84 dBm, 4x = -77.6 dBm, 6x = 71.6 dBm, 8x = -63.7 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -91.5 dBm, 2x = -87 dBm, 4x = -80.2 dBm, 6x = 73.1 dBm, 8x = -66 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -90.5 dBm, 2x = -86.4 dBm, 4x = -80.3 dBm, 6x =
-73.4 dBm, 8x = -66.9 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -89.1 dBm, 2x = -85.1 dBm, 4x = -78.1 dBm, 6x =
-72.1 dBm, 8x = -64.5 dBm
2.4 GHz
1x = -89.9 dBm, 2x = -85.6 dBm, 4x = -80 dBm, 6x = 73.5 dBm, 8x = -66.9 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -89.8 dBm, 2x = -85.6 dBm, 4x = -80 dBm, 6x = 73 dBm, 8x = -66.3 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -89 dBm, 2x = -85.2 dBm, 4x = -78.1 dBm, 6x = 72.1 dBm, 8x = -64.5 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -86.1 dBm, 2x = -82.2 dBm, 4x = -75.3 dBm, 6x =
-69.3 dBm, 8x = -61.3 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -86 dBm, 2x = -82.2 dBm, 4x = -75.1 dBm, 6x = 69 dBm, 8x = -60 dBm
2.4 GHz
1x = -88.4 dBm, 2x = -84.1 dBm, 4x = -77.1 dBm, 6x =
-71.4 dBm, 8x = -65 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -88.5 dBm, 2x = -84.5 dBm, 4x = -77.5 dBm, 6x =
-71.5 dBm, 8x = -64.3 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -87.4 dBm, 2x = -83.7 dBm, 4x = -76.3 dBm, 6x =
-69.7 dBm, 8x = -62.2 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -84.2 dBm, 2x = -80.2 dBm, 4x = -73.2 dBm, 6x =
-67.2 dBm, 8x = -60 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -85 dBm, 2x = -80 dBm, 4x = -74.3 dBm, 6x = -67
dBm, 8x = -58 dBm
2.4 GHz
1x = -85 dBm, 2x = -85 dBm, 4x = -79 dBm, 6x = -72
dBm, 8x = -66 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -85 dBm, 2x = -85 dBm, 4x = -79 dBm, 6x = -72
dBm, 8x = -65 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -86 dBm, 2x = -86 dBm, 4x = -78 dBm, 6x = -71
dBm, 8x = -63 dBm
Page 10-27
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
30 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
5.4 GHz
1x = -81 dBm, 2x = -81 dBm, 4x = -75 dBm, 6x = -68
dBm, 8x = -59 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -82 dBm, 2x = -82 dBm, 4x = -75 dBm, 6x = -69
dBm, 8x = -60 dBm
2.4 GHz
1x = -85.4 dBm, 2x = -80.4 dBm, 4x = -74 dBm, 6x = 68 dBm, 8x = -61 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -85.5 dBm, 2x = -81.5 dBm, 4x = -74.5 dBm, 6x =
-68.2 dBm, 8x = -61.3 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -84 dBm, 2x = -79.5 dBm, 4x = -73.4 dBm, 6x = 66.4 dBm, 8x = -59.2 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -81 dBm, 2x = -76.9 dBm, 4x = -70.9 dBm, 6x = 63.8 dBm, 8x = -55.8 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -80.9 dBm, 2x = -76.8 dBm, 4x = -70 dBm, 6x = 63.8 dBm, 8x = -55 dBm
Performance
Subscribers Per Sector
Up to 238
ARQ
Yes
Cyclic Prefix
1/16
Frame Period
2.5 ms or 5.0 ms
Modulation Levels
(Adaptive)
Modulation Levels
MCS
SNR (in dB)
2x
QPSK
10
4x
16QAM
17
6x
64QAM
24
8x
256QAM
32
Latency
3 - 5 ms for 2.5 ms Frame Period
6-10 ms for 5.0 ms Frame Period
Maximum Deployment Range
Up to 40 miles (64 km)
Packets Per Second
12,500
GPS Synchronization
Yes, via CMM3, CMM4 or UGPS
Quality of Service
Diffserv QoS
Link Budget
Page 10-28
Chapter 10: Reference information
Antenna Gain (Does not
include cable loss,
~1dB)
Equipment specifications
2.4 GHz
18 dBi Dual Slant
3.5 GHz
16 dBi Dual Slant
3.65 GHz
16 dBi Dual Slant
5 GHz
17 dBi Horizontal and Vertical
Combined Transmit
Power
-30 to +22 dBm (to EIRP limit by region) in 1 dBconfigurable intervals (2.4 GHz, 5 GHz)
-30 to +25 dBm (to EIRP limit by region) in 1 dBconfigurable intervals (3.5 GHz)
-30 to +25 dBm (to EIRP limit by region and channel
bandwidth) in 1 dB-configurable intervals (3.6 GHz)
Maximum Transmit
Power
22 dBm combined OFDM (2.4 GHz, 5 GHz)
(dependent upon Region Code setting)
25 dBm combined OFDM (3.5 GHz, 3.6 GHz),
(dependent upon Region Code setting)
Physical
Wind Survival
200 mph (322 kph)
Antenna Connection
50 ohm, N-type (Connectorized version only)
Environmental
IP66, IP67
Temperature / Humidity
-40°C to +60°C (-40°F to +140°F) /
0-95% non-condensing
Weight
2.4 GHz
15 kg (33 lbs) with antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) without antenna
3.5 GHz
15 kg (33 lbs) with antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) without antenna
3.6 GHz
15 kg (33 lbs) with antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) without antenna
5 GHz
5.9 kg (13 lbs) with antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) without antenna
Dimension(HxWxD)
2.4 GHz
Radio: 27 x 21 x 7 cm (10.6” x 8.3” x 2.8”)
Antenna: 112.2 x 24.5 x 11.7 cm (44.2” x 9.6” x 4.6”)
3.5 GHz
Radio: 27 x 21 x 7 cm (10.6” x 8.3” x 2.8”)
3.6 GHz
Radio: 27 x 21 x 7 cm (10.6” x 8.3” x 2.8”)
5 GHz
Radio: 27 x 21 x 7 cm (10.6” x 8.3” x 2.8”)
Page 10-29
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Antenna: 51 x 13 x 7.3 cm (20.2” x 5.1” x 2.9”)
Power Consumption
14 W
Input Voltage
22 to 32 VDC
Security
Encryption
56-bit DES, AES
Page 10-30
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Specifications for PMP 450 Series - SM
The PMP 450 SM conforms to the specifications listed in Table 251.
Table 251 PMP 450 Series - SM specifications
Category
Specification
Model Number
PMP 450 SM
Spectrum
Channel Spacing
5, 7, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz Channel Bandwidth
Configurable on 2.5 MHz increments
Frequency Range
Channel Bandwidth
900 MHz
902 – 928 MHz
2.4 GHz
2400 – 2483.5 MHz
3.5 GHz
3300 – 3600 MHz
3.65 GHz
3500 – 3850 MHz
5 GHz
5470 – 5875 MHz
900 MHz,
5, 7, 10, 15, and 20 MHz
2.4 GHz, 3.5 GHz,
3.65 GHz and 5
GHz
5, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz
OFDM Subcarriers
2.4 GHz band does not support 40 MHz.
512 FFT
Interface
MAC (Media Access Control) Layer
Cambium Proprietary
Physical Layer
2x2 MIMO OFDM
Ethernet Interface
10/100 BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated
(802.3 compliant)
Protocols Used
IPv4, UDP, TCP, IP, ICMP, Telnet, SNMP, HTTP, FTP
Network Management
HTTP, HTTPS, Telnet, FTP, SNMP v3
VLAN
802.1ad (DVLAN Q-in-Q), 802.1Q with 802.1p priority,
dynamic port VID
Sensitivity
900 MHz
1x = -91 dBm, 2x = -91 dBm, 4x = -85 dBm, 6x = -78
dBm, 8x = -70 dBm
Page 10-31
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 5
MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 7
MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
10 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
15 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
2.4 GHz
1x = -92.5 dBm, 2x = -89.9 dBm, 4x = -82.9 dBm, 6x =
-75.9, dBm, 8x = -67.9 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -93.5 dBm, 2x = -89.4 dBm, 4x = -83.5 dBm, 6x =
-76.4 dBm, 8x = -68.3 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -91.3 dBm, 2x = -89.1 dBm, 4x = -82.2 dBm, 6x =
-75.2 dBm, 8x = -67.3 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -89.3 dBm, 2x = -87.3 dBm, 4x = -80.3 dBm, 6x =
-74.3 dBm, 8x = -66.3 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -89 dBm, 2x = -87 dBm, 4x = -80 dBm, 6x = -73.9
dBm, 8x = -64.9 dBm
900 MHz
1x = -91 dBm, 2x = -84 dBm, 4x = -83 dBm, 6x = -77
dBm, 8x = -71 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -92.2 dBm, 2x = -88.5 dBm, 4x = -81.4 dBm, 6x =
-74.5 dBm, 8x = -67.6 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -90.4 dBm, 2x = -87.3 dBm, 4x = -80.6 dBm, 6x =
-73 dBm, 8x = -65.6 dBm
900 MHz
1x = -90 dBm, 2x = -83 dBm, 4x = -80 dBm, 6x = -74
dBm, 8x = -68 dBm
2.4 GHz
1x = -88 dBm, 2x = -88 dBm, 4x = -81 dBm, 6x = -75
dBm, 8x = -69 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -88 dBm, 2x = -88 dBm, 4x = -81 dBm, 6x = -76
dBm, 8x = -68 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -86 dBm, 2x = -86 dBm, 4x = -80 dBm, 6x = -73
dBm, 8x = -66 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -84 dBm, 2x = -84 dBm, 4x = -78 dBm, 6x = -72
dBm, 8x = -63 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -84 dBm, 2x = -84 dBm, 4x = -77 dBm, 6x = -71
dBm, 8x = -63 dBm
900 MHz
1x = -88.6 dBm, 2x = -85.4 dBm, 4x = -78.1 dBm, 6x =
-72.2 dBm, 8x = -65.2 dBm
2.4 GHz
1x = -88.5 dBm, 2x = -84.5 dBm, 4x = -77.5 dBm, 6x =
-71.5 dBm, 8x = -64.5 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -89.5 dBm, 2x = -84.5 dBm, 4x = -78.5 dBm, 6x =
-71.5 dBm, 8x = -65.1 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -87.3 dBm, 2x = -84.3 dBm, 4x = -77.3 dBm, 6x =
-70.3 dBm, 8x = -62.2 dBm
Page 10-32
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
20 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
30 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
40 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
5.4 GHz
1x = -84.5dBm, 2x = -82.5 dBm, 4x = -75.5 dBm, 6x = 69.5 dBm, 8x = -59.5 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -84 dBm, 2x = -84 dBm, 4x = -77 dBm, 6x = -71
dBm, 8x = -63 dBm
900 MHz
1x = -87 dBm, 2x = -80 dBm, 4x = -77 dBm, 6x = -72
dBm, 8x = -65 dBm
2.4 GHz
1x = -86.9 dBm, 2x = -82.9 dBm, 4x = -75.9 dBm, 6x =
-69.9 dBm, 8x = -63.5 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -87.5 dBm, 2x = -83.5 dBm, 4x = -76.5 dBm, 6x =
-69.5 dBm, 8x = -63.1 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -86 dBm, 2x = -83 dBm, 4x = -76.2 dBm, 6x = 68.2 dBm, 8x = -61 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -83.4 dBm, 2x = -81.7 dBm, 4x = -74.4 dBm, 6x =
-67.2 dBm, 8x = -57.3 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -84 dBm, 2x = -80.5 dBm, 4x = -74 dBm, 6x = 66.9 dBm, 8x = -56 dBm
2.4 GHz
1x = -85.9 dBm, 2x = -80.9 dBm, 4x = -73.9 dBm, 6x =
-67.8 dBm, 8x = -60.9 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x = -86.5 dBm, 2x = -81.5 dBm, 4x = -74.5 dBm, 6x =
-68.2 dBm, 8x = -61.3 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x = -84.3 dBm, 2x = -80.3 dBm, 4x = -74.3 dBm, 6x =
-66.2 dBm, 8x = -58 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x = -82 dBm, 2x = -78.3 dBm, 4x = -72.3 dBm, 6x = 65.3 dBm, 8x = -55.3 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x = -81.7 dBm, 2x = -78.6 dBm, 4x = -71.6 dBm, 6x =
-64.4 dBm, 8x = -54 dBm
3.5 GHz
1x=-83.1 dBm, 2x=-79.3 dBm, 4x=-72.9 dBm, 6x=-66
dBm, 8x=-56.3 dBm
3.65 GHz
1x=-83.6 dBm, 2x=-79.6 dBm, 4x=-72.3 dBm, 6x=-65.3
dBm, 8x=-54.4 dBm
5.4 GHz
1x=-82.4 dBm, 2x=-78 dBm, 4x=-71.2 dBm, 6x=-64.3
dBm, 8x=-51 dBm
5.8 GHz
1x=-82.5 dBm, 2x=-78.8 dBm, 4x=-70.7 dBm, 6x=-64.8
dBm, 8x=-51 dBm
Performance
Subscribers Per Sector
Up to 238
Page 10-33
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
ARQ
Yes
Cyclic Prefix
1/16
Frame Period
2.5 ms or 5.0 ms
Modulation Levels
(Adaptive)
Modulation Levels
MCS
SNR (in dB)
2x
QPSK
10
4x
16QAM
17
6x
64QAM
24
8x
256QAM
32
Latency
3 - 5 ms for 2.5 ms Frame Period
6-10 ms for 5.0 ms Frame Period
Maximum Deployment Range
Up to 40 miles (64 km)
GPS Synchronization
Yes
Quality of Service
Diffserv QoS
Link Budget
Antenna Gain (Does not
include cable loss,
~1dB)
900 MHz
12 dBi Yagi antenna
2.4 GHz
7 dBi Dual Slant, integrated patch
3.5 GHz
8 dBi Dual Slant, integrated patch
19 dBi Flat Plate, integrated patch
3.65 GHz
8 dBi Dual Slant, integrated patch
19 dBi Flat Plate, integrated patch
5 GHz
9 dBi H+V, integrated patch
25 dBi H+V, integrated dish
Combined Transmit Power
-30 to +22 dBm (to EIRP limit by region) – 2.4, 5 GHz
-30 to +25 dBm (to EIRP limit by region) – 3.5, 3.6 GHz
25 dBm - 3 GHz
Maximum Transmit
Power
22 dBm combined OFDM (2.4 GHz, 5 GHz)
(dependent upon Region Code setting)
25 dBm combined OFDM (900 MHz, 3.5 GHz, 3.6
GHz), (dependent upon Region Code setting)
Reflector antenna gain
2.4 GHz
+12 dBi
Page 10-34
Chapter 10: Reference information
Other antenna (5 GHz
only)
Equipment specifications
3.5 GHz
+11 dBi
3.65 GHz
+11 dBi
5 GHz
+15 dBi
CLIP Gain
+8 dBi
LENS Gain
+5.5 dBi
Physical
Wind Survival
200 mph (322 kph)
Antenna Connection
50 ohm, N-type (Connectorized version only)
Environmental
IP55
Temperature / Humidity
-40°C to +60°C (-40°F to +140°F) /
0-95% non-condensing
Weight
2.4 GHz
15 kg (33 lbs) with antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) without antenna
3.5 GHz
15 kg (33 lbs) with antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) without antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) for 450 ruggedized
3.6 GHz
15 kg (33 lbs) with antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) without antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) for 450 ruggedized
5 GHz
5.9 kg (13 lbs) with antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) without antenna
3.5 kg (7.7 lbs) for 450d
Dimensions (H x W x D)
30 x 9 x 9 cm (11.75” x 3.4” x 3.4”)
50 x 50 x 38 cm (19.69” x 19.69” x 14.96”) for 450d
31.0 x 31.0 x 6.4 cm (12” x 12” x 2.5”) for 450
ruggedized
Power Consumption
12 W
Input Voltage
20 to 32 VDC
Security
Encryption
56-bit DES, AES
Page 10-35
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Specifications for PTP 450 Series - BH
The PTP 450 BH conforms to the specifications listed in Table 252.
Table 252 PTP 450 Series - BH specifications
Category
Specification
Model Number
PTP 450 BH
Spectrum
Channel Spacing
5, 7, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 MHz Channel Bandwidth
Configurable on 2.5 MHz increments
Frequency Range
902 to 928 MHz
3300 – 3600 MHz
3500 – 3850 MHz
5470 – 5875 MHz
Channel Bandwidth
900 MHz
5, 7, 10, 15, and 20 MHz
3.5 GHz, 3.6
GHz, and 5
GHz
5, 7, 10, 15, 20 and 30 MHz
OFDM Subcarriers
7 MHz Channel bandwidth configurable for 3.5 GHz and
3.65 GHz band only.
512 FFT
Interface
MAC (Media Access
Control) Layer
Cambium Proprietary
Physical Layer
2x2 MIMO OFDM
Ethernet Interface
10/100 BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated (802.3
compliant)
Protocols Used
IPv4, UDP, TCP, IP, ICMP, Telnet, SNMP, HTTP, FTP,
TFTP, RADIUS
Network Management
HTTP, HTTPS, Telnet, FTP, SNMP v2c and v3, TFTP,
Syslog
VLAN
802.1ad (DVLAN Q-in-Q), 802.1Q with 802.1p priority,
dynamic port VID
Sensitivity
3.5 GHz
OFDM: 1x = -92 dBm, 2x = -90 dBm, 4x = -83 dBm, 6x = 76 dBm, 8x = -69 dBm
Page 10-36
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @ 5
MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @7
MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC)
@10 MHz Channel
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC)
@15 MHz Channel
3.6 GHz
OFDM: 1x = -94 dBm, 2x = -89.3 dBm, 4x = -82.3 dBm, 6x
= -75.2 dBm, 8x = -68.4 dBm
5.4 GHz
OFDM: 1x = -90.4 dBm, 2x = -86 dBm, 4x = -79.4 dBm, 6x
= -73.2 dBm, 8x = -65.4 dBm
5.8 GHz
OFDM: 1x = -90 dBm, 2x = -85.4 dBm, 4x = -79.4 dBm, 6x
= -73.4 dBm, 8x = -64.9 dBm
3.5 GHz
OFDM: 1x = -90 dBm, 2x = -88 dBm, 4x = -81 dBm, 6x = 74 dBm, 8x = -67 dBm
3.6 GHz
OFDM: 1x = -92 dBm, 2x = -87.3 dBm, 4x = -81.3 dBm, 6x
= -74.3 dBm, 8x = -66.4 dBm
3.5 GHz
OFDM: 1x =-91 dBm, 2x = -87.2 dBm, 4x = -80 dBm, 6x = 73 dBm, 8x = -65.6 dBm
3.6 GHz
OFDM: 1x =‐90.4 dBm, 2x = ‐86.3 dBm, 4x = ‐80 dBm, 6x =
‐73 dBm, 8x = ‐64.5 dBm
5.4 GHz
OFDM: 1x =‐87.6 dBm, 2x = ‐82.5 dBm, 4x = ‐76.5 dBm, 6x
= ‐70.5 dBm, 8x = ‐61.5 dBm
5.8 GHz
OFDM: 1x =‐87.5 dBm, 2x = ‐82.7 dBm, 4x = ‐76.8 dBm, 6x
= ‐70.5 dBm, 8x = ‐61.4 dBm
3.5 GHz
OFDM: 1x =‐89 dBm, 2x = ‐85 dBm, 4x = ‐78 dBm, 6x = ‐
71.1 dBm, 8x = ‐64.7 dBm
OFDM: 1x =‐89 dBm, 2x = ‐84.3 dBm, 4x = ‐78 dBm, 6x = ‐
71 dBm, 8x = ‐63 dBm
OFDM: 1x =‐85.6 dBm, 2x = ‐81.6 dBm, 4x = ‐74.5 dBm, 6x
= ‐68.5 dBm, 8x = ‐57.5 dBm
OFDM: 1x =‐85.6 dBm, 2x = ‐80.9 dBm, 4x = ‐75 dBm, 6x =
‐68 dBm, 8x = ‐58 dBm
OFDM: 1x =‐88 dBm, 2x = ‐84 dBm, 4x = ‐77 dBm, 6x = ‐70
dBm, 8x = ‐62.2 dBm
3.6 GHz
5.4 GHz
5.8 GHz
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
20 MHz Channel
Equipment specifications
3.5 GHz
3.6 GHz
OFDM: 1x =‐87.3 dBm, 2x = ‐83.3 dBm, 4x = ‐76.3 dBm, 6x
= ‐69.3 dBm, 8x = ‐62 dBm
5.4 GHz
OFDM: 1x =‐84.5 dBm, 2x = ‐80.5 dBm, 4x = ‐73.4 dBm, 6x
= ‐66.4 dBm, 8x = ‐56.4 dBm
5.8 GHz
OFDM: 1x =‐84.8 dBm, 2x = ‐80.8 dBm, 4x = ‐74.7 dBm, 6x
= ‐66.4 dBm, 8x = ‐56 dBm
3.5 GHz
OFDM: 1x =‐86 dBm, 2x = ‐82 dBm, 4x = ‐75 dBm, 6x = ‐68
dBm, 8x = ‐60 dBm
Page 10-37
Chapter 10: Reference information
Nominal Receive
Sensitivity (w/ FEC) @
30 MHz Channel
3.6 GHz
5.4 GHz
5.8 GHz
5.4 GHz
5.8 GHz
Equipment specifications
OFDM: 1x =‐86 dBm, 2x = ‐81.3 dBm, 4x = ‐74.3 dBm, 6x =
‐67.3 dBm, 8x = ‐59 dBm
OFDM: 1x =‐82.5 dBm, 2x = ‐78.5 dBm, 4x = ‐71.5 dBm, 6x
= ‐64.4 dBm, 8x = ‐53.4 dBm
OFDM: 1x =‐82.5 dBm, 2x = ‐78.5 dBm, 4x = ‐71.5 dBm, 6x
= ‐64.4 dBm, 8x = ‐54 dBm
OFDM: 1x =‐81.8 dBm, 2x = ‐77.5 dBm, 4x = ‐71.5 dBm, 6x
= ‐63.5 dBm, 8x = ‐52.6 dBm
OFDM: 1x =‐83.0 dBm, 2x = ‐78.0 dBm, 4x = ‐71.0 dBm, 6x
= ‐63.3 dBm
Performance
ARQ
Yes
Cyclic Prefix
1/16
Frame Period
2.5 ms or 5.0 ms
Modulation Levels
(Adaptive)
Modulation Levels
MCS
SNR (in dB)
2x
QPSK
10
4x
16QAM
17
6x
64QAM
24
8x
256QAM
32
Latency
3 - 5 ms for 2.5 ms frame period
6 - 10 ms for 5.0 ms frame period
Packets Per Second
12,500
Maximum Deployment
Range
Up to 40 miles (64 km)
GPS Synchronization
Yes, via Autosync (CMM4)
Quality of Service
Diffserv QoS
Link Budget
Combined Transmit
Power
30 to +22 dBm (to EIRP limit by region) in 1 dBconfigurable intervals (5 GHz)
-30 to +25 dBm (to EIRP limit by region) in 1 dBconfigurable intervals (3.5 GHz)
-30 to +25 dBm (to EIRP limit by region and channel
bandwidth) in 1 dB-configurable intervals (3.6 GHz)
3.5 GHz
8 dBi Dual Slant, integrated patch
Page 10-38
Chapter 10: Reference information
Antenna Gain (Does not
include cable loss,
~1dB)
Equipment specifications
19 dBi Flat Plate, integrated patch
3.65 GHz
8 dBi Dual Slant, integrated patch
19 dBi Flat Plate, integrated patch
5 GHz
9 dBi H+V, integrated patch
25 dBi H+V, integrated dish
Transmit Power Range
40 dB dynamic range (to EIRP limit by region) (1 dB step)
Maximum Transmit
Power
22 dBm combined OFDM (5 GHz) (dependent upon
Region Code setting)
25 dBm combined OFDM (3.5 GHz, 3.6 GHz), (dependent
upon Region Code setting)
Reflector antenna gain
Other antenna (5 GHz
only)
3.5 GHz
+11 dBi
3.65 GHz
+11 dBi
5 GHz
+15 dBi
CLIP Gain
+8 dBi
LENS Gain
+5.5 dBi
RJ45

