ALFA NETWORK R36 User Manual

Page 34

Advertising
background image

34

BG Protection Mode — Enables a backward compatible protection mechanism for

802.11b clients. There are three modes: (Default: Auto)

Auto — The unit enables its protection mechanism for 802.11b clients when they

are detected in the network. When 802.11b clients are not detected, the protection
mechanism is disabled.

On — Forces the unit to always use protection for 802.11b clients, whether they

are detected in the network or not. Note that enabling b/g Protection can slow
throughput for 802.11g/n clients by as much as 50%.

Off — Forces the unit to never use protection for 802.11b clients.

This prevents 802.11b clients from connecting to the network.

Beacon Interval — The rate at which beacon signals are transmitted from the

access point. The beacon signals allow wireless clients to maintain contact with the
access point. They may also carry powermanagement information. (Range: 20-999
TUs; Default: 100 TUs)

Data Beacon Rate (DTIM) — The rate at which stations in sleep mode must wake up

to receive broadcast/multicast transmissions. Known also as the Delivery Traffic
Indication Map (DTIM) interval, it indicates how often the MAC layer forwards
broadcast/multicast traffic, which is necessary to wake up stations that are using
Power Save mode. The default value of one beacon indicates that the access point
will save all broadcast/multicast frames for the Basic Service Set (BSS) and forward
them after every beacon. Using smaller DTIM intervals delivers broadcast/multicast
frames in a more timely manner, causing stations in Power Save mode to wake up
more often and drain power faster. Using higher DTIM values reduces the power
used by stations in Power Save mode, but delays the transmission of
broadcast/multicast frames. (Range: 1-255 beacons; Default: 1 beacon)

Advertising