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channel bandwidth

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N4FWD
channel bandwidth

A curiosity question:  If a node has its bandwidth set to 5 Mhz, are the transmissions centered on the set frequency with energy distributed similar to double-sideband transmission? My apologies if this question was already answered elsewhere.

AE6XE
AE6XE's picture
With 802.11n, the channel
With 802.11n, the channel freq is defined at the center for the consumed bandwidth.   There's no duplication like double sideband vs single sideband.  802.11 uses a 64 point FFT chip and constructs 64 carrier waves across the bandwidth, some don't carry data at channel edge.  Google the MCS 802.11n rates and there will be tables that show these "Modulation and Code Schemes", QAM8, QAM16, etc., for these 64 carrier waves.  The radio dynamically measures to send the optimal MCS rate for a given neighbor--tests what is highest thoughput of data.  Every other data packet going out could be a different modulation method.

Joe AE6XE
N4FWD
Bandwidth consumed

Apologies for the confusion. Your first statement explained what I was wondering about. You are correct about duplication of information in the case of double sideband. I was attempting to show "consumed bandwidth" as a function of the modulation. Obviously, 802.11 modulation is different. So, in theory, I could choose a center frequency which is 5 MHz from the band edge and run 10 MHz data bandwidth without the transmission exceeding the band edge.

Thank you Joe.

AE6XE
AE6XE's picture
Yea, that's right.   

Yea, that's right.     Although for other's reading this, as I'm sure you know, there will always be some limited emissions out past the channel edge.  (opportunity to plug another forum post :) .)

The part 15 rules these devices have been certified for have some specification about the max power emissions allowed outside the 20Mhz channel.  The non-802.11 systems can see interference in close proximity.   We have seen in SoCal issues with our ATV cousins at a couple of Mt top sites.  When they have a receiver in close proximity on the tower,  within about ~75Mhz of a mesh node, they can detect some interference in 5Ghz. 

To get an idea of how much energy and how clean the waveform is take a look at this post and the charts.  https://www.arednmesh.org/content/spectrum-charts-and-take-aways  .    Our ability to cut channel bandwidth in half and keep max power settings can increase this out-of-channel power -- as shown in these charts 'on the bench' .    But, keeping in perspective this is relatively very low power close to the background noise.   

Joe AE6XE



 

N4FWD
guard band?

Taking into account the extra "noise" from a well mannered data channel, sounds like a good idea would be to choose an appropriate center frequency which would give a gap. Example: 10 MHz data on a center frequency positioned 10 MHz from the band edge. Thus giving a 5 MHz gap between the intended data edge and the band edge. Just a thought experiment smiley

Again, Thank you Joe.
 

AJ6GZ
Isn't a "10Mhz" signal really
Isn't a "10Mhz" signal really closer to 11Mhz by design? Same with 20Mhz=22? There are guard bands on U-NII 1, 2, and 3 for this already based on the standard part15 channels (a whole 20Mhz guard below Ch 36!). U-NII 4 does seem to end promptly at 5925.
AE6XE
AE6XE's picture
Check out the comparison
Check out the comparison table towards the bottom at this link:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11n-2009 .  802.11a/g/n are 20Mhz bandwidth signals using OFDM.  the 22Mhz comes from the 802.11b spec, which is a DSSS spread spectrum signal, very different modulation -- a 2.4Ghz standard.   

The 2.4Ghz band (and 900Mhz devices) can use this mode for beacon and other broadcast packets -- lowest rate for compatibility with these old devices.   On a mesh node look at the following file (nightly builds, path will be a little different for older firmware versions).  The statistics show how much a given rate and modulation method is being used:   

/sys/kernel/debug/ieee80211/phy0/netdev:wlan0/stations/<MAC address of neighbor>/rc_stats

"if" there is a 'mode' in the output of 'CCK', this means 802.11b is in use with DSSS and 22Mhz.   You'll not see this in 5Ghz devices as the standards are all OFDM.

The outer edge carrier waves (of the 64 total) are considered part of the modulation and play into guard gap between channels and I think also help to minimize the peak to average power range of the signal -- an issue to keep in check to not go out of the Power Amp range.  Some charts don't count these carrier waves.   

A guard gap is always good, if the luxury exists.  Here in my area we are doing even channel #s in 5Ghz with 10Mhz channel slots for everyone to align into and minimize possible interference while having the maximum channel options between different groups. 

There have been tests in the past to see if the throughput of a node could be affected by another node on the same tower on an adjacent channel.  Didn't find an impact when both were loaded down streaming data vs the one node.  I believe this was on 5Mhz BW on ch -2 and ch -1, Andre might confirm.

 
AJ6GZ
I like those stats!
I like those stats! 802.11b... does nothing but interfere in my opinion. I always disable it on engineered links if stuck with 2.4 (and one 900) haha I've been mostly successful with adjacent 20Mhz part15 channels on my larger site at work when unavoidable, but I do try to keep them 180 degrees from each other and on the opposite sides of our frame on the roof. The antennas are all very directional tho. I plan to put a omni Bullet up there with AirOS/Airview just to see what I can see.
w6bi
w6bi's picture
Bad URL
Joe, there a couple of garbage characters at the end of that URL, which yields a 404.

 
WU2S
WU2S's picture
Fixed URL
It is fixed now

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