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MU-MIMO?

Tue Oct 13, 2009 10:53 pm

Hi Guys

I see that Mikrotik is supporting 802.11n - MIMO

Is this for ptp links or can we use it on our distribution sectors and make use of MIMO for clients?

Thanks
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Wed Oct 14, 2009 5:14 am

Yes, it is ready for both PtP and PtMP.

Tom
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Wed Oct 14, 2009 10:51 am

Great,

Does the CPE have to have 2x antennas aswell? or can the CPE have 1 antenna that connects to 2x sectors? like a SIMO setup?
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Thu Oct 15, 2009 1:26 am

I don't think MIMO on the tower would really show much benefit without MIMO on the ground as well. It certainly wouldn't help as much.

I have wondered if a rubber duck omni on the client side would help on good shots, 5dBi or so.

Two panels would be better, but a 15 dBi panel with a 5-7 dBi omni on short range links would, theoretically, improve the link, and not increase cost much.

I was thinking Rootenna or ARC enclosure with an NF bulkhead and a rubber duck, extra $25 for the CPE. I can't see where it would really hurt.
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Sat Oct 24, 2009 8:27 pm

I don't think MIMO on the tower would really show much benefit without MIMO on the ground as well. It certainly wouldn't help as much.

I have wondered if a rubber duck omni on the client side would help on good shots, 5dBi or so.

Two panels would be better, but a 15 dBi panel with a 5-7 dBi omni on short range links would, theoretically, improve the link, and not increase cost much.

I was thinking Rootenna or ARC enclosure with an NF bulkhead and a rubber duck, extra $25 for the CPE. I can't see where it would really hurt.
Good idea, but its the long links that need the improvement :P
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Sun Oct 25, 2009 3:25 am

MIMO is what dual polarity antennas can be used for.

ARC has a 5GHz panel that is 23/24dBi dual pol.

http://www.roc-noc.com/pdf/arc/ARC-ID5823B88.pdf

Laird has some dual pol dishes up to 32dBi.

http://www.roc-noc.com/pdf/laird/HDDA5W_DataSheet.pdf

Tom
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Sun Oct 25, 2009 12:49 pm

thanks Roc Noc

Could you just clarify: for MIMO do the antenna's need to be opposite polarity or the same?...ie 1x horizotal + 1x vertical or 2x vertical?

My one supplier says they need to be the same but I dnt agree with that
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 10:03 am

they can be both opposite or same polarity.

same polarity makes better sense.
UBNT802.11n products are opposite polarities.
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:35 am

they can be both opposite or same polarity.

same polarity makes better sense.
UBNT802.11n products are opposite polarities.
Then why does UBNT have them opposite if same polarity is better?
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:38 am

:D
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:56 am

:D
haha oh I see :P
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:57 am

Could you give me a quick technical reason why same polarity is better?

thanks
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:58 am

you can ask Doush what he meant, I didn't comment yet.
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 3:06 pm

The chains need best seperation or isolation.
Having different polarities nets you easy seperation.
Alternatively you can space your antennas for seperation, but with this you need ALOT of seperation.

N is designed for multipath and seperation nets you a better multipath senario, however seperation on towers is difficult to acheive without a massively high tower, and extremely good coax.
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Mon Oct 26, 2009 3:53 pm

The chains need best seperation or isolation.
Having different polarities nets you easy seperation.
Alternatively you can space your antennas for seperation, but with this you need ALOT of seperation.

N is designed for multipath and seperation nets you a better multipath senario, however seperation on towers is difficult to acheive without a massively high tower, and extremely good coax.
\

Thanks, is LMR400 good enough coaxial? How far is ALOT of separation? 2 meters apart? or are you referring to channels?
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Tue Oct 27, 2009 2:56 pm

It Largely depends on the type of antennas used.
I would recommend in most cases a minimum of 6 meters or more.
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Tue Oct 27, 2009 3:08 pm

...
I would recommend in most cases a minimum of 6 meters or more.

Id est one antenna bi-polar is impossible to work properly, right? Even different antennas at 1-2m...
We have problems with interference in such cases. Usually 1.20-1.40m diam. antennas @ 5GHz mimo or not.
 
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Re: MU-MIMO?

Tue Oct 27, 2009 3:19 pm

...
I would recommend in most cases a minimum of 6 meters or more.

Id est one antenna bi-polar is impossible to work properly, right? .
sorry, im not sure what you mean?

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