10/100/1000BASE-T Ethernet Data

PoE output

Sync input or output (Connection and powering of
UGPS Sync input)
Physical
Sync/AUX port
Antenna Connection
50 ohm, N-type (Connectorized version only)
Surge Suppression
EN61000-4-5
EN61000-4-5: 1.2us/50us, 500 V voltage waveform
Recommended external surge suppressor: Cambium
Networks Model # C000000L033A
Mean Time Between
Failure
> 40 Years
Environmental
IP66, IP67
Temperature / Humidity
-40°C to +60°C (-40°F to +140°F), 0-95% non-condensing
Weight
15 kg (33 lbs) with antenna
2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) without antenna
Wind Survival
200 mph (322 kph)
Page 10-39
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
Dimension(HxWxD)
30 x 9 x 9 cm (11.75” x 3.4” x 3.4”)
Maximum Power
Consumption
14 W
Input Voltage
22 to 32 VDC
Security
Encryption
56-bit DES, AES
Page 10-40
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
PSU specifications
The PMP/PTP 450i AC+DC Enhanced Power Injector conforms to the specifications listed in Table 253.
Table 253 PMP/PTP 450i AC power Injector specifications
Category
Specification
Dimensions
137 mm (5.4 in) x 56 mm (2.2 in) x 38 mm (1.5 in)
Weight
0.240 Kg (0.5 lbs)
Temperature
-40°C to +60°C
Humidity
90% non-condensing
Waterproofing
Not waterproof
Altitude
Sea level to 5000 meters (16000 ft)
AC Input
Min 90 V AC, 57 – 63 Hz, max 264 V AC, 47 – 53 Hz.
DC output voltage to the ODU
58V +2V/- 0V
AC connector
IEC-320-C8
Efficiency
Better than 85%, efficiency level ‘VI’
Over Current Protection
Hiccup current limiting, trip point set between 120% to 150%
of full load current
Hold up time
At least 10 milliseconds
Warning
Use the above PSU to only power up 450i and 450m products.
Page 10-41
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment specifications
The PMP/PTP 450 power supply conforms to the specifications listed in Table 254.
Table 254 PMP/PTP 450 power supply specifications (part number: N000900L001A)
Category
Specification
Dimensions
118 mm (4.66 in) x 45 mm (1.75 in) x 32 mm (1.25 in)
Weight
0.240 Kg (0.5 lbs)
Temperature
0°C to +40°C
Humidity
20 to 90%
AC Input
90-264 VAC, 47 – 63 Hz, 0.5 A rms at 120 VAC, 0.25 A rms at
240 VAC.
DC output voltage to the ODU
30 V ± 5%
AC connector
IEC-320-C8
Efficiency
Better than 85%, efficiency level ‘V’
Over Current Protection
Short circuit, with auto recovery; Should restart between every
0.5 to 2 sec.
Hold up time
10mS min at max load, 120VAC
Note
The 30V PSU (part number: #N000900L001A) has to be used for PMP 450 900 MHz SM.
Warning
The PMP 450 Ruggedized High Gain Integrated Subscriber Module (Cambium part
numbers C035045C014A and C036045C014A), while encapsulated in a 450i-type
enclosure, contains 450 circuitry which must be powered via 30VDC. Powering these
SMs with 56 VDC will damage the device.
Page 10-42
Chapter 10: Reference information
Data network specifications
Data network specifications
This section contains specifications of the PMP/PTP 450 platform Ethernet interface.
Ethernet interface
450m/450i Series
The 450m/450i Series Ethernet port conforms to the specifications listed in Table 255.
Table 255 450m/450i Series Main and Aux Ethernet bridging specifications
Ethernet Bridging
Specification
Protocol
IEEE 802.3 compatible
QoS
IEEE 802.1p, IEEE 802.1Q, IEEE 802.1ad, DSCP IPv4
Main Ethernet port
10/100/1000 BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated
Aux Ethernet port
10/100 BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated
Maximum Ethernet Frame Size
1700 Bytes
450/450b Series
Table 256 450 Series Ethernet bridging specifications
Ethernet Bridging
Specification
Protocol
IEEE 802.3 compatible
QoS
IEEE 802.1p, IEEE 802.1Q, IEEE 802.1ad, DSCP IPv4
Interface
10/100/1000 BaseT, half/full duplex, rate auto negotiated
Maximum Ethernet Frame Size
1700 Bytes
Note
Practical Ethernet rates depend on network configuration, higher layer protocols and
platforms used.
Over the air throughput is restricted to the rate of the Ethernet interface at the receiving end
of the link.
Page 10-43
Chapter 10: Reference information
Wireless specifications
Wireless specifications
This section contains specifications of the 450 Platform Family wireless interface. These specifications
include RF bands, channel bandwidth, spectrum settings, maximum power and link loss.
General wireless specifications
The wireless specifications that apply to all 450 Platform variants are listed under Table 257.
Table 257 450 Platform Family - wireless specifications
Item
Specification
Channel selection
Manual selection (fixed frequency).
Manual power control
To avoid interference to other users of the band, maximum power can
be set lower than the default power limit.
Duplex scheme
Adaptive TDD
Range
Band
Platform
Range
900 MHz
PMP 450i Series - AP and
120 mi / 193 km
PMP 450 Series - SM
2.4 GHz
PMP 450 Series
40 mi / 64 km
3.5 GHz
PMP/PTP 450 Series
40 mi / 64 km (PMP)
186 mi/ 299 km (PTP)
3.65 GHz
PMP/PTP 450 Series
40 mi / 64 km (PMP)
186 mi/ 299 km (PTP)
5 GHz
PMP/PTP 450/450i/450b
Series and
PMP 450m Series AP
Over-the-air encryption
DES, AES
Error Correction
Rate 3/4 RS coder
Page 10-44
40 mi / 64 km (PMP)
186 mi/ 299 km (PTP)
Chapter 10: Reference information
Wireless specifications
Link Range and Throughput
Link range and throughput estimates are based on site-specific attributes and configuration parameters.
For the most up-to-date information on link range and throughput for your equipment see the Capacity
Planner and LINKPlanner software tools:

For average-deployment link range and throughput planning information, see:
https://support.cambiumnetworks.com/files/capacityplanner/

