Wistron NeWeb DNBA81 WLAN a/b/g/n Cardbus adapter User Manual DNBA 81 Manual

Wistron NeWeb Corporation WLAN a/b/g/n Cardbus adapter DNBA 81 Manual

User Manual

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WLAN 802.11 a/b/g/n CardBus
DNBA-81
User Manual
Version: 1.0
Jan 2008
Copyright Statement
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
transmitted in any form or by any means, whether electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior writing of the publisher.
Windows™ 98SE/2000/ME/XP are trademarks of Microsoft® Corp.
Pentium is trademark of Intel.
All copyright reserved.
Federal Communication Commission Interference Statement
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class
B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are
designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a
residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio
frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with
the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications.
However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular
installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or
television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and
on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one of the
following measures:
- Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
- Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
- Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which
the receiver is connected.
- Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
FCC Caution: To assure continued compliance, (example - use only shielded
interface cables when connecting to computer or peripheral devices) any
changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for
compliance could void the user's authority to operate this equipment.
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. 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.
If this device is going to be operated in 5.15~5.25GHz frequency range, then it is
restricted in indoor environment only.
For product available in the USA/Canada market, only channel 1~11 can be operated.
Selection of other channels is not possible.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction
with any other antenna or transmitter.
T h is EU T is co mp l i an ce w it h SAR f or gene ra l po pu la t i on / un con t r o l led
exposure limits in AN SI/IEEE C95.1- 1999 and had been tested in
a cc or dan ce w ith t he me asu re me nt met hod s a nd pr oc ed ur es sp ec if ied in
O E T B u l le t i n 6 5 Su p p l e m e n t C . T h is eq uipme nt s ho uld be installed and
o pe rat ed w ith min imu m d istan ce 2.5 c m b etw een th e r ad ia tor & yo u r
b od y.
"This device supports FCC Part 15, subpart E dynamic frequency selection
(DFS)."
"For the band 5150–5350 MHz this equipment must be used indoors only
to reduce potential for harmful interference to co-channel mobile
satellite systems."
“This device has been designed to operate with the antennas listed below,
and having a maximum gain of 4.52 dB. Antennas not included in this list or
having a gain greater than 4.52 dB are strictly prohibited for use with this
device. The required antenna impedance is 50 ohms."
This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003.
Cet appareil numérique de la classe B conforme á la norme NMB-003 du Canada
“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."
The device could automatically discontinue transmission in case of absence of
information to transmit, or operational failure. Note that this is not intended to
prohibit transmission of control or signaling information or the use of repetitive
codes where required by the technology.
The device for the band 5150-5350 MHz is only for indoor usage to reduce
potential for harmful interference to co-channel mobile satellite systems;
The maximum antenna gain 4.52 permitted (for devices in the bands
5250-5350 MHz and 5470-5725 MHz) to comply with the e.i.r.p. limit; and The
maximum antenna gain 4.52 permitted (for devices in the band 5725-5825
MHz) to comply with the e.i.r.p. limits specified for point-to-point and non
point-to-point operation as appropriate, as stated in section A9.2(3).
High-power radars are allocated as primary users (meaning they have priority)
of the bands 5250-5350 MHz and 5650-5850 MHz and these radars could
cause interference and/or damage to LE-LAN devices.
For product available in the USA/Canada market, only channel 1~11 can be operated.
Selection of other channels is not possible.
This device and its antenna(s) must not be co-located or operation in conjunction with
any other antenna or transmitter.
To reduce potential radio interference to other users, the antenna type and its gain
should be so chosen that the equivalent isotropically radiated power (e.i.r.p) is not
more than that permitted for successful communication.
The information is as follows:
-the maximum antenna gain 4.52 permitted (for devices in the 5250-5350 MHz
and 5470-5725 MHz bands) to comply with the e.i.r.p. limit.
- the maximum antenna gain 4.52 permitted (for devices in the 5725-5825 MHz
band) to comply with the e.i.r.p. limits specified for point-to-point
and non point-to-point operation as appropriate, as stated in section
A9.2(3)
- users should also 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
LE-LAN devices.
CE Statement
Hereby, AirMagnet,declares that this device is in compliance with the essential
requirement and other relevant provisions of the R&TTE Driective 1999/5/EC.
