Advanced Wireless Settings. Netcomm NP725
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Netcomm NP725 is a Multi-Mode Access Point, specially designed for connecting wireless networks for wider coverage. NP725 provides features of Access Point (AP) and Wireless Distribution System (WDS) simultaneously. In the Access Point mode, it supports up to eight Virtual Access Points (VAPs) which could provide service in different levels and much securer network. NP725 Access Point also supports the most popular wireless authentication and encryption standards which make flexible security policy possible by taking advantage of these Virtual Access Points.
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4.2.5 Advanced Wireless Settings
Chapter 4. Web Management Interface
Virtual AP advanced settings should mostly meet general requirements. Take the following parameters if occasionally it is necessary to tune or debug the wireless network.
Beacon Interval: This interval specifies the time interval, in milliseconds. The default value is 100, valid from 25 to 500ms.
RTS Threshold: To control station access to medium and to alleviate this effect of the hidden terminal problem, administrators can tune this RTS threshold value. It should have a value among 1-2346 and is default to 2346.
Fragment Threshold: A unicast frame larger than this threshold will be fragmented before transmission. If significant numbers of collisions are occurring, administrators can try to take a smaller value of the fragmentation threshold to see if it helps.
Broadcast SSID: Disable this item will prevent the NP725 from broadcasting its SSID publicly.
Station Isolation: When enabled, wireless client stations are isolated from each other. In other words, one PC associated to the Virtual AP is not able to see other PCs on the same Virtual AP. However, wireless clients are
not isolated from wired clients on the LAN environment.
WMM: WMM (Wi-Fi Multimedia) provides basic Quality of service (QoS) features to Wi-Fi networks. When enabled, it prioritizes traffic according to four Access Categories (AC) - voice, video, best effort, and background.
However, it does not provide guaranteed throughput
IAPP: IAPP (Inter-Access Point Protocol) is to support smooth users’ hand-over (roaming) from one access point to another. When enabled, it provides a better capability for wireless client stations to roam among APs with the same SSID.
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Table of contents
- 4 Introduction
- 4 Overview
- 4 Product Features
- 5 Deployment Topology Examples
- 6 System Overview
- 6 Package Contents
- 6 Hardware
- 8 System Requirement and Preparation
- 9 Installation
- 9 Wireless LAN Access Point Connection
- 10 Basic Configuration
- 20 Web Management Interface
- 23 System
- 23 System Information
- 26 Network Settings
- 27 Management Services
- 28 Virtual AP Overview
- 31 General Settings
- 32 VAP Configuration
- 33 Security Settings
- 36 Advanced Wireless Settings
- 37 Access Control Settings
- 40 WDS Link Overview
- 41 WDS Link Settings
- 42 Utilities
- 42 Change Password
- 43 Configuration Save / Restore
- 44 System Upgrade
- 45 Reboot
- 46 Status
- 46 System Overview
- 48 Associated Client Status