For site-specific link range and throughput planning information, see:
https://support.cambiumnetworks.com/files/linkplanner
Page 10-45
Chapter 10: Reference information
Country specific radio regulations
Country specific radio regulations
This section describes how the 450 Platform Family complies with the radio regulations that are enforced
in various countries.
Caution
Changes or modifications not expressly approved by Cambium could void the user’s
authority to operate the system.
Type approvals
This system has achieved Type Approval in various countries around the world. This means that the
system has been tested against various local technical regulations and found to comply. The frequency
bands in which the system operates may be ‘unlicensed’ and, in these bands, the system can be used
provided it does not cause interference. The system is not guaranteed protection against interference
from other ODUs and installations.
The radio specification type approvals that have been granted for 450 Platform frequency variants are
listed in Table 258.
Table 258 Radio certifications
Variant
Region
Specification (Type Approvals)
900 MHz PMP 450i
Canada
RSS Gen and RSS 210
USA
FCC Part 15.247
Mexico
NOM-121-SCT1-2009
Canada
RSS Gen and RSS 210
USA
FCC Part 15 Class B
Canada
RSS Gen and RSS 192
Europe
ETSI EN 302 326-2 V1.2.2
Canada
RSS Gen and RSS 197
USA
FCC Part 15 Class B
4.9 GHz PMP/PTP
450i/450b
USA
FCC Part 90 Subpart Y
Canada
RSS Gen and RSS 111
5.1 GHz PMP/PTP
450i/450b
USA
FCC Part 15 Class B
5.1 GHz PMP/PTP 450m
USA
FCC Part 15E and Part 15B
Europe
ETSI EN 302 625 V1.1.1
USA
FCC Part 15E and Part 15B
2.4 GHz PMP 450
3.5 GHz PMP/PTP 450
3.6 GHz PMP/PTP 450
5.2 GHz PMP/PTP 450m
Page 10-46
Chapter 10: Reference information
Country specific radio regulations
Variant
Region
Specification (Type Approvals)
5.2 GHz PMP/PTP
450i/450b
USA
FCC Part 15 Class B
Canada
RSS Gen and RSS 247
5.4 GHz PMP/PTP 450
and 450i
Europe
ETSI EN 301 893 v1.6.1
USA
FCC Part 15 Class B
5.4 GHz PMP/PTP 450m
USA
FCC Part 15E and Part 15B
Canada
RSS Gen and RSS 247
Europe
ETSI EN 301 893 v1.8.1
ETSI EN 301 893 v2.1.1 Clause 4.8
Canada
RSS Gen and RSS 210
USA
FCC Part 15 Class B
Europe
ETSI EN 302 502 v1.2.1
USA
FCC Part 15E and Part 15B
Canada
RSS Gen and RSS 247
Europe
ETSI EN 302 502 v2.1.1
5.8 GHz PMP/PTP 450
and 450i
5.8 GHz PMP/PTP 450m
DFS for 2.4 and 5 GHz Radios
Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) is a requirement in several countries and regions for 2.4 and 5 GHz
unlicensed systems to detect radar systems and avoid co-channel operation.
The details of DFS operation and channels available for each Country Code, including whether DFS is
active on the AP, SM, which DFS regulation apply, and any channel restrictions are shown in Table 259
on page 10-47.
Table 259 Country & Bands DFS setting
Region
Code
North
America
Country Code
Band
AP
SM
Weather
Radar
Notch-Out
USA
2.4 GHz
No effect
No effect
No
5.2 GHz
FCC DFS
No effect
No
5.4 GHz
FCC DFS
No effect
No
5.8 GHz
No effect
No effect
No
2.4 GHz
No effect
No effect
No
5.2 GHz
FCC DFS
No effect
No
5.4 GHz
FCC DFS
No effect
No
Canada
Page 10-47
Chapter 10: Reference information
Mexico
South
America
Europe
OtherRegulatory
Brazil
ETSI
Other-FCC
Other-ETSI
Country specific radio regulations
5.8 GHz
No effect
No effect
No
2.4 GHz
No effect
No effect
No
5.2 GHz
ANATEL Res5062008
No effect
No
5.4 GHz
ANATEL Res5062008
No effect
No
5.8 GHz
No effect
No effect
No
5.4 GHz
ETSI EN 301 893
v1.7.1 DFS
No effect
No
5.8 GHz
No effect
No effect
No
5.4 GHz
ETSI EN 301 893
v1.7.1 DFS
ETSI EN 301 893
v1.7.1 DFS
Yes
5.8 GHz
ETSI EN 302 502
v1.2.1 DFS
ETSI EN 302 502
v1.2.1 DFS
Yes
2.4 GHz
No effect
No effect
No
5.2 GHz
FCC DFS
No effect
No
5.4 GHz
FCC DFS
No effect
No
5.8-GHz
No effect
No effect
No
5.4 GHz
ETSI EN 301 893
v1.7.1 DFS
ETSI EN 301 893
v1.7.1 DFS
No
5.8 GHz
ETSI EN 302 502
v1.2.1 DFS
ETSI EN 302 502
v1.2.1 DFS
No
Page 10-48
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Equipment Disposal
Waste (Disposal) of Electronic and Electric Equipment
Waste (Disposal)
of Electronic
and Electric
Equipment
Please do not dispose of Electronic and Electric Equipment or
Electronic and Electric Accessories with your household waste. In
some countries or regions, collection systems have been set up to
handle waste of electrical and electronic equipment. In European
Union countries, please contact your local equipment supplier
representative or service center for information about the waste
collection system in your country.
Country specific maximum transmit power
Maximum transmit power 900 MHz band
Table 260 Default combined transmit power per country – 900 MHz band PMP 450i Series
Countries
USA,
Mexico,
Canada,
Other FCC
Brazil, Panama,
Colombia,
Venezuela
Ecuador
Device Type
(AP/SM/BH)
Any
Any
Any
Antenna
Type
Any
Any
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
36
7 MHz
36
10 MHz
36
15 MHz
36
20 MHz
36
5 MHz
36
7 MHz
36
10 MHz
36
15 MHz
36
20 MHz
36
Any
Page 10-49
Chapter 10: Reference information
Countries
Other
Australia, New
Zealand
Device Type
(AP/SM/BH)
Any
Equipment Disposal
Antenna
Type
Any
Any
Any
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
25 dBm
7 MHz
25 dBm
10 MHz
25 dBm
15 MHz
25 dBm
20 MHz
25 dBm
Any
5 MHz
19 dBm
30
7 MHz
19 dBm
30
10 MHz
19 dBm
30
15 MHz
19 dBm
36
Maximum transmit power 2.4 GHz band
Table 261 Default combined transmit power per country – 2.4 GHz band PMP/PTP 450 Series
Countries
USA,
Canada,
Other FCC
Other
Device
Type
Antenna Type
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
AP
Sector
Any
18
36
Integrated
Any
36
Reflector
Any
24
36
Integrated Dish
(450d)
Any
11
36
Any
Any
30
SM, BH
Any
Page 10-50
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Maximum transmit power 3.5 GHz band
Table 262 Default combined transmit power per country – 3.5 GHz band PMP/PTP 450 Series
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
Sector
Any
66
SM, BH
Any
Any
63
Brazil, China,
India,
Indonesia,
Mexico, Other
Any
Any
Any
Canada
Any
Any
Any
62
Australia
Any
Any
Any
63
Countries
Other-ETSI
Device
Type
Antenna Type
AP
Page 10-51
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Maximum transmit power 3.65 GHz band
Table 263 Default combined transmit power per country – 3.65 GHz band PMP/PTP 450
Countries
Device
Type
Antenna Type
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
Australia, India,
Indonesia,
Mexico, Other
Any
Any
Any
Any
Any
Other-ETSI
AP
SM, BH
AP
Canada, USA,
Other-FCC
SM, BH
Sector
25
Integrated
Any
Reflector
Integrated Dish
(450d)
66
63
43
18
Maximum transmit power 4.9 GHz band
Table 264 Default combined transmit power per country – 4.9 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i Series
Countries
Device
Type
Antenna Type
Sector
AP
USA,
Mexico,
Canada,
Other FCC
Omni
Flate plate
SM, BH
4ft parabolic
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
24
40
10 MHz
24
40
20 MHz
23
39
5 MHz
24
35
10 MHz
24
36
20 MHz
23
35
5 MHz
24
51
10 MHz
24
51
20 MHz
23
50
5 MHz
24
52
10 MHz
24
55
Page 10-52
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
6ft parabolic
Brazil
Other
Any
Any
Any
Any
20 MHz
23
56
5 MHz
24
52
10 MHz
24
55
20 MHz
23
58
5 MHz
23
54
10 MHz
27
57
20 MHz
27
60
Any
27
Table 265 Default combined transmit power per country – 4.9 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
FCC
Device
Type
SM
Antenna Type
16 dBi
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
26
51
10 MHz
26
51
15 MHz
26
51
20 MHz
24
51
30 MHz
51
40 MHz
51
Page 10-53
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Maximum transmit power 5.1 GHz band
Table 266 Default combined transmit power per Country – 5.1 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i Series
Countries
USA,
Other FCC
Device
Type
Antenna Type
AP
Sector
Omni
SM, BH
Flat plate
4ft parabolic
Mexico
Any
Any
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
12
30
10 MHz
15
33
15 MHz
14
34
20 MHz
16
36
30 MHz
16
36
40 MHz
16
36
5 MHz
16
28
10 MHz
19
31
20 MHz
22
34
40 MHz
23
35
5 MHz
-2
47
10 MHz
50
15 MHz
51
20 MHz
31
30 MHz
31
40 MHz
31
5 MHz
39
10 MHz
42
20 MHz
43
40 MHz
11
45
5 MHz
17
10 MHz
20
15 MHz
21
20 MHz
23
30 MHz
23
40 MHz
23
Page 10-54
Chapter 10: Reference information
Countries
Equipment Disposal
Device
Type
Antenna Type
Other
Any
ETSI
Any
Other ETSI
Any
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
Any
Any
27
Any
5 MHz
33
10 MHz
36
15 MHz
37
20 MHz
39
5 MHz
33
10 MHz
36
15 MHz
37
20 MHz
39
Any
Table 267 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.1 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
FCC
Device
Type
SM
Antenna Type
16 dBi
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
24
47
10 MHz
27
50
15 MHz
27
51
20 MHz
27
53
30 MHz
27
53
40 MHz
27
53
Page 10-55
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 268 Default combined transmit power per Country – 5.1 GHz band PMP 450m Series
Countries
USA
ETSI
Other
Other ETSI
Mexico
Device
Type
Antenna Type
AP
Sector
AP
Any
Any
Any
Sector
Any
Any
Any
Channel BW
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
30
10 MHz
33
15 MHz
34
20 MHz
36
40 MHz
36
5 MHz
33
10 MHz
36
15 MHz
37
20 MHz
39
5 MHz
42
10 MHz
42
15 MHz
42
20 MHz
42
5 MHz
36
10 MHz
36
15 MHz
36
20 MHz
36
5 MHz
17
10 MHz
20
15 MHz
21
20 MHz
23
Page 10-56
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Maximum transmit power 5.2 GHz band
Note
The selection of 5 MHz channel is not available for the PMP 450 AP and the PTP 450 BHM.
It is available for the PMP/PTP 450i AP/SM and the PMP 450m AP.
Table 269 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.2 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i Series
Countries
USA,
Other FCC
Device
Type
Antenna Type
AP
Sector
Omni
SM, BH
Flat plate
4ft parabolic
Mexico
Other
Any
Any
Any
Any
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
12
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
10
22
10 MHz
13
25
20 MHz
16
28
5 MHz
-7
20
10 MHz
-4
23
20 MHz
-1
26
5 MHz
-13
19
10 MHz
-11
22
20 MHz
-8
25
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
Any
27
Page 10-57
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 270 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.2 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
FCC
Other
Device
Type
SM
SM
Antenna Type
16 dBi
16 dBi
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
22
27
15 MHz
22
28
20 MHz
22
30
30 MHz
22
30
40 MHz
22
30
5 MHz
27
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
27
20 MHz
27
30 MHz
27
40 MHz
27
Page 10-58
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 271 Default combined transmit power per Country – 5.2 GHz band PMP 450m Series
Countries
USA,
Other FCC
Mexico
Other
Device
Type
Antenna Type
AP
Sector
Any
Any
Any
Any
Channel BW
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
42
10 MHz
42
15 MHz
42
20 MHz
42
40 MHz
42
Page 10-59
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Maximum transmit power 5.4 GHz band
Table 272 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.4 GHz band PMP 450m Series
Countries
Device Type
Antenna Type
Channel BW
EIRP Limit (dBm)
FCC
AP
Sector
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
42
10 MHz
42
15 MHz
42
20 MHz
42
40 MHz
42
No EIRP Limit
ETSI
AP
RoW
AP
RoW Other
Sector
Sector
Note

The selection of 5 MHz channel is not available for the PMP 450 AP and the PTP 450
BHM. It is available for the PMP/PTP 450i AP/SM and the PMP 450m AP.

