Anyone have any recommendations for a good dual radio mesh node for batman-adv that won't break the bank? I'm looking at having wired clients, but two mesh radios to keep throughput high. 802.11n radios also required.
Thanks!
Tplink wdr3500, we've deployed more than 100, running nice with barrierbreaker tplink wdr3600 is identical, but with gigabit ethernet in some places, one or the other will be easier to find (availability) and cheaper. Tplink wdr4300 is like wdr3600 but with 3x3 on one of the bands (5ghz IIRC) so it has an extra, single-band antenna
HTH, cheers!
On October 14, 2014 7:34:56 PM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone have any recommendations for a good dual radio mesh node for batman-adv that won't break the bank? I'm looking at having wired clients, but two mesh radios to keep throughput high. 802.11n radios also required.
Thanks!
TL-WDR3500/TL-WDR3600 pretty interesting! Also has USB, might take an additional radio.
Are you mounting these outdoors or indoor?
These are cheap enough, I could do a 3 radio mesh +2.4Ghz hotspot....
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 1:55 AM, Gui Iribarren gui@altermundi.net wrote:
Tplink wdr3500, we've deployed more than 100, running nice with barrierbreaker tplink wdr3600 is identical, but with gigabit ethernet in some places, one or the other will be easier to find (availability) and cheaper. Tplink wdr4300 is like wdr3600 but with 3x3 on one of the bands (5ghz IIRC) so it has an extra, single-band antenna
HTH, cheers!
On October 14, 2014 7:34:56 PM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone have any recommendations for a good dual radio mesh node for batman-adv that won't break the bank? I'm looking at having wired clients, but two mesh radios to keep throughput high. 802.11n radios also required.
Thanks!
GUI, what's the input voltage? and amperage on the power supply?
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 6:49 AM, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
TL-WDR3500/TL-WDR3600 pretty interesting! Also has USB, might take an additional radio.
Are you mounting these outdoors or indoor?
These are cheap enough, I could do a 3 radio mesh +2.4Ghz hotspot....
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 1:55 AM, Gui Iribarren gui@altermundi.net wrote:
Tplink wdr3500, we've deployed more than 100, running nice with barrierbreaker tplink wdr3600 is identical, but with gigabit ethernet in some places, one or the other will be easier to find (availability) and cheaper. Tplink wdr4300 is like wdr3600 but with 3x3 on one of the bands (5ghz IIRC) so it has an extra, single-band antenna
HTH, cheers!
On October 14, 2014 7:34:56 PM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone have any recommendations for a good dual radio mesh node for batman-adv that won't break the bank? I'm looking at having wired clients, but two mesh radios to keep throughput high. 802.11n radios also required.
Thanks!
Wdr3500 consumes about 3w to 5w, depending on traffic/cpu (no usb) accepts input voltage up to 24v (undocumented) Original PSU is 12v x 1a
Wdr3600 does not accept 24v (we burned 1 out and we didn't try again)
Mounted outdoors, on weatherproof enclosures.
USB radios? Mmmh... been there, done that: Here Be Dragons. You've been warned (google "ath9k_htc issues") :)
Cheers!
On October 15, 2014 7:51:04 AM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
GUI, what's the input voltage? and amperage on the power supply?
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 6:49 AM, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
TL-WDR3500/TL-WDR3600 pretty interesting! Also has USB, might take
an
additional radio.
Are you mounting these outdoors or indoor?
These are cheap enough, I could do a 3 radio mesh +2.4Ghz hotspot....
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 1:55 AM, Gui Iribarren gui@altermundi.net
wrote:
Tplink wdr3500, we've deployed more than 100, running nice with
barrierbreaker
tplink wdr3600 is identical, but with gigabit ethernet in some places, one or the other will be easier to find
(availability) and cheaper.
Tplink wdr4300 is like wdr3600 but with 3x3 on one of the bands
(5ghz IIRC) so it has an extra, single-band antenna
HTH, cheers!
On October 14, 2014 7:34:56 PM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone have any recommendations for a good dual radio mesh node for batman-adv that won't break the bank? I'm looking at having wired clients, but two mesh radios to keep throughput high. 802.11n
radios
also required.
Thanks!
Gui, may I ask how you use the nodes? Is it in production or just a hobby?
I run a wireless ISP and I have a number of areas that no one has tried to get into because the traditional star topology wont work (valleys, heavily treed, lots of switchbacks). I have enough people wanting service that I should be able to get at least 2 uplinks from any single node throughout these areas. I've been trying to put together a dual radio mesh out of alix or routerboard hardware but I'm hitting $200 per node which is too much. This TPLink looks like a good option, add an external enclosure and some 7-8dBi omnis should be under $100!
I'm just not sure if these are 'production' quality, do you have any failure rate for these in an outdoor enclosure?
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 8:15 AM, Gui Iribarren gui@altermundi.net wrote:
Wdr3500 consumes about 3w to 5w, depending on traffic/cpu (no usb) accepts input voltage up to 24v (undocumented) Original PSU is 12v x 1a
Wdr3600 does not accept 24v (we burned 1 out and we didn't try again)
Mounted outdoors, on weatherproof enclosures.
USB radios? Mmmh... been there, done that: Here Be Dragons. You've been warned (google "ath9k_htc issues") :)
Cheers!