This device will be sold in the following EEA countries:Austria, Italy, Belgium,
Liechtenstein, Denmark, Luxembourg, Finland, Netherlands, France, Norway, Germany,
Portugal, Greece, Spain, Iceland, Sweden, Ireland, United Kingdom, Cyprus, Czech
Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Slovakia, Poland, Slovenia
Bulgaria, Romania.
Table of Contents
1. INTRODUCTION
2. DRIVER/UTILITY INSTALLATION
2.1 INSTALLATION .........................................................................................................7
2.2 ADDITIONAL SETUP PROCESSES ............................................................................12
3. CONNECTING TO AN EXISTING NETWORK 13
5. MODIFYING A WIRELESS NETWORK
16
5.1 INFRASTRUCTURE MODE ......................................................................................16
5.2 MODIFYING A WIRELESS NETWORK.....................................................................16
APPENDIX A: FAQ ABOUT WLAN
APPENDIX B: SPECIFICATION 19
17
1. Introduction
Thank you for purchasing the 802.11a/b/g/n Wireless PC Card that provides the
easiest way to wireless networking. This User Manual contains detailed instructions in
the operation of this product. Please keep this manual for future reference.
System Requirements
A laptop PC contains:
- 32 MB memory or greater
- 300 MHz processor or higher
Microsoft® Win™2000/ME/98 Second Edition/XP
2. Driver/Utility Installation
2.1 Installation
Note! The Installation Section in this User Manual describes the first-time installation
for Windows. To re-install the driver, please first uninstall the previously
installed driver. See Chapter 2.3 “Uninstallation” in this User Manual.
Follow the steps below to complete the driver/utility installation:
1. Insert the Installation Software CD into the CD-Rom Drive.
2. Choose the installation language
3. Click “Next”.
4. Read the License Agreement, choose “I accept the terms of license agreement”
and click “Next”
3.5. Click “Next”
4.6. If the device is not plugged, insert now.
7. Click “Next” to continue or click “Browse” to choose a destination folder.
5.8. Click “Next”.
9. Click “Next”.
10. Click “Next”.
11. Click “Yes”
12. Click “Yes”
10
7.13.
Click “Finish” to restart your system.
11
2.2 Additional Setup Processes
During software installation procedure, each operating system may prompt different
specific options:
1. Windows 98SE: The system will request the original Windows CD during the
installation process. When the installation is finished, you’ll have to restart your
computer.
2. Windows Me: Please restart your computer when the installation is finished.
3. Windows 2000/XP: Select “Install the software automatically” when the window
with this option appears, and then click “Next” to continue installation.
12
3. Connecting to an Existing Network
1. Double click the shortcut icon of Atheros Client Utility on the desktop, and the
Configuration window appears.
2. Click on the Scan button to list all available networks.
3. From the list of “Available Networks”, choose one network by double clicking the
Network Name. Click “Activate” to continue.
4. Type the preferred profile name.
13
5. If the chosen network has security enabled, the Security tab displays. Select the
security option used by the network. Contact the network administrator for the
correct settings.
14
Additional Note for Windows XP
In Windows XP, it is recommended that you use the Atheros Client Utility.
15
5. Modifying a Wireless Network
5.1 Infrastructure Mode
Only Infrastructure mode is supported with this 802.11a/b/g/n Wireless PC Card.
Infrastructure Mode
In infrastructure mode, devices communicate with each other by first going through
an Access Point (AP). Wireless devices can communicate with each other or can
communicate with a wired network. When one AP is connected to wired network
and a set of wireless stations, it is referred to as a BSS (Basic Service Set).
5.2 Modifying a Wireless Network
1. Open “Atheros Client Utility” by double clicking the shortcut icon on the desktop.
2. From the Profile List, select one Profile and click Modify button
16
Appendix A: FAQ about WLAN
1. Can I run an application from a remote computer over the wireless network?
This will depend on whether or not the application is designed to be used over a
network. Consult the application’s user guide to determine whether it supports
operation over a network.
2. Can I play computer games with other members of the wireless network?
Yes, as long as the game supports multiple players over a LAN (local area network).
Refer to the game’s user guide for more information.