Power reduction at the band edges is required in some cases.
Page 10-60
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 273 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.4 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i Series
Countries
USA,
Other FCC
Device
Type
Antenna Type
AP
Sector
Omni
SM, BH
Flat plate
4ft parabolic
Brazil
Mexico
Other
Any
Any
Any
Any
Any
Any
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
12
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
10
22
10 MHz
13
25
20 MHz
16
28
5 MHz
-7
20
10 MHz
-4
23
20 MHz
-1
26
5 MHz
-6
21
10 MHz
-3
24
20 MHz
27
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
19
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
23
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
Any
27
Page 10-61
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Countries
Device
Type
Antenna Type
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
ETSI
Any
Any
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
Australia
Any
Any
Page 10-62
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 274 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.4 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
FCC
ETSI
Device
Type
SM
SM
Antenna Type
16 dBi
16 dBi
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
22
27
15 MHz
22
28
20 MHz
22
30
30 MHz
22
30
40 MHz
13
30
5 MHz
27
24
10 MHz
27
27
15 MHz
27
28
20 MHz
27
30
30 MHz
27
30
40 MHz
27
30
Page 10-63
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 275 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.4 GHz band PMP 450 Series
Countries
Device
Type
Antenna
Type
AP
Sector (18
dBi – 1dB
cable loss)
United States, Canada,
Brazil, Australia, Denmark,
Finland, Germany, Greece,
Liechtenstein, Norway,
Portugal, Spain, UK, Vietnam
Austria, Belgium, Bosnia &
Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia,
Cyprus, Czech Republic,
France, , Hungary, Ireland,
Italy, Latvia, Lithuania,
Luxembourg, Macedonia,
Malta, Netherlands, Poland,
Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia ,
Sweden
AP
Algeria
AP
Other
AP
Sector (18
dBi – 1dB
cable loss)
Sector (18
dBi – 1dB
cable loss)
Sector (18
dBi – 1dB
cable loss)
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP
Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
10
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
13
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
10
27*
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
13
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
30
10 MHz
10
30
15 MHz
30
20 MHz
13
30
30 MHz
30
40 MH
30
5 MHz
10 MHz
19
15 MHz
20 MHz
19
30 MHz
40 MH
No EIRP
limit
(*) At 5.4 GHz, EU regulations are harmonized. 5600 – 5650 MHz excluded, as ten minute Channel
Availability Check (CAC) is required
Page 10-64
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Maximum transmit power 5.8 GHz band
Table 276 Default combined transmit power per Country – 5.8 GHz band PMP 450m Series
Countries
Device Type
Antenna Type
Channel BW
EIRP Limit (dBm)
USA,
Other FCC
AP
Sector
5 MHz
36
10 MHz
36
15 MHz
36
20 MHz
36
40 MHz
36
5 MHz
30
10 MHz
33
15 MHz
34
20 MHz
36
40 MHz
36
5 MHz
42
10 MHz
42
15 MHz
42
20 MHz
42
40 MHz
42
5 MHz
30
10 MHz
33
15 MHz
34
20 MHz
36
40 MHz
36
Mexico
Other
ETSI
AP
AP
AP
Sector
Sector
Sector
Table 277 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.8 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i Series
Countries
Device
Type
AP
Antenna Type
Sector,
Omni
Conducted Power
Limit (dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
36
10 MHz
36
15 MHz
36
Channel BW
Page 10-65
Chapter 10: Reference information
Countries
Device
Type
Equipment Disposal
Antenna Type
USA,
Canada,
Brazil,
Other FCC
SM, BH
Mexico
Other
Any
Any
Flat plate,
4ft parabolic,
6ft parabolic
Any
Any
Conducted Power
Limit (dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
20 MHz
36
30 MHz
36
40 MHz
36
5 MHz
27
27
(26 for 5733 MHz
and below)
10 MHz
15 MHz
27
20 MHz
27
30 MHz
27
40 MHz
27
5 MHz
30
10 MHz
33
15 MHz
34
20 MHz
36
30 MHz
36
40 MHz
36
5 MHz
27
Channel BW
Table 278 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.8 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
FCC
ETSI
Device
Type
SM
SM
Antenna Type
16 dBi
16 dBi
Channel BW
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
27
43
10 MHz
27
43
15 MHz
27
43
20 MHz
27
43
30 MHz
27
43
40 MHz
27
43
5 MHz
27
30
Page 10-66
Chapter 10: Reference information
Other ETSI
SM
16 dBi
Equipment Disposal
10 MHz
27
33
15 MHz
27
34
20 MHz
27
36
30 MHz
27
36
40 MHz
27
36
5 MHz
19
30
10 MHz
19
33
15 MHz
19
34
20 MHz
19
36
30 MHz
19
36
40 MHz
19
36
Table 279 Default combined transmit power per country – 5.8 GHz band PMP 450 Series
Countries
Australia, India, United
States
Vietnam
Brazil
Device
Type
AP
AP
AP
Antenna Type
Sector (18 dBi –
1dB cable loss)
Sector (18 dBi –
1dB cable loss)
Sector (18 dBi –
1dB cable loss)
Page 10-67
Conducted
Power Limit
(dBm)
EIRP
Limit
(dBm)
5 MHz
19
36
10 MHz
19
36
15 MHz
36
20 MHz
19
36
30 MHz
36
5 MHz
24
10 MHz
10
27
15 MHz
28
20 MHz
13
30
30 MHz
30
40 MHz
30
5 MHz
36
10 MHz
36
15 MHz
36
20 MHz
36
30 MHz
36
Channel
BW
Chapter 10: Reference information
Canada
Denmark, Finland,
Germany, Greece,
Iceland, Ireland,
Liechtenstein, Norway,
Portugal, Serbia, Spain,
Switzerland, United
Kingdom,
Indonesia
AP
AP
AP
Equipment Disposal
Sector (18 dBi –
1dB cable loss)
Sector (18 dBi –
1dB cable loss)
Sector (18 dBi –
1dB cable loss)
Page 10-68
40 MHz
36
5 MHz
26
10 MHz
19
36
15 MHz
36
20 MHz
19
36
30 MHz
36
40 MHz
36
5 MHz
30
10 MHz
16
33
15 MHz
34
20 MHz
19
36
30 MHz
36
40 MHz
36
5 MHz
13
30
10 MHz
19
33
15 MHz
34
20 MHz
19
36
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Country specific frequency range
Frequency range 900 MHz band
Table 280 Frequency range per country – 900 MHz band
Region
Country
Other
North America
Oceania
Lower
Upper
Other
902
928
Other-FCC
902
928
Canada
902
928
United States
902
928
Mexico
902
928
Puerto Rico
902
928
Australia
915
928
915
928
920.5 (7 MHz)
924.5 (7 MHz)
919.5 (5 MHz)
925.5 (5 MHz)
902
907.5
915
928
Ecuador
902
928
Colombia
902
928
Panama
902
928
Venezuela
902
928
New Zealand
South America
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Brazil
Page 10-69
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Frequency range 2.4 GHz band
Table 281 Frequency range per country – 2.4 GHz band PMP/PTP 450 Series
Countries
Antenna Type
Channel BW
Canada,
United States,
Other, OtherFCC
Any
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
2402.5
2481
10 MHz
2405
2478.5
15 MHz
2407.5
2476
20 MHz
2410
2473.5
30 MHz
2415
2468.5
Frequency range 3.5 GHz band
Table 282 Frequency range per country – 3.5 GHz band PMP/PTP 450/450i Series
Countries
Antenna Type
Channel BW
Brazil, OtherETSI
Any
China,
Indonesia
Any
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
3402.5
3597.5
7 MHz
3403.5
3596.5
10 MHz
3405
3595
20 MHz
3410
3590
5 MHz
3302.5
3397.5
7 MHz
3303.5
3396.5
10 MHz
3305
3395
20 MHz
3310
3390
Page 10-70
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Frequency range 3.65 GHz band
Table 283 Frequency range per country – 3.65 GHz band PMP/PTP 450/450i Series
Countries
Antenna Type
Channel BW
Australia,
India, Other
Any
Other – ETSI
Indonesia
Mexico
Any
Any
Any
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
3302.5
3797.5
7 MHz
3303.5
3796.5
10 MHz
3305
3795
15 MHz
3307.5
3792.5
20 MHz
3310
3790
30 MHz
3315
3785
40 MHz
3320
3780
5 MHz
3402.5
3847.5
10 MHz
3405
3845
15 MHz
3407.5
3842.5
20 MHz
3410
3840
30 MHz
3415
3835
40 MHz
3420
3830
5 MHz
3602.5
3797.5
7 MHz
3603.5
3796.5
10 MHz
3605
3795
20 MHz
3610
3790
40 MHz
3620
3780
5 MHz
3302.5
3747.5
10 MHz
3305
3745
20 MHz
3310
3740
40 MHz
3320
3730
Page 10-71
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Frequency range 4.9 GHz band
Table 284 Frequency range per country – 4.9 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i/450b Series
Countries
Antenna Type
Channel BW
USA,
Mexico,
Canada,
Other FCC
Any
Brazil
Other
Any
Any
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
4942.5
4987.5
10 MHz
4945
4985
15 MHz
4947.5
4982.5
20 MHz
4950
4980
5 MHz
4912.5
4987.5
10 MHz
4915
4985
15 MHz
4917.5
4982.5
20 MHz
4920
4980
5 MHz
4942.5
4987.5
10 MHz
4945
4985
15 MHz
4947.5
4982.5
20 MHz
4950
4980
30 MHz
4955
4975
40 MHz
4960
4970
Table 285 Frequency range per country – 4.9 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
Antenna Type
Channel BW
FCC
16 dBi
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
4942.5
4987.5
10 MHz
4945
4985
15 MHz
4947.5
4982.5
20 MHz
4950
4980
30 MHz
4955
4975
40 MHz
4960
4970
Page 10-72
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Frequency range 5.1 GHz band
Table 286 Frequency range per country – 5.1 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i Series
Countries
United States,
FCC
ETSI
Other
Antenna Type
Any
Any
Any
Channel BW
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
5157.5
5247.5
10 MHz
5160
5245
15 MHz
5170
5242.5
20 MHz
5170
5240
30 MHz
5182.5
5235
40 MHz
5187.5
5230
5 MHz
5155
5245
10 MHz
5155
5245
15 MHz
5157.5
5242.5
20 MHz
5160
5240
5 MHz
5152.5
5247.5
10 MHz
5155
5245
15 MHz
5157.5
5242.5
20 MHz
5160
5240
30 MHz
5165
5235
40 MHz
5170
5230
Table 287 Frequency range per country – 5.1 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
Antenna Type
Channel BW
FCC
16 dBi
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
5155
5247.5
10 MHz
5155
5245
15 MHz
5157.5
5242.5
20 MHz
5160
5240
30 MHz
5165
5235
40 MHz
5170
5230
Page 10-73
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 288 Frequency range per country – 5.1 GHz band PMP 450m Series
Countries
United States,
FCC
Antenna Type
Any
Channel BW
Lower
Upper
5162.5
5247.5
5160
5197.5
5200
5245
5165
5197.5
5200
5242.5
5170
5197.5
5200
5240
5 MHz
5152.5 (1)
5247.5 (1)
10 MHz
5155
5245
15 MHz
5157.5
5242.5
20 MHz
5160
5240
5 MHz
5152.5
5247.5
10 MHz
5155
5245
15 MHz
5157.5
5242.5
20 MHz
5160
5240
5 MHz
10 MHz
15 MHz
20 MHz
ETSI
Other
Any
Any
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Page 10-74
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Frequency range 5.2 GHz band
Table 289 Frequency range per country – 5.2 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i Series
Countries
United States,
FCC
Other
Antenna Type
Any
Any
Channel BW
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
5252.5
5342.5
10 MHz
5255
5340
15 MHz
5257.5
5335
20 MHz
5260
5332.5
30 MHz
5265
5332.5
40 MHz
5270
5330
5 MHz
5252.5
5347.5
10 MHz
5255
5345
15 MHz
5257.5
5342.5
20 MHz
5260
5340
30 MHz
5265
5335
40 MHz
5270
5330
Table 290 Frequency range per country – 5.2 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
Antenna Type
Channel BW
FCC
16 dBi
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
10 MHz
5255
5340
15 MHz
5257.5
5337.5
20 MHz
5260
5337.5
30 MHz
5265
5330
40 MHz
5270
5330 (*)
(*) Last channel at full power is 5325. Channel centers 5327.5 and 5330 need a power backoff of 5 dB.
Page 10-75
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 291 Frequency range per country – 5.2 GHz band PMP 450m Series
Countries
United States,
FCC
Antenna Type
Any
Channel BW
Lower
Upper
5252.5
5347.5
5255
5300
5302.5
5340
5257.5
5300
5302.5
5335
5260
5300
5302.5
5340
5 MHz
5252.5
5347.5
10 MHz
5255
5345
15 MHz
5257.5
5342.5
20 MHz
5260
5340
5 MHz
10 MHz
15 MHz
20 MHz
Other
Any
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Page 10-76
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Frequency range 5.4 GHz band
Table 292 Frequency range per country – 5.4 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i Series
Countries
Mexico
Other
Other
Other
Antenna Type
Any
Any
FCC
ETSI
Channel BW
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
5472.5
5722.5
10 MHz
5475
5720
15 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
20 MHz
5480
5715
30 MHz
5485
5710
40 MHz
5490
5685
5 MHz
5472.5
5722.5
10 MHz
5475
5720
15 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
20 MHz
5480
5715
30 MHz
5485
5710
40 MHz
5490
5705
5 MHz
5475
5720
10 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
15 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
20 MHz
5480
5715
30 MHz
5485
5710
40 MHz
5490
5705
5472.5
5597.5
5652.5
5722.5
5475
5595
5655
5720
5477.5
5592.5
5657.5
5717.5
5480
5590
5660
5715
5 MHz
10 MHz
15 MHz
20 MHz
Page 10-77
Chapter 10: Reference information
Countries
Other
Antenna Type
ETSI
Equipment Disposal
Channel BW
30 MHz
40 MHz
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5485
5585
5665
5710
5490
5580
5670
5705
Table 293 Frequency range per country – 5.4 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
Antenna Type
Channel BW
FCC
16 dBi
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
10 MHz
5477.5
5720
15 MHz
5480
5717.5
20 MHz
5482.5
5715
30 MHz
5487.5
5710
40 MHz
5490 (*)
5705
(*) First channel at full power is 5495. Channel centers 5490 and 5492.5 need a power backoff of 5 dB.
Page 10-78
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 294 Frequency range per country – 5.4 GHz band PMP/PTP 450
Region
code
Country Code
Other
Any
Other-FCC (Any non-US
country that follows FCC
rules
Other-ETSI (Any country that
follows ETSI rules
Channel
BW
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
5472.5
5722.5
10 MHz
5475
5720
15 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
20 MHz
5480
5715
30 MHz
5485
5710
40 MHz
5490
5705
5 MHz
5475
5720
10 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
15 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
20 MHz
5480
5715
30 MHz
5485
5710
40 MHz
5490
5705
5472.5
5597.5
5652.5
5722.5
5475
5595
5655
5720
5477.5
5592.5
5657.5
5717.5
5460
5590
5640
5715
5485
5585
5665
5710
5490
5580
5670
5705
5472.5
5597.5
5652.5
5722.5
5475
5595
5645
5720
5 MHz
10 MHz
15 MHz
20 MHz
30 MHz
40 MHz
5 MHz
Oceania
Series
Australia
10 MHz
Page 10-79
Chapter 10: Reference information
Region
code
Country Code
Oceania
Australia
Equipment Disposal
Channel
BW
Lower
Upper
5477.5
5592.5
5657.5
5717.5
5465
5490
5640
5715
5485
5585
5665
5710
5490
5580
5670
5705
5475
5597.5
5655
5722.5
5477.5
5592.5
5657.5
5717.5
5480
5590
5660
5715
5485
5585
5665
5710
5490
5580
5670
5705
10 MHz
5475
5720
15 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
20 MHz
5480
5715
30 MHz
5485
5710
40 MHz
5490
5705
10 MHz
5475
5720
15 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
20 MHz
5480
5715
30 MHz
5485
5710
40 MHz
5490
5705
15 MHz
20 MHz
30 MHz
40 MHz
10 MHz
15 MHz
North
America
Canada
20 MHz
30 MHz
40 MHz
South
America
Asia
Brazil
Vietnam
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Page 10-80
Chapter 10: Reference information
Region
code
Country Code
Africa
Algeria
Equipment Disposal
Channel
BW
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
5472.5
5667.5
10 MHz
5475
5665
15 MHz
5477.5
5662.5
20 MHz
5480
5660
30 MHz
5485
5655
40 MHz
5490
5650
5475
5595
5655
5720
5477.5
5592.5
5657.5
5717.5
5465
5490
5660
5715
5485
5585
5665
5710
5490
5580
5670
5705
10 MHz
Europe
Europe (Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece,
Iceland, Ireland, Italy,
Liechtenstein, Norway,
Portugal, Serbia, Spain,
Switzerland, United
Kingdom)
15 MHz
20 MHz
30 MHz
40 MHz
Page 10-81
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 295 Frequency range per country – 5.4 GHz band PMP 450m Series
Countries
United States,
FCC
Antenna Type
Any
Channel BW
Lower
Upper
5475
5720
5475
5477.5
5480
5720
5477.5
5482.5
5485
5717.5
5480
5487.5
5490
5715
5472.5
5597.5
5652.5
5722.5
5475
5595
5655
5720
5477.5
5592.5
5657.5
5717.5
5480
5590
5660
5715
5 MHz
5472.5
5722.5
10 MHz
5475
5720
15 MHz
5477.5
5717.5
20 MHz
5480
5715
5 MHz
10 MHz
15 MHz
20 MHz
ETSI
Any
5 MHz
10 MHz
15 MHz
20 MHz
Other
Any
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Page 10-82
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Frequency range 5.8 GHz band
Table 296 Frequency range per country – 5.8 GHz band PMP/PTP 450i Series
Countries
USA,
Canada,
Brazil,
Other FCC
Mexico
Other
ETSI
Antenna Type
Any
Any
Any
Any
Channel BW
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
5730
5845
10 MHz
5730
5845
15 MHz
5732.5
5842.5
20 MHz
5735
5840
30 MHz
5740
5835
40 MHz
5745
5830
5 MHz
5727.5
5847.5
10 MHz
5730
5845
15 MHz
5732.5
5842.5
20 MHz
5735
5840
30 MHz
5740
5835
40 MHz
5745
5830
5 MHz
5727.5
5922.5
10 MHz
5730
5920
15 MHz
5732.5
5917.5
20 MHz
5735
5915
30 MHz
5740
5910
40 MHz
5745
5905
5 MHz
5727.5
5872.5
10 MHz
5730
5870
15 MHz
5735
5867.5
20 MHz
5737.5
5865
30 MHz
5740
5860
40 MHz
5745
5855
Page 10-83
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 297 Frequency range per country – 5.8 GHz band PMP 450b Series
Countries
Antenna Type
Channel BW
FCC
16 dBi
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
5730
5845
10 MHz
5730
5845
15 MHz
5732.5
5842.5
20 MHz
5735
5840
30 MHz
5740
5835
40 MHz
5745
5830
Table 298 Frequency range per country – 5.8 GHz band PMP/PTP 450 Series
Countries
Denmark,
Norway, United
Kingdom,
Finland
Antenna Type
Any
Channel BW
Lower
Upper
5730
5790
5820
5845
5732.5
5787.5
5822.5
5842.5
5735
5785
5825
5840
5740
5780
5830
5835
5745
5775
5835
5830
10 MHz
5760
5870
15 MHz
5762.5
5867.5
20 MHz
5765
5865
30 MHz
5770
5860
40 MHz
5775
5855
5730
5790
5820
5850
5732.5
5787.5
10 MHz
15 MHz
20 MHz
30 MHz
40 MHz
Germany
Spain
Any
Any
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
10 MHz
15 MHz
Page 10-84
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
5822.5
5847.5
5735
5785
5825
5845
5740
5780
5830
5840
5745
5775
5835
5835
10 MHz
5730
5790
15 MHz
5732.5
5787.5
20 MHz
5735
5785
30 MHz
5740
5780
40 MHz
5745
5775
10 MHz
5730
5870
15 MHz
5732.5
5867.5
20 MHz
5735
5865
30 MHz
5740
5860
40 MHz
5745
5855
5730
5790
5820
5870
5732.5
5787.5
5822.5
5867.5
5735
5785
5825
5865
5740
5780
5830
5860
5745
5775
5835
5855
5 MHz
5727.5
5847.5
10 MHz
5730
5845
15 MHz
5732.5
5842.5
20 MHz
5735
5840
20 MHz
30 MHz
40 MHz
Greece
Portugal,
Iceland, Serbia
Switzerland,
Liechtenstein
Any
Any
Any
10 MHz
15 MHz
20 MHz
30 MHz
40 MHz
Australia
Any
Page 10-85
Chapter 10: Reference information
Canada, United
States
India
Brazil, Vietnam
Indonesia
Malaysia
Any
Any
Any
Any
Any
Equipment Disposal
30 MHz
5740
5835
40 MHz
5745
5830
5 MHz
5727.5
5847.5
10 MHz
5730
5845
15 MHz
5732.5
5842.5
20 MHz
5735
5840
30 MHz
5740
5835
40 MHz
5745
5830
5 MHz
5727.5
5872.5
10 MHz
5730
5870
15 MHz
5832.5
5867.5
20 MHz
5735
5865
30 MHz
5840
5860
40 MHz
5845
5855
5 MHz
5727.5
5847.5
10 MHz
5730
5845
15 MHz
5732.5
5842.5
20 MHz
5735
5840
30 MHz
5740
5835
40 MHz
5745
5830
5 MHz
5727.5
5822.5
10 MHz
5730
5820
15 MHz
5732.5
5817.5
20 MHz
5735
5815
5 MHz
5727.5
5872.5
10 MHz
5830
5870
20 MHz
5835
5865
Page 10-86
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 299 Frequency range per country – 5.8 GHz band PMP 450m Series
Countries
United States,
FCC
ETSI
Other
Antenna Type
Any
Any
Any
Channel BW
Channel center Frequency limits (MHz)
Lower
Upper
5 MHz
5730
5845
10 MHz
5730
5845
15 MHz
5732.5
5842.5
20 MHz
5735
5840
5 MHz
5727.5
5872.5
10 MHz
5730
5870
15 MHz
5735
5867.5
20 MHz
5737.5
5865
5 MHz
5727.5
5922.5
10 MHz
5730
5920
15 MHz
5732.5
5917.5
20 MHz
5735
5915
Page 10-87
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
FCC specific information
FCC compliance testing
With GPS synchronization installed, the system has been tested for compliance to US (FCC)
specifications. It has been shown to comply with the limits for emitted spurious radiation for a Class B
digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules in the USA. These limits have been designed to
provide reasonable protection against harmful interference. However the equipment can radiate radio
frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful
interference to other radio communications. There is no guarantee that interference does not occur in a
particular installation.
Note
A Class B Digital Device is a device that is marketed for use in a residential environment,
notwithstanding use in commercial, business and industrial environments.
Note
Notwithstanding that Cambium has designed (and qualified) the 450 Platform Family ODUs
to generally meet the Class B requirement to minimize the potential for interference, the 450
Platform Family ODU range is not marketed for use in a residential environment.
FCC IDs
Table 300 US FCC IDs
FCC ID
Z8H89FT
0021 and
Z8H89FT
0022
Z8H89FT
0003 and
Z8H89FT
004
Product
900 MHz
PMP 450i
AP & PMP
450 SM
2.4 GHz
PMP 450
AP & SM
Frequency
Band
900 MHz
2.4 GHz
3.5 GHz
Channel
Bandwidth
Frequencies
Maximum
Combined Tx
Output Power
5 MHz
904.5 – 925.5 MHz
25 dBm
7 MHz
905.5 – 924.5 MHz
25 dBm
10 MHz
907.0 – 923.0 MHz
25 dBm
15 MHz
909.5 – 920.5 MHz
25 dBm
20 MHz
912.0 – 918.0 MHz
25 dBm
5 MHz
2402.5 – 2480.0 MHz
19 dBm
10 MHz
2405.0 – 2477.5 MHz
19 dBm
15 MHz
2407.5 – 2475.0 MHz
19 dBm
20 MHz
2410.0 – 2472.5 MHz
19 dBm
30 MHz
2415.0 – 2467.5 MHz
19 dBm
5 MHz
3452.5 – 3647.5 MHz
25 dBm
Page 10-88
Chapter 10: Reference information
FCC ID
Product
Frequency
Band
3.5 GHz
PMP 450i
AP & SM
Equipment Disposal
Channel
Bandwidth
Frequencies
Maximum
Combined Tx
Output Power
7 MHz
3453.5 – 3646.5 MHz
25 dBm
10 MHz
3455.0 – 3645 MHz
25 dBm
15 MHz
3457.5 – 3642.5 MHz
25 dBm
20 MHz
3460.0 – 3640 MHz
25 dBm
30 MHz
3465.0 – 3635 MHz
25 dBm
Z8H89FT
0009
and
40 MHz
3470.0 – 3630 MHz
25 dBm
5 MHz
3652.5 -3697.5 MHz
19 dBm
Z8H89FT
0010
7 MHz
3653.5 – 3696.5 MHz
21 dBm
10 MHz
3655.0 – 3695.0 MHz
22 dBm
15 MHz
3657.5 – 3692.5 MHz
24 dBm
20 MHz
3660.0 – 3690.0 MHz
25 dBm
30 MHz
3665.0 – 3685.0 MHz
25 dBm
40 MHz
3670.0 – 3680.0 MHz
25 dBm
5 MHz
3452.5 – 3647.5 MHz
22 dBm
7 MHz
3453.5 – 3646.5 MHz
22 dBm
10 MHz
3455.0 – 3645 MHz
22 dBm
15 MHz
3457.5 – 3642.5 MHz
22 dBm
20 MHz
3460.0 – 3640 MHz
22 dBm
30 MHz
3465.0 – 3635 MHz
22 dBm
40 MHz
3470.0 – 3630 MHz
22 dBm
5 MHz
3652.5 -3697.5 MHz
19 dBm
7 MHz
3653.5 – 3696.5 MHz
21 dBm
10 MHz
3655.0 – 3695.0 MHz
22 dBm
15 MHz
3657.5 – 3692.5 MHz
22 dBm
20 MHz
3660.0 – 3690.0 MHz
22 dBm
30 MHz
3665.0 – 3685.0 MHz
22 dBm
40 MHz
3670.0 – 3680.0 MHz
22 dBm
5 MHz
4942.5 – 4987.5 MHz
27 dBm
3.65 GHz
PMP 450i
AP & SM
3.5 GHz
PMP 450
AP & SM
3.65 GHz
3.5 GHz
Z8H89FT
0009
and
Z8H89FT
0010
3.65 GHz
PMP 450
AP & SM
5 GHz
3.65 GHz
4.9 GHz
Page 10-89
Chapter 10: Reference information
FCC ID
Equipment Disposal
Product
Frequency
Band
Channel
Bandwidth
Frequencies
Maximum
Combined Tx
Output Power
PMP 450/
450i AP,
SM & PTP
450/450i
BH
(PMP/PTP
450i only)
10 MHz
4945.0 – 4985.0 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
4947.5 – 4982.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
4950.0 – 4980.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
4955.0 – 4975.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
4960.0 – 4970.0 MHz
27 dBm
Maximum transmission power for US is 19 dBm.
5.1 GHz
(PMP/PTP
450i only)
Z8H89FT
0001,
Z8H89FT
0002 and
QWP50450I
5 MHz
5157.5 – 5247.5 MHz
27 dBm
10 MHz
5160.0 – 5245.0 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
5162.5 – 5242.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
5165.0 – 5240.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
5170.0 – 5235.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
5175.0 – 5230.0 MHz
27 dBm
Maximum transmission power for
FCC/US/Mexico is 19 dBm.
5.2 GHz
(PMP/PTP
450i only)
5 GHz
5.4 GHz
5 MHz
5252.5 – 5347.5 MHz
27 dBm
10 MHz
5255.0 – 5345.0 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
5257.5 – 5342.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
5260.0 – 5340.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
5265.0 – 5335.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
5270.0 – 5330.0 MHz
27 dBm
Maximum transmission power for:

