EAP245 Mesh not working
I bought two EAP245 APs, and am attempting to mesh them together. They were advertised as Mesh ready, so i am trying to get them to mesh together. I adopted the first AP and enabled mesh, but when plugging in the second AP, the controller will not detect the AP as an isolated AP and allow meshing. Is there something I am missing to enable meshing the APs together?
Thanks in advance.
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@R1D2 any news regarding firmware for eap245 with mesh support?
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For the mest would it need the controller?
And also is this how it would work, setup two AP 245 V3 one as the main unit using ethernet and the second one only connected to the main by wifi to create the mesh.
Thanks
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@Cloudbuster Yes mesh requires a controller to work, either running on a PC or via the OC200.
Yes, the setup would be as you describe. At least one EAP connected via ethernet to the network to act as the 'root' then other EAP can be connected via mesh, only requiring PoE power. I believe you can also 'daisy chain' mesh AP although I've never tried it.
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Cloudbuster wrote
For the mest would it need the controller?
Yes, to set up, organize, re-organize (on failure) and monitor the mesh a controller is needed. If the controller is then turned off, the mesh will still work, but if a node fails, the controller needs to run in order to detect the failure and to re-organize the mesh.
And also is this how it would work, setup two AP 245 V3 one as the main unit using ethernet and the second one only connected to the main by wifi to create the mesh.
One or more EAPs which have a wired connection are called »root nodes«. One or more other nodes connecting to either the root node or any other node are called »mesh nodes«. Each connection of a mesh node to either a root node or another mesh node is called an »uplink«. Mesh topology is like tthis:
If you want to make use of automatic failover, topology looks like this:
The topology with auto-failover enabled in the controller is kind of a »self-healing« mesh network. For true failover you would have to use two independent connections to two different ISPs and the controller must be reachable by the second root node.
The number of uplinks is limited to 4 per node and there can be 3 hops at maximum.
Note that a mesh network will not increase the total capacity of the whole mesh network. Capacity remains the same as the root node(s) offer(s), the mesh nodes just eliminate the need to have them wired to a router.
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Thanks that explain a lot.
forgot to ask,
when used as mesh do you still have separate Bands.
2.4 and 5Ghz with their own name?
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Cloudbuster wrote
when used as mesh do you still have separate Bands.
2.4 and 5Ghz with their own name?
Yes, you can still use both bands. The mesh network will use the BSSID with a hidden ESSID in the 5 GHz band to connect between nodes. You can use another SSID, so that it does not interfere with the mesh communication.
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thanks for the clarification.
i am currently testing other products Ruckus R720, Unifi nanoHD, Orbi, ASUS AC86U
and this TP Link 245 V3 is amazing.
the Orbi mesh is a let down as it won’t let you choose the band the device would automatically choose one bust most time it goes to the 2.4Ghz and speed go down.
if it stay in the 5Ghz is great.
i wonder if you see any speed decrease using the OC200 mesh.
i have a 110Mbps cable if I mesh another TP Link 245 to the main unit they would be one on 1st floor the mesh on second floor would the speed go down to the 40Mbps or there a good chance it would stay in the 100Mbps.
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@Cloudbuster In my experience there is a small decrease in speed when using mesh but you should still be getting your full 110mbps quite comfortably.
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Cloudbuster wrote
i wonder if you see any speed decrease using the OC200 mesh.
Every byte you send/receive from a mesh node must be transferred to/from the root node, too. Thus, as long as your bandwdith requirements don't exceed half of the actual (not theoretical!) data throughput your mesh node can achieve, you will not notice a major decrease in speed.
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