3. What is Spread Spectrum?
Spread Spectrum technology is a wideband radio frequency technique developed by
the military for use in reliable, secure, mission-critical communications systems. It is
designed to trade off bandwidth efficiency for reliability, integrity, and security. In
other words, more bandwidth is consumed than in the case of narrowband
transmission, but the trade-off produces a signal that is, in effect, louder and thus
easier to detect, provided that the receiver knows the parameters of the
spread-spectrum signal being broadcast. If a receiver is not tuned to the right
frequency, a spread-spectrum signal looks like background noise. There are two main
alternatives, Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) and Frequency Hopping
Spread Spectrum (FHSS).
4. What is DSSS? What is FHSS? And what are their differences?
Frequency-Hopping Spread-Spectrum (FHSS) uses a narrowband carrier that changes
frequency in a pattern that is known to both transmitter and receiver. Properly
synchronized, the net effect is to maintain a single logical channel. To an unintended
receiver, FHSS appears to be short-duration impulse noise. Direct-Sequence
Spread-Spectrum (DSSS) generates a redundant bit pattern for each bit to be
transmitted. This bit pattern is called a chip (or chipping code). The longer the chip,
the greater the probability that the original data can be recovered. Even if one or more
bits in the chip are damaged during transmission, statistical techniques embedded in
the radio can recover the original data without the need for retransmission. To an
unintended receiver, DSSS appears as low power wideband noise and is rejected
(ignored) by most narrowband receivers.
17
5. Would the information be intercepted while transmitting on air?
WLAN features two-fold protection in security. On the hardware side, as with Direct
Sequence Spread Spectrum technology, it has the inherent security feature of
scrambling. On the software side, WLAN offers the encryption function (WEP) to
enhance security and access control.
6. What is WEP?
WEP is Wired Equivalent Privacy, a data privacy mechanism based on a 64-bit or
128-bit shared key algorithm, as described in the IEEE 802.11 standard.
7. What is infrastructure mode?
When a wireless network is set to infrastructure mode, the wireless network is
configured to communicate with a wired network through a wireless access point.
8. What is roaming?
Roaming is the ability of a portable computer user to communicate continuously
while moving freely throughout an area greater than that covered by a single access
point. Before using the roaming function, the workstation must make sure that it is the
same channel number with the access point of dedicated coverage area.
To achieve true seamless connectivity, the wireless LAN must incorporate a number
of different functions. Each node and access point, for example, must always
acknowledge receipt of each message. Each node must maintain contact with the
wireless network even when not actually transmitting data. Achieving these functions
simultaneously requires a dynamic RF networking technology that links access points