US/FCC is 19 dBm
Page 10-90
Chapter 10: Reference information
FCC ID
Product
Frequency
Band
Channel
Bandwidth

PMP 450i
AP, SM &
PTP 450i
BH
Z8H89FT
0001,
Z8H89FT
0002 and
QWP50450I
5.8 GHz
4.9 GHz
Z8H89FT
0032
Equipment Disposal
5 GHz
PMP 450b
SM
5 MHz
5475.0 – 5720.0 MHz
27 dBm
10 MHz
5477.5 –5717.5 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
5477.5 – 5717.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
5480.0 – 5715.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
5485.0 – 5710 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
5490.0 – 5705 MHz
27 dBm
5 MHz
5730.0 – 5872.5 MHz
27 dBm
10 MHz
5730.0 – 5870.0 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
5732.5 – 5867.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
5735.0 – 5865.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
5740.0 – 5860.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
5745.0 – 5855.0 MHz
27 dBm
5 MHz
4942.5 – 4987.5 MHz
27 dBm
10 MHz
4945.0 – 4985.0 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
4947.5 – 4982.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
4950.0 – 4980.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
4955.0 – 4975.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
4960.0 – 4970.0 MHz
27 dBm
5 MHz
5157.5 – 5247.5 MHz
27 dBm
10 MHz
5160.0 – 5245.0 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
5162.5 – 5242.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
5165.0 – 5240.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
5170.0 – 5235.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
5175.0 – 5230.0 MHz
27 dBm
5 MHz
5252.5 – 5347.5 MHz
27 dBm
5 GHz
5.2 GHz
Maximum
Combined Tx
Output Power
Australia/ETSI is 25 for 5 MHz Channel bandwidth as a
result of restricted EIRP limit
5.1 GHz
Z8H89FT
0032
Frequencies
Page 10-91
Chapter 10: Reference information
FCC ID
Product
Frequency
Band
PMP 450b
SM
Equipment Disposal
Channel
Bandwidth
Frequencies
Maximum
Combined Tx
Output Power
10 MHz
5255.0 – 5345.0 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
5257.5 – 5342.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
5260.0 – 5340.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
5265.0 – 5335.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
5270.0 – 5330.0 MHz
27 dBm
5 MHz
5475.0 – 5720.0 MHz
27 dBm
10 MHz
5477.5 –5717.5 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
5477.5 – 5717.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
5480.0 – 5715.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
5485.0 – 5710 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
5490.0 – 5705 MHz
27 dBm
5 MHz
5730.0 – 5872.5 MHz
27 dBm
10 MHz
5730.0 – 5870.0 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
5732.5 – 5867.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
5735.0 – 5865.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
5740.0 – 5860.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
5745.0 – 5855.0 MHz
27 dBm
10 MHz
4945.0 – 4985.0 MHz
27 dBm
15 MHz
4947.5 – 4982.5 MHz
27 dBm
20 MHz
4950.0 – 4980.0 MHz
27 dBm
30 MHz
4955.0 – 4975.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
4960.0 – 4970.0 MHz
27 dBm
40 MHz
5490.0 – 5705 MHz
22 dBm
5.4 GHz
5.8 GHz
Z8H89FT
0001,
Z8H89FT
0002 and
QWP50450I
5 GHz
PMP 450
AP, SM &
PTP 450
BH
5.4 GHz
5.8 GHz
Maximum transmission power for
FCC/US/Mexico is 19 dBm.
Page 10-92
Chapter 10: Reference information
FCC ID
Z8H89FT
0001,
Z8H89FT
0002 and
QWP50450I
(*)
Product
Frequency
Band
5 GHz
PMP 450
AP, SM &
PTP 450
BH
5.8 GHz
Equipment Disposal
Channel
Bandwidth
Frequencies
Maximum
Combined Tx
Output Power
5 MHz
5730.0 – 5872.5 MHz
22 dBm
10 MHz
5730.0 – 5870.0 MHz
22 dBm
15 MHz
5732.5 – 5867.5 MHz
22 dBm
20 MHz
5735.0 – 5865.0 MHz
22 dBm
30 MHz
5740.0 – 5860.0 MHz
22 dBm
5745.0 – 5855.0 MHz
22 dBm
40 MHz
27 dBm conducted power for 450i Series and 22 dBm conducted power for 450 Series
Page 10-93
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
FCC approved antenna list
The lists of antennas which have been approved for operation by the FCC are provided in:

