Eap 225 outdoor positioning
Hi, I wanting to know where is the best position to place the EAP in my garden so I get best coverage in my summer house which is situated 50meteres away from house. For example do I place it 10feet high half way? Or 6ft half way etc.
- Copy Link
- Subscribe
- Bookmark
- Report Inappropriate Content
EAP225-Outdoor is using the omni-directional antenna, for the signa; emission direction, you can refer to the following picture.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@forrest hi I have the outdoor version with the 2 long antennas.
The antennas can be swiveled to point in different directions.
The AP is mounted in a vertical position onto such item like a pole or fence.
This is not ceiling mountable.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@Finney1984, position the EAP225-Outdoor about 8ft (2.40m) above ground and in the center of the area you want to supply with WLAN. The EAP covers ~210ft (70m) radius in the 360º H plane, but keep in mind that the coverage is limted also by your client device's antennas, not only the EAP's antennas. Thus, if you want to supply clients inside your summer house and there is no free line of sight between the clients and the EAP, position the EAP nearer to the summer house if possible. The EAP's antennas should both point upwards (parallel to each other) to make best use of MU-MIMO.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Hello @Finney1984,
Thinking of getting one of these for myself. How do you like it?
Anyone using the Ethernet port to connected other wired devices (via MESH uplink). This was a pleasant surprise when using my EAP225 indoor via MESH. Wondering if the outdoor works the same.
-Jonathan
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
JSchnee21 wrote
Anyone using the Ethernet port to connected other wired devices (via MESH uplink). This was a pleasant surprise when using my EAP225 indoor via MESH. Wondering if the outdoor works the same.
Sure, it works the same. In every Access Point its WLAN interface is always bridged with the Ethernet interface, thus clients wired to an AP's Ethernet port are in the same network as wireless clients are.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Information
Helpful: 0
Views: 5357
Replies: 6
Voters 0
No one has voted for it yet.