and nodes. In such a system, the user’s end node undertakes a search for the best
possible access to the system. First, it evaluates such factors as signal strength and
quality, as well as the message load currently being carried by each access point and
the distance of each access point to the wired backbone. Based on that information,
the node next selects the right access point and registers its address. Communications
between end node and host computer can then be transmitted up and down the
backbone. As the user moves on, the end node’s RF transmitter regularly checks the
system to determine whether it is in touch with the original access point or whether it
should seek a new one. When a node no longer receives acknowledgment from its
original access point, it undertakes a new search. Upon finding a new access point, it
then re-registers, and the communication process continues.
18
Appendix B: Specification
C1060, Product Specification, 802.11N a/b/g Cardbus Card
Item
Main Chipset
Key specifications
Atheros® AR5416, AR5133
USA: 2.400 ~ 2.483GHz, 5.15 ~ 5.35GHz, 5.725 ~ 5.825GHz
Frequency
Europe: 2.400 ~ 2.483GHz, 5.15 ~ 5.35GHz, 5.47 ~ 5.725GHz
range
Japan: 2.400 ~ 2.497GHz, 5.15 ~ 5.35GHz, 5.47 ~ 5.725GHz
China: 2.400 ~ 2.483GHz, 5.725 ~5.85GHz
802.11n a/b/g
DSSS (DBPSK, DQPSK, CCK)
OFDM (BPSK, QPSK, 16-QAM, 64-QAM)
Modulation
technique
DSSS (Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum) with
DBPSK (Differential Binary Phase Shift Keying 1Mbps),
DQPSK (Differential Quaternary Phase Shift Keying 2Mbps), and
CCK (Complementary Code Keying 5.5&11Mbps), and
OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing with BPSK for 6,9Mbps、 QPSK for
12,18Mbps、 16QAM for 24,36Mbps、 64QAM for 48,54Mbps)
Host interface
Cardbus form factor with 32-bit interface
802.11n b/g
US/Canada: 11 (1 ~ 11)
Major European country: 13 (1 ~ 13)
France: 4 (10 ~ 13)
Japan: 11b: 14 (1~13 or 14th), 11g: 13 (1 ~ 13)
Channels
support
China: 13 (1 ~ 13)
802.11n a
1). US/Canada: 12 non-overlapping channels (36,40,44,48,52,56,60,64; 149,153,157,161)
2). Europe: 19 non-overlapping channel (36,40,44,48,52,56,60,64;
100,104,108,112,116,120,124,128,132,136,140)
3). Japan: 19 non-overlapping channels 36,40,44,48,52,56,60,64;
100,104,108,112,116,120,124,128,132,136,140)
4). China: 5 non-overlapping channels (149,153,157,161,165)
Operation
voltage
3.3V +/- 5%
Power
consumption
802.11a
802.11b
802.11n(5GHz)
19
802.11g
802.11n(2.4GHz)
@25 o C &
Win2K
environment
Avg/Max (mA)
Avg/Max
Avg/Max
Avg/Max (mA)
Avg/Max (mA)
Continue Tx
615/716
584/685
614/720
547/639
632/732
FTP Tx
384/600
486/669
487/640
351/480
379/611
386/499
572/698
FTP Rx
433/524
406/653
474/676
Standby mode
437/502
393/485
391/468
383/456
393/490
Power saving
38/487
41/447
42/417
42/454
101/426
***The maximum current consumption would be impacted by radiation environment and the
driver mechanism.
802.11a
Test Frequencies
6-24_Target
36_Target
48_Target
54_Target
4920
15
15
15
15
15
15
14
14
14
14
17
16
17
16
17
16
17
16
15
5170
15
15
5230
15
15
5260
14
14
5320
Output power
15
14
14
5500
16
15
5600
16
15
5700
16
15
5825
16
15
802.11b
Test Frequencies
1/2_Target
20
5.5_Target
11_Target
2412
16
16
2472