Table 301 for 4.9 GHz

Table 302 for 5.1 and 5.2 GHz

Table 303 for 5.4 GHz

Table 304 for 5.8 GHz
Note
Any antenna of the same type and of gain equal or lower than the one approved by the FCC
can be used in the countries following the FCC rules.
Table 301 USA approved antenna list 4.9 GHz
Directivity
Directional
Sector
Omnidirectional
Type
Manufacturer
Reference
Stated Gain
(dBi)
Integrated flat plate
Cambium
Networks
N/A
23.0
2 ft dual polarised
flat plate
Mars Antennas
MA-WA56-DP-28N
28.0
4 ft parabolic dual
polarised
Gabriel
Antennas
Dual QuickFire QFD4-49-N
33.7
6 ft parabolic dual
polarised
Gabriel
Antennas
QuickFire QF6-49-N
37.2
Integrated 90°
sector flat plate
Cambium
Networks
A005240
16.0
90° sectorised
Cambium
Networks
85009324001
17.0
60° sectorised
Cambium
Networks
85009325001
17.0
Dual polar omnidirectional
KP
KPPA-5.7-DPOMA
13.0
Page 10-94
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 302 USA approved antenna list 5.1 and 5.2 GHz
Directivity
Directional
Sector
Omnidirectional
Type
Manufacturer
Reference
Stated Gain
(dBi)
Integrated flat plate
Cambium
Networks
N/A
23.0
2ft dual polarised
flat plate
Mars Antennas
MA-WA56-DP-28N
28.5
4ft parabolic dual
polarised
Gabriel
Antennas
PX4F-52-N7A/A
34.5
Integrated 90°
sector flat plate
Cambium
Networks
A005240
16.0
90° sectorised
Cambium
Networks
85009324001
17.0
Dual polar omnidirectional
KP
KPPA-5.7-DPOMA
13.0
Dual polar omnidirectional
Mars Antennas
MA-WO56-DP10
10.0
Table 303 USA approved antenna list 5.4 GHz
Directivity
Directional
Sector
Omnidirectional
Type
Manufacturer
Reference
Stated Gain
(dBi)
Integrated flat plate
Cambium
Networks
N/A
23.0
2 ft dual polarised
flat plate
Mars Antennas
MA-WA56-DP-28N
28.5
2 ft dual polarised
parabolic
MTI
MT-486013-NVH
28.5
Integrated 90°
sector flat plate
Cambium
Networks
A005240
16.0
90° sectorised
Cambium
Networks
85009324001
17.0
Dual polar omnidirectional
KP
KPPA-5.7-DPOMA
13.0
Dual polar omnidirectional
Mars Antennas
MA-WO56-DP10
10.0
Page 10-95
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 304 USA approved antenna list 5.8 GHz
Directivity
Directional
Sector
Omnidirectional
Type
Manufacturer
Reference
Stated Gain
(dBi)
Integrated flat plate
Cambium
Networks
N/A
23.0
2 ft dual polarised
flat plate
Mars Antennas
MA-WA56-DP-28N
28.0
4 ft parabolic dual
polarised
Gabriel
Antennas
PX4F-52-N7A/A
35.3
6 ft Parabolic dual
polarised
Gabriel
Antennas
PX6F-52/A
38.1
Integrated 90°
sector flat plate
Cambium
Networks
A005240
16.0
90° sectorised
Cambium
Networks
85009324001
17.0
60° sectorised
Cambium
Networks
85009325001
17.0
Dual polar omnidirectional
KP
KPPA-5.7-DPOMA
13.0
Innovation Science and Economic Development
Canada (ISEDC) specific information
900 MHz ISEDC notification
Radio Standards Specification RSS-247, Issue 1, Digital Transmission Systems (DTSs), Frequency
Hopping Systems (FHSs) and License-Exempt Local Area Network (LE-LAN) Devices, is a new standard
to replace annexes 8 and 9 of RSS-210, Issue 8.
4.9 GHz ISEDC notification
The system has been approved under ISEDC RSS-111 for Public Safety Agency usage. The installer or
operator is responsible for obtaining the appropriate site licenses before installing or using the system.
Utilisation de la bande 4.9 GHz FCC et ISEDC
Le système a été approuvé en vertu d’ ISEDC RSS-111 pour l'utilisation par l'Agence de la Sécurité
publique. L'installateur ou l'exploitant est responsable de l'obtention des licences de appropriées avant
d'installer ou d'utiliser le système.
Page 10-96
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
5.2 GHz and 5.4 GHz ISEDC notification
This device complies with ISEDC RSS-247. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This
device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) This device must accept any interference received,
including interference that may cause undesired operation. Users should be cautioned to take note that
high power radars are allocated as primary users (meaning they have priority) of 5250 – 5350 MHz and
5650 – 5850 MHz and these radars could cause interference and/or damage to license-exempt local area
networks (LELAN).
For the connectorized version of the product and in order to reduce potential radio interference to other
users, the antenna type and its gain should be so chosen that the equivalent isotropically radiated power
(EIRP) is not more than that permitted by the regulations. The transmitted power must be reduced to
achieve this requirement.
Utilisation de la bande 5.2 and 5.4 GHz ISEDC
Cet appareil est conforme à ISEDC RSS-247. Son fonctionnement est soumis aux deux conditions
suivantes: (1) Ce dispositif ne doit pas causer d'interférences nuisibles, et (2) Cet appareil doit tolérer
toute interférence reçue, y compris les interférences pouvant entraîner un fonctionnement indésirable.
Les utilisateurs doivent prendre garde au fait que les radars à haute puissance sont considères comme
les utilisateurs prioritaires de 5250 à 5350 MHz et 5650 à 5850 MHz et ces radars peuvent causer des
interférences et / ou interférer avec un réseau local ne nécessitant pas de licence.
Pour la version du produit avec antenne externe et afin de réduire le risque d'interférence avec d'autres
utilisateurs, le type d'antenne et son gain doivent être choisis afin que la puissance isotrope rayonnée
équivalente (PIRE) ne soit pas supérieure à celle permise par la règlementation. Il peut être nécessaire
de réduire la puissance transmise doit être réduite pour satisfaire cette exigence.
ISEDC notification 5.8 GHz
RSS-GEN issue 3 (7.1.3) Licence-Exempt Radio Apparatus:
This device complies with ISEDC license-exempt RSS standard(s). Operation is subject to the
following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause interference, and (2) this device must accept
any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device.
In Canada, high power radars are allocated as primary users (meaning they have priority) of the 5600 –
5650 MHz spectrum. These radars could cause interference or damage to license-exempt local area
network (LE-LAN) devices.
Utilisation de la bande 5.8 GHz ISEDC
RSS-GEN issue 3 (7.1.3) appareil utilisant la bande sans licence:
Le présent appareil est conforme aux CNR d'Industrie Canada applicables aux appareils radio
exempts de licence. L'exploitation est autorisée aux deux conditions suivantes : (1) l'appareil ne doit
pas produire de brouillage, et (2) l'utilisateur de l'appareil doit accepter tout brouillage radioélectrique
subi, même si le brouillage est susceptible d'en compromettre le fonctionnement.
Au Canada, les radars à haute puissance sont désignés comme utilisateurs principaux (ils ont la priorité) dans la
bande 5600 à 5650 MHz. Ces radars peuvent causer des interférences et / ou interférer avec un réseau local ne
nécessitant pas de licence.
Page 10-97
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
ISEDC certification numbers
Table 305 ISEDC Certification Numbers
ISEDC
Cert.
Product
Frequency
Band
Frequencies
Maximum
Combined Tx
Output Power
5 MHz
4942.5 – 4987.5 MHz
24 dBm
10 MHz
4945.0 – 4985.0 MHz
24 dBm
5 GHz
20 MHz
4950.0 – 4980.0 MHz
23.5 dBm
AP, SM &
BHM
5 MHz
5730.0 – 5845.0 MHz
28 dBm
10 MHz
5730.0 – 5845.0 MHz
28 dBm
20 MHz
5735.0 – 5840.0 MHz
28 dBm
4.9 GHz
109AO50450I
(Pending)
Channel
Bandwidth
5.8 GHz
Canada approved antenna list
Under ISEDC regulations, this radio transmitter may only operate using an antenna of a type and
maximum (or lesser) gain approved for the transmitter by ISEDC . To reduce potential radio interference
to other users, the antenna type and its gain must be so chosen that the equivalent isotropically radiated
power (EIRP) is not more than that necessary for successful communication.
Conformément à la réglementation d'Industrie Canada, le présent émetteur radio peut fonctionner avec
une antenne d'un type et d'un gain maximal (ou inférieur) approuvé pour l'émetteur par Industrie Canada.
Dans le but de réduire les risques de brouillage radioélectrique à l'intention des autres utilisateurs, il faut
choisir le type d'antenne et son gain de sorte que la puissance isotrope rayonnée équivalente (PIRE) ne
dépasse pas l'intensité nécessaire à l'établissement d'une communication satisfaisante.
This radio transmitter (identify the device by certification number) has been approved by ISEDC to
operate with the antenna types listed in Country specific radio regulations, Innovation Science and
Economic Development Canada (ISEDC) , Table 306 with the maximum permissible gain and required
antenna impedance for each antenna type indicated. Antenna types not included in this list, having a gain
greater than the maximum gain indicated for that type, are strictly prohibited for use with this device.
Le présent émetteur radio (identifier le dispositif par son numéro de certification) a été approuvé par
Industrie Canada pour fonctionner avec les types d'antenne énumérés dans la section Country specific
radio regulations, Innovation Science and Economic Development Canada (ISEDC) , Table 306 et ayant
un gain admissible maximal et l'impédance requise pour chaque type d'antenne. Les types d'antenne non
inclus dans cette liste, ou dont le gain est supérieur au gain maximal indiqué, sont strictement interdits
pour l'exploitation de l'émetteur.
Page 10-98
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 306 Canada approved antenna list 4.9 and 5.8 GHz
Antenna
type
Directional
Sector
Omnidirectional
Description
Manufacturer
Reference
Integrated flat
plate
Cambium
Networks
N/A
2 ft dual
polarised flat
plate
MARS
Antennas
MA-WA56-DP-28N
4 ft parabolic
dual polarised
Andrews
Antennas
PX4F-52-N7A/A
6 ft Parabolic
dual polarised
Gabriel
Antennas
QF6-49-N
Integrated
90° sector flat
plate
Cambium
Networks
A005240
90°sector
Cambium
Networks
85009324001
60° sectorised
Cambium
Networks
85009325001
Omni-directional
KP Antennas
KPPA-5.7-DPOMA
Omni-directional
MARS
Antennas
MA-WO56-DP10
Page 10-99
Gain (dBi)
4.9 GHz
5.8 GHz
23
23
28.5
28
N/A
35.3
37.2
N/A
16
16
17
17
16
16
13
13
10
10
Chapter 10: Reference information
Equipment Disposal
Table 307 Canada approved antenna list 5.2 and 5.4 GHz
Directivity
Directional
Sector
Omnidirectional
Type
Manufacturer
Reference
Stated Gain
(dBi)
Integrated flat plate
Cambium
Networks
N/A
23.0
2ft dual polarised
flat plate
Mars Antennas
MA-WA56-DP-28N
28.5
2ft dual polarised
parabolic
MTI
MT-486013-NVH
28.5
Integrated 90°
sector flat plate
Cambium
Networks
A005240
16.0
90° sectorised
Cambium
Networks
85009324001
17.0
Dual polar omnidirectional
KP
KPPA-5.7-DPOMA
13.0
Dual polar omnidirectional
Mars Antennas
MA-WO56-DP10
10.0
Page 10-100
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
This chapter contains procedures for identifying and correcting faults in a 450 Platform Family link. These
procedures can be performed either on a newly installed link, or on an operational link if communication is
lost, or after a lightning strike.
The following topics are described in this chapter:

General troubleshooting procedure on page 11-2

Troubleshooting procedures on page 11-5

Power-up troubleshooting on page 11-13

Registration and connectivity troubleshooting on page 11-14
Page 11-1
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
General troubleshooting procedure
General troubleshooting procedure
General planning for troubleshooting
Effective troubleshooting depends in part on measures that you take before you experience trouble in
your network. Cambium recommends the following measures for each site:

Identify troubleshooting tools that are available at your site (such as a protocol analyzer).

Identify commands and other sources that can capture baseline data for the site. These may include:
o Ping
o Tracert or traceroute
o Link Capacity Test results
o Throughput data
o Configuration tab captures
o Status tab captures
o Session logs
o Web browser used

Start a log for the site.

Include the following information in the log:
o Operating procedures
o Site-specific configuration records
o Network topology
o Software releases, boot versions and FPGA firmware versions
o Types of hardware deployed
o Site-specific troubleshooting processes
o Escalation procedures

Capture baseline data into the log from the sources listed above
Page 11-2
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
General troubleshooting procedure
General fault isolation process
Effective troubleshooting also requires an effective fault isolation methodology that includes the following:

Attempting to isolate the problem to the level of a system, subsystem, or link, such as
o AP to SM
o AP to CMM4
o AP to GPS
o Backhaul(BH)
o Backhaul(BH) to CMM4
o Power

Researching Event Logs of the involved equipment

Interpreting messages in the Event Log

Answering the questions listed in the following sections.

Reversing the last previous corrective attempt before proceeding to the next.

Performing only one corrective attempt at a time.
Questions to help isolate the problem
When a problem occurs, attempt to answer the following questions:

What is the history of the problem?
o Have we changed something recently?
o Have we seen other symptoms before this?

How wide-spread is the symptom?
o Is the problem on only a single SM? (If so, focus on that SM.)
o Is the problem on multiple SMs? If so
is the problem on one AP in the cluster? (If so, focus on that AP)
is the problem on multiple, but not all, APs in the cluster? (If so, focus on those APs)
is the problem on all APs in the cluster? (If so, focus on the CMM4 and the GPS signal.)

Based on data in the Event Log
o does the problem correlate to External Hard Resets with no WatchDog timers? (If so, this
indicates a loss of power. Correct your power problem.)
o is intermittent connectivity indicated? (If so, verify your configuration, power level, cables and
connections and the speed duplex of both ends of the link).
o does the problem correlate to loss-of-sync events?

Are connections made via shielded cables?

Does the GPS antenna have an unobstructed view of the entire horizon?

Has the site grounding been verified?
Secondary Steps
After preliminary fault isolation is completed through the above steps, follow these:
Page 11-3
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
General troubleshooting procedure

Check the Canopy knowledge base (https://support.cambiumnetworks.com/forum) to find whether
other network operators have encountered a similar problem.

Proceed to any appropriate set of diagnostic steps. These are organized as follows:
Module has lost or does not establish connectivity on page 11-5
NAT/DHCP-configured SM has lost or does not establish connectivity on page 11-7
SM Does Not Register to an AP on page 11-8
Module has lost or does not gain sync on page 11-9
Module does not establish Ethernet connectivity on page 11-10
CMM4 does not pass proper GPS sync to connected modules on page 11-11
Module Software Cannot be Upgraded on page 11-12
Module Functions Properly, Except Web Interface Became Inaccessible on page 11-12
Page 11-4
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting procedures
Troubleshooting procedures
Proceed to any appropriate set of diagnostic steps. These are organized as follows:

Module has lost or does not establish connectivity on page 11-5

NAT/DHCP-configured SM has lost or does not establish connectivity on page 11-7

SM Does Not Register to an AP on page 11-8

Module has lost or does not gain sync on page 11-9

Module does not establish Ethernet connectivity on page 11-10

CMM4 does not pass proper GPS sync to connected modules on page 11-11

Module Software Cannot be Upgraded on page 11-12

Module Functions Properly, Except Web Interface Became Inaccessible on page 11-12
Module has lost or does not establish connectivity
To troubleshoot a loss of connectivity, perform the following steps:
Procedure 37 Troubleshooting loss of connectivity
Isolate the end user/SM from peripheral equipment and variables such as routers,
switches and firewalls.
Set up the minimal amount of equipment.
On each end of the link:

Check the cables and connections.

Verify that the cable/connection scheme—straight-through or crossover—is correct.

Verify that the LED labeled LNK is green.

Access the General Status tab in the Home page of the module.

Verify that the SM is registered.

Verify that Received Power Level is -87 dBm or higher.

Access the IP tab in the Configuration page of the module.

Verify that IP addresses match and are in the same subnet.

If RADIUS authentication is configured, ensure that the RADIUS server is operational
Page 11-5
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting procedures
On the SM end of the link:

Verify that the PC that is connected to the SM is correctly configured to obtain an IP
address through DHCP.

Execute ipconfig (Windows) or ifconfig (linux)

Verify that the PC has an assigned IP address.
On each end of the link:

Access the General tab in the Configuration page of each module.

Verify that the setting for Link Speeds (or negotiation) matches that of the other
module.

Access the Radio tab in the Configuration page of each module.

Verify that the Radio Frequency Carrier setting is checked in the Custom Radio
Frequency Scan Selection List.

Verify that the Color Code setting matches that of the other module.

Access the browser LAN settings (for example, at
Tools > Internet Options > Connections > LAN Settings in Internet Explorer).

Verify that none of the settings are selected.

Access the Link Capacity Test tab in the Tools page of the module.