On October 15, 2014 7:51:04 AM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
GUI, what's the input voltage? and amperage on the power supply?
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 6:49 AM, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
TL-WDR3500/TL-WDR3600 pretty interesting! Also has USB, might take
an
additional radio.
Are you mounting these outdoors or indoor?
These are cheap enough, I could do a 3 radio mesh +2.4Ghz hotspot....
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 1:55 AM, Gui Iribarren gui@altermundi.net
wrote:
Tplink wdr3500, we've deployed more than 100, running nice with
barrierbreaker
tplink wdr3600 is identical, but with gigabit ethernet in some places, one or the other will be easier to find
(availability) and cheaper.
Tplink wdr4300 is like wdr3600 but with 3x3 on one of the bands
(5ghz IIRC) so it has an extra, single-band antenna
HTH, cheers!
On October 14, 2014 7:34:56 PM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone have any recommendations for a good dual radio mesh node for batman-adv that won't break the bank? I'm looking at having wired clients, but two mesh radios to keep throughput high. 802.11n
radios
also required.
Thanks!
I've bought 20-odd WDR-3600 units and used them in a batman-adv mesh in a dusty construction site for about three months. I've had zero failures during that time. My only complaint with the hardware is that it would be nice if the SMA antenna connectors were recessed a bit, as the antenna protrudes quite a bit. But that is a minor trifle. Otherwise they're great.
Note that not all "dual band" routers are created equal. Many are advertised as dual band, but can only talk on one band or the other, not both simultaneously. The WDR-3600 is a true dual band device. I use the 5GHz radio for the mesh backbone between the routers, and 2.4GHz to clients.
On 16 October 2014 00:57, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
Gui, may I ask how you use the nodes? Is it in production or just a hobby?
I run a wireless ISP and I have a number of areas that no one has tried to get into because the traditional star topology wont work (valleys, heavily treed, lots of switchbacks). I have enough people wanting service that I should be able to get at least 2 uplinks from any single node throughout these areas. I've been trying to put together a dual radio mesh out of alix or routerboard hardware but I'm hitting $200 per node which is too much. This TPLink looks like a good option, add an external enclosure and some 7-8dBi omnis should be under $100!
I'm just not sure if these are 'production' quality, do you have any failure rate for these in an outdoor enclosure?
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 8:15 AM, Gui Iribarren gui@altermundi.net wrote:
Wdr3500 consumes about 3w to 5w, depending on traffic/cpu (no usb) accepts input voltage up to 24v (undocumented) Original PSU is 12v x 1a
Wdr3600 does not accept 24v (we burned 1 out and we didn't try again)
Mounted outdoors, on weatherproof enclosures.
USB radios? Mmmh... been there, done that: Here Be Dragons. You've been warned (google "ath9k_htc issues") :)
Cheers!
On October 15, 2014 7:51:04 AM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
GUI, what's the input voltage? and amperage on the power supply?
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 6:49 AM, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
TL-WDR3500/TL-WDR3600 pretty interesting! Also has USB, might take
an
additional radio.
Are you mounting these outdoors or indoor?
These are cheap enough, I could do a 3 radio mesh +2.4Ghz hotspot....
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 1:55 AM, Gui Iribarren gui@altermundi.net
wrote:
Tplink wdr3500, we've deployed more than 100, running nice with
barrierbreaker
tplink wdr3600 is identical, but with gigabit ethernet in some places, one or the other will be easier to find
(availability) and cheaper.
Tplink wdr4300 is like wdr3600 but with 3x3 on one of the bands
(5ghz IIRC) so it has an extra, single-band antenna
HTH, cheers!
On October 14, 2014 7:34:56 PM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone have any recommendations for a good dual radio mesh node for batman-adv that won't break the bank? I'm looking at having wired clients, but two mesh radios to keep throughput high. 802.11n
radios
also required.
Thanks!
Have you deployed 100 radios in a single mesh? We are used to doing frequency allocation/management and with a single radio mesh AP all radios need to be on the same frequency correct? We are planning on using dual-radio nodes but the 2.4G will be for the client access and the 5.8G will be for the mesh.
This is a huge project with 6,000 nodes in a one square mile community.
-----Original Message----- From: B.A.T.M.A.N [mailto:b.a.t.m.a.n-bounces@lists.open-mesh.org] On Behalf Of Gui Iribarren Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2014 3:55 AM To: The list for a Better Approach To Mobile Ad-hoc Networking; dan Subject: Re: [B.A.T.M.A.N.] good dual radio node?
Tplink wdr3500, we've deployed more than 100, running nice with barrierbreaker tplink wdr3600 is identical, but with gigabit ethernet in some places, one or the other will be easier to find (availability) and cheaper. Tplink wdr4300 is like wdr3600 but with 3x3 on one of the bands (5ghz IIRC) so it has an extra, single-band antenna
HTH, cheers!
On October 14, 2014 7:34:56 PM CDT, dan dandenson@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone have any recommendations for a good dual radio mesh node for batman-adv that won't break the bank? I'm looking at having wired clients, but two mesh radios to keep throughput high. 802.11n radios also required.
Thanks!
b.a.t.m.a.n@lists.open-mesh.org