16
16
2484
16
16
16
16
16
802.11g
Test Frequencies
6-24_Target
36_Target
48_Target
54_Target
2412
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
16
2437
17
16
2472
17
16
802.11n
Freq. Range: 5GHz/HT20: @800GI(400GI)
Test Freq MCS 0/8 MCS 1/9 MCS 2/10 MCS 3/11 MCS 4/12 MCS 5/13
MCS 7/15
4920
15
15
15
15
5170
15
12
15
15
15
5230
15
12
15
15
15
5260
14
12
14
14
14
5320
14
12
14
14
14
5500
15
12
18
18
15
5600
15
12
18
18
15
5700
15
12
18
18
15
5825
12
18
18
21
15
15
12
15
15
12
15
15
12
14
14
12
14
14
12
18
16
12
18
16
12
18
16
12
18
16
MCS 6/14
15
15
12
12
Freq. Range: 5GHz/HT40: @800GI(400GI)
Test Freq MCS 0/8 MCS 1/9 MCS 2/10 MCS 3/11 MCS 4/12 MCS 5/13
MCS 6/14
MCS 7/15
4920
15.5
15.5
15
5190
12
15.5
15.5
15
5230
15.5
15.5
15
17
15
15
17
17
15
5700
15
17
17
15
5825
15
17
17
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
11
15.5
12
17
5600
15.5
15.5
15
11
12
15.5
5500
15.5
15.5
15
11
12
15
5320
15.5
15.5
15
11
12
15
5260
15.5
11
17
15
12
11
17
15
12
11
17
15
12
11
17
15
12
11
Freq. Range: 2.4GHz/HT20: @800GI(400GI)
Test Freq MCS 0/8 MCS 1/9 MCS 2/10 MCS 3/11 MCS 4/12 MCS 5/13
MCS 6/14
MCS 7/15
2412
16
18
18
15
2437
16
14
18
18
15
2472
14
18
18
16
15
18
17
13
18
17
13
18
17
14
13
Freq. Range: 2.4GHz/HT40: @800GI(400GI)
Test Freq MCS 0/8 MCS 1/9 MCS 2/10 MCS 3/11 MCS 4/12 MCS 5/13
22
MCS 6/14
MCS 7/15
2412
16
18
18
15
2437
16
13
18
18
15
2472
13
18
18
16
15
18
16
12
18
16
12
18
16
13
12
802.11a
Modulation
Code Rate
Relative constellation error (dB)
Relative constellation
error (dB)
IEEE Spec (1Tx dB)
Typical/Maximum
(2Tx dB)
BPSK
1/2
-5
3/4
-8
-20/-15
BPSK
-20/-15
QPSK
1/2
-10
3/4
-13
-20/-15
QPSK
-21/-17
16-QAM
1/2
-16
3/4
-19
2/3
-22
3/4
-25
-21/-17
EVM
16-QAM
-25/-21
64-QAM
-26/-23
64-QAM
-28/-25
802.11b
Modulation
Code Rate
Relative constellation error (dB)
Relative constellation
error (dB)
IEEE Spec (1Tx dB)
Typical/Maximum
(2Tx dB)
DBPSK
-10
-18/-15
DQPSK
-10
-18/-15
23
CCK
-10
-18/-15
802.11g
Modulation
Code Rate
Relative constellation error (dB)
Relative constellation
error (dB)
IEEE Spec (1Tx dB)
Typical/Maximum
(2Tx dB)
BPSK
1/2
-5
3/4
-8
-21/-15
BPSK
-21/-15
QPSK
1/2
-10
3/4
-13
-21/-15
QPSK
-23/-20
16-QAM
1/2
-16
3/4
-19
2/3
-22
3/4
-25
-25/-20
16-QAM
-27/-22
64-QAM
-28/-25
64-QAM
-30/-27
802.11ng
Modulation
Code Rate
Relative constellation error (dB)
Relative constellation
error (dB)
IEEE Spec (1Tx dB)
Typical/Maximum
(2Tx dB)
HT20
BPSK
1/2
-5
-20/-15
QPSK
1/2
-10
3/4
-13
-20/-16
QPSK
-20/-16
16-QAM
1/2
-16
24
-25/-20
16-QAM
3/4
-19
2/3
-22
3/4
-25
5/6
-28
-29/-22
64-QAM
-29/-24
64-QAM
-30/-26
64-QAM
-31/-28
HT40
BPSK
1/2
-5
-21/-15
QPSK
1/2
-10
3/4
-13
-21/-15
QPSK
-21/-15
16-QAM
1/2
-16
3/4
-19
2/3
-22
3/4
-25
5/6
-28
-25/-20
16-QAM
-28/-22
64-QAM
-30/-24
64-QAM
-31/-26
64-QAM
-32/-28
802.11na
Modulation
Code Rate
Relative constellation error (dB)
Relative constellation
error (dB)
IEEE Spec (1Tx dB)
Typical/Maximum
(2Tx dB)
HT20
BPSK
1/2
-5
-26/-15
QPSK
1/2
-10
-26/-16
25
QPSK
3/4
-13
-26/-16
16-QAM
1/2
-16
3/4
-19
2/3
-22
3/4
-25
5/6
-28
-28/-20
16-QAM
-29/-22
64-QAM
-30/-24
64-QAM
-30/-26
64-QAM
-30/-28
HT40
BPSK
1/2
-5
-20/-15
QPSK
1/2
-10
3/4
-13
-20/-15
QPSK
-20/-15
16-QAM
1/2
-16
3/4
-19
2/3