Perform a link test

Verify that the link test results show efficiency greater than 90% in both the uplink and
downlink

Execute ping.
Verify that no packet loss was experienced.
Verify that response times are not significantly greater than

4 ms from AP to SM

15 ms from SM to AP
Replace any cables that you suspect may be causing the problem.
Note
A ping size larger than 1494 Bytes to a module times out and fails.
However, a ping of this size or larger to a system that is behind a Canopy
module typically succeeds. It is generally advisable to ping such a system,
since Canopy handles that ping with the same priority as is given all other
transport traffic. The results are unaffected by ping size and by the load on
the Canopy module that brokers this traffic.
After connectivity has been re-established, reinstall network elements and variables that
you removed in Step 1.
Page 11-6
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting procedures
NAT/DHCP-configured SM has lost or does not
establish connectivity
Before troubleshooting this problem, identify the NAT/DHCP configuration from the following list:

NAT with DHCP Client (DHCP selected as the Connection Type of the WAN interface) and DHCP
Server

NAT with DHCP Client (DHCP selected as the Connection Type of the WAN interface)

NAT with DHCP Server

NAT without DHCP
To troubleshoot a loss of connectivity for a SM configured for NAT/DHCP, perform the following steps.
Procedure 38 Troubleshooting loss of connectivity for NAT/DHCP-configured SM
Isolate the end user/SM from peripheral equipment and variables such as routers,
switches and firewalls.
Set up the minimal amount of equipment.
On each end of the link:

Check the cables and connections.

Verify that the cable/connection scheme—straight-through or crossover—is correct.

Verify that the LED labeled LNK is green.
At the SM:

Access the NAT Table tab in the Logs web page.

Verify that the correct NAT translations are listed.
RESULT: NAT is eliminated as a possible cause if these translations are correct.
If this SM is configured for NAT with DHCP, then at the SM:

Execute ipconfig (Windows) or ifconfig (Linux)

Verify that the PC has an assigned IP address.

If the PC does not have an assigned IP address, then
enter ipconfig /release “Adapter Name”.
enter ipconfig /renew “Adapter Name”.
reboot the PC.
after the PC has completed rebooting, execute ipconfig
if the PC has an assigned IP address, then
access the NAT DHCP Statistics tab in the Statistics web page of the SM.
verify that DHCP is operating as configured.
After connectivity has been re-established, reinstall network elements and variables that
you removed in Step 1.
Page 11-7
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting procedures
SM Does Not Register to an AP
To troubleshoot a SM failing to register to an AP, perform the following steps.
Procedure 39 Troubleshooting SM failing to register to an AP
Access the Radio tab in the Configuration page of the SM.
Note the Color Code of the SM.
Access the Radio tab in the Configuration page of the AP.
Verify that the Color Code of the AP matches that of the SM.
Note the Radio Frequency Carrier of the AP.
Verify that the value of the RF Frequency Carrier of the AP is selected in the Custom
Radio Frequency Scan Selection List parameter in the SM.
In the AP, verify that the Max Range parameter is set to a distance slightly greater than
the distance between the AP and the furthest SM that must register to this AP.
Verify that no obstruction significantly penetrates the Fresnel zone of the attempted link.
Access the General Status tab in the Home page of each module.
10
Remove the bottom cover of the SM to expose the LEDs.
11
Power cycle the SM.
RESULT: Approximately 25 seconds after the power cycle, the green LED labeled LNK
must light to indicate that the link has been established. If the orange LED labeled SYN is
lit instead, then the SM is in Alignment mode because the SM failed to establish the link.
12
If the AP is configured to require authentication, ensure proper configuration of RADIUS
or Pre-shared AP key.
13
In this latter case and if the SM has encountered no customer-inflicted damage, then
request an RMA for the SM.
Page 11-8
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting procedures
Module has lost or does not gain sync
To troubleshoot a loss of sync, perform the following steps.
Procedure 40 Troubleshooting loss of sync
Access the Event Log tab in the Home page of the SM
Check for messages with the following format:
RcvFrmNum =
ExpFrmNum =
If these messages are present, check the Event Log tab of another SM that is registered
to the same AP for messages of the same type.
If the Event Log of this second SM does not contain these messages, then the fault is
isolated to the first SM.
If the Event Log page of this second SM contains these messages, access the GPS
Status page of the AP.
If the Satellites Tracked field in the GPS Status page of the AP indicates fewer than 4 or
the Pulse Status field does not indicate Generating Sync, check the GPS Status page of
another AP in the same AP cluster for these indicators. GPS signal acquisition must not
take longer than 5 minutes from unit startup.
If these indicators are present in the second AP, then:

Verify that the GPS antenna still has an unobstructed view of the entire horizon.

Visually inspect the cable and connections between the GPS antenna and the
CMM4. If this cable is not shielded, replace the cable with shielded cable
If these indicators are not present in the second AP, visually inspect the cable and
connections between the CMM4 and the AP antenna. If this cable is not shielded, replace
the cable with shielded cable.
Page 11-9
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting procedures
Module does not establish Ethernet connectivity
To troubleshoot a loss of Ethernet connectivity, perform the following steps:
Procedure 41 Troubleshooting loss of Ethernet connectivity
Verify that the connector crimps on the Ethernet cable are not loose.
Verify that the Ethernet cable is not damaged.
If the Ethernet cable connects the module to a network interface card (NIC), verify that
the cable is pinned out as a straight-through cable.
If the Ethernet cable connects the module to a hub, switch, or router, verify that the cable
is pinned out as a crossover cable.
Verify that the Ethernet port to which the cable connects the module is set to autonegotiate speed.
Verify VLAN configuration in the network, which may cause loss of module access if the
accessing device is on a separate VLAN from the radio.
Power cycle the module.
RESULT: Approximately 25 seconds after the power cycle, the green LED labeled LNK
must light up to indicate that the link has been established. If the orange LED labeled
SYN is lit instead, then the module is in Alignment mode because the module failed to
establish the link.
In this latter case and if the module has encountered no customer-inflicted damage, then
request an RMA for the module.
Page 11-10
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting procedures
CMM4 does not pass proper GPS sync to connected
modules
If the Event Log tabs in all connected modules contain Loss of GPS Sync Pulse messages, perform the
following steps.
Procedure 42 Troubleshooting CMM4 not passing sync
Verify that the GPS antenna has an unobstructed view of the entire horizon.
Verify that the GPS coaxial cable meets specifications.
Verify that the GPS sync cable meets specifications for wiring and length.
If the web pages of connected modules indicate any of the following, then find and
eliminate the source of noise that is being coupled into the GPS sync cable:


In the GPS Status page:
anomalous number of Satellites Tracked (greater than 12, for example)
incorrect reported Latitude and/or Longitude of the antenna
In the Event Log page:
garbled GPS messages
large number of Acquired GPS Sync Pulse messages
GPS signal acquisition must not take longer than 5 minutes from unit startup.
If these efforts fail to resolve the problem, then request an RMA for the CMM4.
Page 11-11
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting procedures
Module Software Cannot be Upgraded
If your attempt to upgrade the software of a module fails, perform the following steps.
Procedure 43 Troubleshooting an unsuccessful software upgrade
Download the latest issue of the target release and the associated release notes.
Verify that the latest version of CNUT is installed.
Compare the files used in the failed attempt to the newly downloaded software.
Compare the procedure used in the failed attempt to the procedure in the newly
downloaded release notes.
If these comparisons reveal a difference, retry the upgrade, this time with the newer file
or newer procedure.
If, during attempts to upgrade the FPGA firmware, the following message is repeatable,
then request an RMA for the module:
Error code 6, unrecognized device
Module Functions Properly, Except Web Interface
Became Inaccessible
If a module continues to pass traffic and the SNMP interface to the module continues to function, but the
web interface to the module does not display, perform the following steps:
Procedure 44 Restoring web management GUI access
Enter telnet DottedIPAddress.
RESULT: A telnet session to the module is invoked.
At the Login prompt, enter root.
At the Password prompt, enter PasswordIfConfigured.
At the Telnet +> prompt, enter reset.
RESULT: The web interface is accessible again and this telnet connection is closed.
Note
The module may also be rebooted via an SNMP-based NMS (Wireless
Manager, for example)
If the issue persists, turn off any SNMP-based network/radio monitoring software and
repeat steps 1-4.
Page 11-12
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Power-up troubleshooting
Power-up troubleshooting
Module does not power ON
Is Module’s power
LED ON?
Yes
No
Is the
LED always red?
Ethernet cable
repaired
Yes
No
Yes
Is there AC power
going to the supply?
Test cable, use known
good cable. Could the radio be
in default mode
Switch ON AC mains power
No
Yes
Cable wire and pin out
corrected
No
Test cable?
Yes
Connect to known good
module
Yes
Cable length within
300 meters
No
Is cable length < 300 meters?
Is module getting
powered ON?
Yes
Connect to a known power
supply
Yes
No
Is the module’s
red LED ON?
No
Yes
Module is powered ON
Page 11-13
Contact Cambium Support for
RMA
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Registration and connectivity troubleshooting
Registration and connectivity
troubleshooting
SM/BMS Registration
If no SMs are registered to this AP, then the Session Status tab displays the simple message No
sessions. In this case, try the following steps.
More finely aim the SM or SMs toward the AP.
Recheck the Session Status tab of the AP for the presence of LUIDs.
If still no LUIDs are reported on the Session Status tab, click the Configuration button on
the left side of the Home page.
RESULT: The AP responds by opening the AP Configuration page.
Click the Radio tab.
Find the Color Code parameter and note the setting.
In the same sequence as you did for the AP directly under Configuring Link for Test on
Page 5-16, connect the SM to a computing device and to power.
On the left side of the SM Home page, click the Configuration button.
RESULT: The Configuration page of the SM opens.
Click the Radio tab.
If the transmit frequency of the AP is not selected in the Custom Radio Frequency Scan
Selection List parameter, select the frequency that matches.
10
If the Color Code parameter on this page is not identical to the Color Code parameter
you noted from the AP, change one of them so that they match.
11
At the bottom of the Radio tab for the SM, click the Save Changes button.
12
Click the Reboot button.
13
Allow several minutes for the SM to reboot and register to the AP.
14
Return to the computing device that is connected to the AP.
15
Recheck the Session Status tab of the AP for the presence of LUIDs.
Page 11-14
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Logs
Logs
Persistent Logging
PMP 450 SM supports logging information such as session logs, authentication logs, and authorization
logs that are persistent through reboots and connectivity losses.
Navigate to Logs to view:

SM Session

SM Authentication

SM Authorization
All the SM logs are saved to flash and displayed upon reboot.
Figure 202 SM Logs
Figure 203 SM Session log
Figure 204 SM Authentication log
Page 11-15
Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Logs
Figure 205 SM Authorization log
Page 11-16
Appendix A - 450m
information
Reference
Specifications
Please see the Specification sheets listed on the Cambium Networks website for the most up-to-date
450m Series cnMedusa AP specifications:
http://www.cambiumnetworks.com/resources/pmp-450m/
450m overload
The 450m Series AP is designed to handle high load in terms of high throughput and high PPS. In terms
of throughput, 450m is designed to achieve 3x or more throughput improvement over 450 and 450i Series
products. In terms of packets per second (PPS), 450m is designed to handle up to 100k PPS.
Overload occurs when the offered load exceeds the above limits. When overload occurs, 450m will start
discarding packets and TCP throughput will degrade due to packet loss. The 450 family of products have
a set of overload statistics that can be used to monitor overload conditions (Statistics >Overload tab).
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Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
Logs
The above statistics shall be monitored over time for overload conditions over consecutive periods. Refer
to Interpreting Overload statistics for description of those statistics.
It’s worth noting that Frame Utilization statistics (Statistics >Frame Utilization tab: Frame Utilization:
Downlink and Uplink) are not necessarily indicative of overload condition. They show how much the TDD
frame is utilized. High frame utilization depends on:
1. high traffic during busy periods: those statistics will be close to 100% and almost all slots will be
utilized. In this case if the Overload statistics show that packets are discarded then this is an
indication of overload condition.
2. high percentage of VCs with low modulation with moderate traffic. Those VCs will require more slots
to service them (due to low modulation) and the frame utilization will be high. In this case the TDD
frame is fully utilized but the system is at low capacity and is not in an overload condition.
450m has higher PPS than 450 and 450i and supports higher throughput through spatial multiplexing,
therefore when a 450m replaces an overloaded 450 or 450i AP the 450m will not be overloaded under the
same conditions but the frame utilization may still show close to 100%; this should not alarm the
customer. The overload statistics shall be monitored on 450m to see if it is overloaded or not.
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Logs
Glossary
Term
Definition
10Base-T
Technology in Ethernet communications that can deliver 10 Mb of data
across 328 feet (100 meters) of CAT 5 cable.
169.254.0.0
Gateway IP address default in Cambium fixed wireless broadband IP
network modules.
169.254.1.1
IP address default in Cambium fixed wireless broadband IP network
modules.
255.255.0.0
Subnet mask default in Cambium fixed wireless broadband IP network
modules and in Microsoft and Apple operating systems.
802.3
An IEEE standard that defines the contents of frames that are transferred
through Ethernet connections. Each of these frames contains a
preamble, the address to which the frame is sent, the address that sends
the frame, the length of the data to expect, the data, and a checksum to
validate that no contents were lost.
Access Point Cluster
Two to six Access Point Modules that together distribute network or
Internet services to a community of subscribers. Each Access Point
Module covers a 60° or 90° sector. This cluster covers as much as 360°.
Also known as AP cluster.
Access Point Module
Also known as AP. One module that distributes network or Internet
services in a 60° or 90° sector.
ACT/4
Second-from-left LED in the module. In the operating mode, this LED is
lit when data activity is present on the Ethernet link.
Address Resolution
Protocol
Protocol defined in RFC 826 to allow a network element to correlate a
host IP address to the Ethernet address of the host. See
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc826.html.
Aggregate Throughput
The sum of the throughputs in the uplink and the downlink.
AP
Access Point Module. One module that distributes network or Internet
services to subscriber modules.
ARP
Address Resolution Protocol. A protocol defined in RFC 826 to allow a
network element to correlate a host IP address to the Ethernet address
of the host. See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc826.html.
APs MIB
Management Information Base file that defines objects that are specific
to the Access Point Module. See also Management Information Base.
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Logs
Term
Definition
ASN.1
Abstract Syntax Notation One language. The format of the text files that
compose the Management Information Base.
Attenuation
Reduction of signal strength caused by the travel from the transmitter to
the receiver, and caused by any object between. In the absence of
objects between, a signal that has a short wavelength experiences a
high degree of attenuation nevertheless.
BER
Bit Error Rate. The ratio of incorrect data received to correct data
received.
BHM
Backhaul Timing Master (BHM)- a module that is used in a point to point
link. This module controls the air protocol and configurations for the link..
BHS
Backhaul Timing Slave (BHS)- a module that is used in a point to point
link. This module accepts configuration and timing from the master
module.
Bit Error Rate
Ratio of incorrect data received to correct data received.
Box MIB
Management Information Base file that defines module-level objects.
See also Management Information Base.
Bridge
Network element that uses the physical address (not the logical address)
of another to pass data. The bridge passes the data to either the
destination address, if found in the simple routing table, or to all network
segments other than the one that transmitted the data. Modules are
Layer 2 bridges except that, where NAT is enabled for an SM, the SM is
a Layer 3 switch. Compare to Switch and Router, and see also NAT.
Buckets
Theoretical data repositories that can be filled at preset rates or emptied
when preset conditions are experienced, such as when data is
transferred.
Burst
Preset amount limit of data that may be continuously transferred.
CAT 5 Cable
Cable that delivers Ethernet communications from module to module.
Later modules auto-sense whether this cable is wired in a straightthrough or crossover scheme.
CIR
Committed Information Rate. For an SM or specified group of SMs, a
level of bandwidth that can be guaranteed to never fall below a specified
minimum (unless oversubscribed). In the Cambium implementation, this
is controlled by the Low Priority Uplink CIR, Low Priority Downlink CIR,
High Priority Uplink CIR, and High Priority Downlink CIR parameters.
Cluster Management
Module
Module that provides power, GPS timing, and networking connections for
an AP cluster. Also known as CMM4.
CMM
Cluster Management Module. A module that provides power, GPS
timing, and networking connections for an Access Point cluster.
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Term
Definition
CodePoint
See DiffServ.
Color Code Field
Module parameter that identifies the other modules with which
communication is allowed. The range of valid values is 0 to 255.
Community String Field
Control string that allows a network management station to access MIB
information about the module.
Connectorized
The 450 Platform Family Connectorized Radio solution provide RF port
to connect external antenna. It gives flexibility to connect to a variety of
external antennas.
Country Code
A parameter that offers multiple fixed selections, each of which
automatically implements frequency band range restrictions for the
selected country. Units shipped to countries other than the United States
must be configured with the corresponding Region Code and Country
Code to comply with local regulatory requirements.
CRCError Field
This field displays how many CRC errors occurred on the Ethernet
controller.
Data Encryption Standard
Over-the-air link option that uses secret 56-bit keys and 8 parity bits.
Data Encryption Standard (DES) performs a series of bit permutations,
substitutions, and recombination operations on blocks of data.
Demilitarized Zone
Internet Protocol area outside of a firewall. Defined in RFC 2647. See
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2647.html.
DES
Data Encryption Standard. An over-the-air link option that uses secret
56-bit keys and 8 parity bits. DES performs a series of bit permutations,
substitutions, and recombination operations on blocks of data.
DFS
See Dynamic Frequency Selection
DHCP
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, defined in RFC 2131. Protocol that
enables a device to be assigned a new IP address and TCP/IP
parameters, including a default gateway, whenever the device reboots.
Thus DHCP reduces configuration time, conserves IP addresses, and
allows modules to be moved to a different network within the system.
See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2131.html. See also Static IP Address
Assignment.
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Chapter 11: Troubleshooting
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Term
Definition
DiffServ
Differentiated Services, consistent with RFC 2474. A byte in the type of
service (TOS) field of packets whose values correlates to the channel on
which the packet should be sent. The value is a numeric code point.
Cambium modules map each of 64 code points to values of 0 through 7.
Three of these code points have fixed values, and the remaining 61 are
settable. Values of 0 through 3 map to the low-priority channel; 4 through
7 to the high-priority channel. The mappings are the same as 802.1p
VLAN priorities. (However, configuring DiffServ does not automatically
enable the VLAN feature.) Among the settable parameters, the values
are set in the AP for all downlinks within the sector and in the SM for
each uplink.
DMZ
Demilitarized Zone as defined in RFC 2647. An Internet Protocol area
outside of a firewall. See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2647.html.
Dynamic Frequency
Selection
A requirement in certain countries and regions for systems to detect
interference from other systems, notably radar systems, and to avoid cochannel operation with these systems.
Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol
See DHCP.
Electronic Serial Number
Hardware address that the factory assigns to the module for identification
in the Data Link layer interface of the Open Systems Interconnection
system. This address serves as an electronic serial number. Same as
MAC Address.
ESN
Electronic Serial Number. The hardware address that the factory assigns
to the module for identification in the Data Link layer interface of the
Open Systems Interconnection system. This address serves as an
electronic serial number. Same as MAC Address.
Ethernet Protocol
Any of several IEEE standards that define the contents of frames that are
transferred from one network element to another through Ethernet
connections.
ETSI
European Telecommunications Standards Institute
Fade Margin
The difference between strength of the received signal and the strength
that the receiver requires for maintaining a reliable link. A higher fade
margin is characteristic of a more reliable link. Standard operating
margin.
FCC
Federal Communications Commission of the U.S.A.
Field-programmable Gate
Array
Array of logic, relational data, and wiring data that is factory programmed
and can be reprogrammed.
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Term
Definition
File Transfer Protocol
Utility that transfers of files through TCP (Transport Control Protocol)
between computing devices that do not operate on the same platform.
Defined in RFC 959. See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc959.html.
FPGA
Field-programmable Gate Array. An array of logic, relational data, and
wiring data that is factory programmed and can be reprogrammed.
Free Space Path Loss
Signal attenuation that is naturally caused by atmospheric conditions and
by the distance between the antenna and the receiver.
Fresnel Zone
Space in which no object should exist that can attenuate, diffract, or
reflect a transmitted signal before the signal reaches the target receiver.
FTP
File Transfer Protocol, defined in RFC 959. Utility that transfers of files
through TCP (Transport Control Protocol) between computing devices
that do not operate on the same platform. See
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc959.html.
Global Positioning System
Network of satellites that provides absolute time to networks on earth,
which use the time signal to synchronize transmission and reception
cycles (to avoid interference) and to provide reference for
troubleshooting activities.
GPS
Global Positioning System. A network of satellites that provides absolute
time to networks on earth, which use the time signal to synchronize
transmission and reception cycles (to avoid interference) and to provide
reference for troubleshooting activities.
GPS/3
Third-from-left LED in the module. In the operating mode for an Access
Point Module, this LED is continuously lit as the module receives sync
pulse. In the operating mode for a Subscriber, this LED flashes on and
off to indicate that the module is not registered.
GUI
Graphical user interface.
High-priority Channel
Channel that supports low-latency traffic (such as Voice over IP) over
low-latency traffic (such as standard web traffic and file downloads). To
recognize the latency tolerance of traffic, this channel reads the IPv4
Type of Service DiffServ Control Point (DSCP) bits. Enabling the highpriority channel reduces the maximum number of SMs that can be
served in the sector.
HTTP
Hypertext Transfer Protocol, used to make the Internet resources
available on the World Wide Web. Defined in RFC 2068. See
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2068.html.
HTTPS
Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure (HTTPS)
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Term
Definition
ICMP
Internet Control Message Protocols defined in RFC 792, used to identify
Internet Protocol (IP)-level problems and to allow IP links to be tested.
See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc792.html.
Integrated
The 450 Platform Family Integrated Radio solution provides integrated
antenna..
IP
Internet Protocol defined in RFC 791. The Network Layer in the TCP/IP
protocol stack. This protocol is applied to addressing, routing, and
delivering, and re-assembling data packets into the Data Link layer of the
protocol stack. See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc791.html.
IP Address
32-bit binary number that identifies a network element by both network
and host. See also Subnet Mask.
IPv4
Traditional version of Internet Protocol, which defines 32-bit fields for
data transmission.
ISM
Industrial, Scientific, and Medical Equipment radio frequency band, in the
900-MHz, 2.4-GHz, and 5.8-GHz ranges.
L2TP over IPSec
Level 2 Tunneling Protocol over IP Security. One of several virtual
private network (VPN) implementation schemes. Regardless of whether
Subscriber Modules have the Network Address Translation feature
(NAT) enabled, they support VPNs that are based on this protocol.
Late Collision Field
This field displays how many late collisions occurred on the Ethernet
controller. A normal collision occurs during the first 512 bits of the frame
transmission. A collision that occurs after the first 512 bits is considered
a late collision. A late collision is a serious network problem because the
frame being transmitted is discarded. A late collision is most commonly
caused by a mismatch between duplex configurations at the ends of a
link segment.
Line of Sight
Wireless path (not simply visual path) direct from module to module. The
path that results provides both ideal aim and an ideal Fresnel zone.
LNK/5
Furthest left LED in the module. In the operating mode, this LED is
continuously lit when the Ethernet link is present. In the aiming mode for
a Subscriber Module, this LED is part of a bar graph that indicates the
quality of the RF link.
Logical Unit ID
Final octet of the 4-octet IP address of the module.
LOS
Line of sight. The wireless path (not simply visual path) direct from
module to module. The path that results provides both ideal aim and an
ideal Fresnel zone.
LUID
Logical Unit ID. The final octet of the 4-octet IP address of the module.
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Term
Definition
MAC Address
Media Access Control address. The hardware address that the factory
assigns to the module for identification in the Data Link layer interface of
the Open Systems Interconnection system. This address serves as an
electronic serial number.
Management Information
Base
Space that allows a program (agent) in the network to relay information
to a network monitor about the status of defined variables (objects).
Maximum Information Rate
(MIR)
The cap applied to the bandwidth of an SM or specified group of SMs. In
the Cambium implementation, this is controlled by the Sustained Uplink
Data Rate, Uplink Burst Allocation, Sustained Downlink Data Rate, and
Downlink Burst Allocation parameters.
MIB
Management Information Base. Space that allows a program (agent) in
the network to relay information to a network monitor about the status of
defined variables (objects).
MIR
See Maximum Information Rate.
MU-MIMO
Multi User- Multiple Input Multiple Output
NAT
Network Address Translation defined in RFC 1631. A scheme that
isolates Subscriber Modules from the Internet. See
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1631.html.
NEC
National Electrical Code. The set of national wiring standards that are
enforced in the U.S.A.
NetBIOS
Protocol defined in RFC 1001 and RFC 1002 to support an applications
programming interface in TCP/IP. This interface allows a computer to
transmit and receive data with another host computer on the network.
RFC 1001 defines the concepts and methods. RFC 1002 defines the
detailed specifications. See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1001.html and
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1002.html.
Network Address
Translation
Scheme that defines the Access Point Module as a proxy server to
isolate registered Subscriber Modules from the Internet. Defined in RFC
1631. See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1631.html.
Network Management
Station
See NMS.
NMS
Network Management Station. A monitor device that uses Simple
Network Management Protocol (SNMP) to control, gather, and report
information about predefined network variables (objects). See also
Simple Network Management Protocol.
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Term
Definition
Default Mode
Device that enables the operator to regain control of a module that has
been locked by the No Remote Access feature, the 802.3 Link Disable
feature, or a password or IP address that cannot be recalled. This device
can be either fabricated on site or ordered.
PMP
See Point-to-Multipoint Protocol.
Point-to-Multipoint Protocol
Defined in RFC 2178, which specifies that data that originates from a
central network element can be received by all other network elements,
but data that originates from a non-central network element can be
received by only the central network element. See
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2178.html. Also referenced as PMP.
PPPoE
Point to Point Protocol over Ethernet. Supported on SMs for
operators who use PPPoE in other parts of their network operators who
want to deploy PPPoE to realize per-subscriber authentication, metrics,
and usage control.
PPS
Packet Per Second
PPTP
Point to Point Tunneling Protocol. One of several virtual private network
implementations. Regardless of whether the Network Address
Translation (NAT) feature enabled, Subscriber Modules support VPNs
that are based on this protocol.
Protective Earth
Connection to earth (which has a charge of 0 volts). Also known as
ground.
Proxy Server
Network computer that isolates another from the Internet. The proxy
server communicates for the other computer, and sends replies to only
the appropriate computer, which has an IP address that is not unique or
not registered.
PTP
A Point-to-Point connection refers to a communications connection
between two nodes or endpoints.
Radio Signal Strength
Indicator
Relative measure of the strength of a received signal. An acceptable link
displays a Radio Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) value of greater than
700.
Reflection
Change of direction and reduction of amplitude of a signal that
encounters an object larger than the wavelength. Reflection may cause
an additional copy of the wavelength to arrive after the original,
unobstructed wavelength arrives. This causes partial cancellation of the
signal and may render the link unacceptable. However, in some
instances where the direct signal cannot be received, the reflected copy
may be received and render an otherwise unacceptable link acceptable.
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Term
Definition
Region Code
A parameter that offers multiple fixed selections, each of which
automatically implements frequency band range restrictions for the
selected region. Units shipped to regions other than the United States
must be configured with the corresponding Region Code to comply with
local regulatory requirements.
RF
Radio frequency. How many times each second a cycle in the antenna
occurs, from positive to negative and back to positive amplitude.
RJ-12
Standard cable that is typically used for telephone line or modem
connection.
RJ-45
Standard cable that is typically used for Ethernet connection. This cable
may be wired as straight-through or as crossover. Later modules autosense whether the cable is straight-through or crossover.
Router
Network element that uses the logical (IP) address of another to pass
data to only the intended recipient. Compare to Switch and Bridge.
RSSI
Radio Signal Strength Indicator. A relative measure of the strength of a
received signal. An acceptable link displays an RSSI value of greater
than 700.
Self-interference
Interference with a module from another module in the same network.
SFP
Small Form-factor Pluggable
Simple Network
Management Protocol
Standard that is used for communications between a program (agent) in
the network and a network management station (monitor). Defined in
RFC 1157. See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1157.html.
SM
Customer premises equipment (CPE) device that extends network or
Internet services by communication with an Access Point Module or an
Access Point cluster.
SNMP
See Simple Network Management Protocol, defined in RFC 1157.
SNMPv3
SNMP version 3
SNMP Trap
Capture of information that informs the network monitor through Simple
Network Management Protocol of a monitored occurrence in the module.
Static IP Address
Assignment
Assignment of Internet Protocol address that can be changed only
manually. Thus static IP address assignment requires more configuration
time and consumes more of the available IP addresses than DHCP
address assignment does. RFC 2050 provides guidelines for the static
allocation of IP addresses. See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2050.html.
See also DHCP.
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Term
Definition
Subnet Mask
32-bit binary number that filters an IP address to reveal what part
identifies the network and what part identifies the host. The number of
subnet mask bits that are set to 1 indicates how many leading bits of the
IP address identify the network. The number of subnet mask bits that are
set 0 indicate how many trailing bits of the IP address identify the host.
Subscriber Module
Customer premises equipment (CPE) device that extends network or
Internet services by communication with an Access Point Module or an
Access Point cluster.
Sustained Data Rate
Preset rate limit of data transfer.
Switch
Network element that uses the port that is associated with the physical
address of another to pass data to only the intended recipient. Compare
to Bridge and Router.
Sync
GPS (Global Positioning System) absolute time, which is passed from
one module to another. Sync enables timing that prevents modules from
transmitting or receiving interference. Sync also provides correlative time
stamps for troubleshooting efforts.
TCP
Alternatively known as Transmission Control Protocol or Transport
Control Protocol. The Transport Layer in the TCP/IP protocol stack. This
protocol is applied to assure that data packets arrive at the target
network element and to control the flow of data through the Internet.
Defined in RFC 793. See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc793.html.
TDD
Time Division Duplexing. Synchronized data transmission with some
time slots allocated to devices transmitting on the uplink and some to the
device transmitting on the downlink.
telnet
Utility that allows a client computer to update a server. A firewall can
prevent the use of the telnet utility to breach the security of the server.
See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc818.html,
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc854.html and
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc855.html.
Tokens
Theoretical amounts of data. See also Buckets.
TxUnderrun Field
This field displays how many transmission-underrun errors occurred on
the Ethernet controller.
UDP
User Datagram Protocol. A set of Network, Transport, and Session Layer
protocols that RFC 768 defines. These protocols include checksum and
address information but does not retransmit data or process any errors.
See http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc768.html.
udp
User-defined type of port.
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Term
Definition
U-NII
Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure radio frequency band, in
the 5.1GHz through 5.8 GHz ranges.
VID
VLAN identifier. See also VLAN.
VLAN
Virtual local area network. An association of devices through software
that contains broadcast traffic, as routers would, but in the switch-level
protocol.
VPN
Virtual private network for communication over a public network.
One typical use is to connect remote employees, who are at home or in a
different city, to their corporate network over the Internet. Any of several
VPN implementation schemes is possible. SMs support L2TP over IPSec
(Level 2 Tunneling Protocol over IP Security) VPNs and PPTP (Point to
Point Tunneling Protocol) VPNs, regardless of whether the Network
Address Translation (NAT) feature enabled.
Page XIII

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