-22
3/4
-25
5/6
-28
-25/-20
16-QAM
-26/-22
64-QAM
-28/-24
64-QAM
-31/-26
64-QAM
-32/-28
802.11a
Modulation
Code Rate
IEEE Spec (1Rx dBm)
Typical/Maximum (3Rx dBm)
Sensitivity
BPSK
1/2
-82
3/4
-81
-94/-90
BPSK
-94/-90
QPSK
1/2
26
-79
-94/-89
QPSK
3/4
-77
-93/-88
16-QAM
1/2
-74
3/4
-70
2/3
-66
3/4
-65
-90/-86
16-QAM
-87/-82
64-QAM
-83/-79
64-QAM
-81/-77
802.11b
Modulation
IEEE Spec (1Rx dBm)
Typical/Maximum (3Rx dBm)
DBPSK
-82
-99/-95
DQPSK
-80
-93/-89
CCK
-76
-90/-86
802.11g
Modulation
Code Rate
IEEE Spec (1Rx dBm)
Typical/Maximum (3Rx dBm)
BPSK
1/2
-82
3/4
-81
-95/-91
BPSK
-95/-91
QPSK
1/2
-79
3/4
-77
-95/-91
QPSK
-94/-90
16-QAM
1/2
-74
3/4
-70
2/3
-66
-91/-87
16-QAM
-88/-84
64-QAM
27
-84/-80
64-QAM
3/4
-65
-82/-77
802.11ng
Modulation
Code Rate
IEEE Spec (1Rx dBm)
Typical/Maximum (3Rx dBm)
HT20
BPSK
1/2
-80
-95/-91
QPSK
1/2
-77
3/4
-75
-94/-90
QPSK
-91/-87
16-QAM
1/2
-72
3/4
-68
2/3
-64
3/4
-63
5/6
-62
-88/-84
16-QAM
-85/-81
64-QAM
-81/-77
64-QAM
-80/-76
64-QAM
-77/-72
HT40
BPSK
1/2
-77
-91/-86
QPSK
1/2
-74
3/4
-72
-90/-86
QPSK
-88/-83
16-QAM
1/2
-69
3/4
-65
2/3
-61
-85/-81
16-QAM
-82/-78
64-QAM
-78/-74
28
64-QAM
3/4
-60
5/6
-59
-77/-72
64-QAM
-74/-70
802.11na
Modulation
Code Rate
IEEE Spec (1Rx dBm)
Typical/Maximum (3Rx dBm)
HT20
BPSK
1/2
-80
-94/-90
QPSK
1/2
-77
3/4
-75
-92/-88
QPSK
-90/-86
16-QAM
1/2
-72
3/4
-68
2/3
-64
3/4
-63
5/6
-62
-87/-83
16-QAM
-84/-81
64-QAM
-81/-76
64-QAM
-79/-75
64-QAM
-76/-72
HT40
BPSK
1/2
-77
-90/-86
QPSK
1/2
-74
3/4
-72
-89/-85
QPSK
-88/-84
16-QAM
1/2
-69
3/4
-65
2/3
-61
-85/-80
16-QAM
-81/-77
64-QAM
29
-78/-73
64-QAM
3/4
-60
5/6
-59
-76/-72
64-QAM
-74/-70
802.11a
Outdoor: 50 m @54Mbps, 300 m @6Mbps
Indoor:
30 m @54Mbps, 100 m @6Mbps
802.11b
Outdoor: 150 m @11Mbps, 300 m @1Mbps
Indoor:
30 m @11Mbps, 100 m @1Mbps
802.11g
Operation
distance
Outdoor: 50 m @54Mbps, 300 m @6Mbps
Indoor:
30 m @54Mbps, 100 m @6Mbps
802.11n
Outdoor: 250 m @6.5Mbps (MCS0:
1 Nss/20MHz BW)
30
m @130Mbps (MCS15: 2 Nss/20MHz BW)
30
m @300Mbps (MCS15: 2 Nss/40MHz BW)
Indoor:
100 m @6.5Mbps (MCS0:
1 Nss/20MHz BW)
20
m @130Mbps (MCS15: 2 Nss/20MHz BW)
20
m @300Mbps (MCS15: 2 Nss/40MHz BW)
Operation
System
Windows® 2K, XP, Vista
supported
PCB
Dimension
112mm(L) x 48mm(W) x 0.787mm(T) 4L FR4
64-bit, 128-bit, 152-bit WEP Encryption
Security
802.1x Authentication
AES-CCM & TKIP Encryption
Operation
mode
Infrastructure & Ad-hoc mode (TBD)
802.11a: 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, 54Mbps
802.11b: 1, 2, 5.5, 11Mbps
Transfer data
rate
802.11g: 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, 54Mbps
802.11n: @800GI(400GI)
20MHz BW
1 Nss: 65(72.2) Mbps maximal
2 Nss: 130(144.444) Mbps maximal
30
40MHz BW
1 Nss: 135(150) Mbps maximal
2 Nss: 270(300) Mbps maximal
Operation
temperature
Storage
temperature
Wi-Fi®
Alliance®
WHQL
FAA
0o ~ 55o C
-20o ~ 80o C
WECA Compliant
Microsoft® 2K, XP Compliant
S/W audio On/Off support
FCC part 15 (USA)
EMC
certificate
IC RSS210 (Canada)
TELEC (Japan)
ETSI, EN301893, EN60950 (Europe)
VCCI CLASS B
Media access
protocol
Antenna
CSMA/CA with ACK architecture 32-bit MAC
Dual Band Metal PIFA Antenna x 2 and Chip Antenna x 1
31

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