The triton internal radio 1-16, Interference and coexistence 1-16, 11b/g fallback mode 1-16 – AML Triton Wireless Handheld Terminal User Manual

Page 22: The triton internal radio, 11b/g fallback mode, Interference and coexistence

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USER’S GUIDE

Triton Wireless Hand-held Terminal

The Triton Internal Radio

The Triton has a multi-color LED to indicate when the unit has scanned a bar code The

Triton Hand-held Terminal comes equipped with an internal 802.11b/g/n radio and diversity

antenna. This internal radio is specifically designed to communicate with any 802.11b/g/n

access point. The range of the internal radio depends greatly on the quality of the Access

Point and the RF communication characteristics of the environment where the device is

used. The typical range for an 802.11b/g radio is 500 feet through free air. Additional Access

Points must be added to improve coverage in a larger area, or in electrically noisy RF
environments.

802.11b/g/n Fallback Mode

Wireless LAN technology is designed to make maintaining a connection between

two devices as reliable and consistent as possible. Since the speed of the connection

between wireless devices will vary as range and signal quality varies, the wireless devices

will intentionally sacrifice throughput (data rate or connection speed as measured in bits

per second) in exchange for maintaining a reliable connection. In other words, a reliable

connection at a lower speed is preferred over an unreliable connection at a higher speed

(i.e., it is easier to maintain the connection if data rate is deliberately reduced, or put

another way, lower data rates will tolerate a higher range and/or worse signal quality). This

characteristic is known as fallback. As an example, an 802.11b/g system will fallback from 11

Mbps to 5.5 Mbps as range increases or signal quality decreases. Subsequent fallbacks from

5.5 Mbps to 2 Mbps and 1 Mbps are also supported.

Interference and Coexistence

802.11b/g operates in a range of radio frequencies known as an “unlicensed” band (i.e.

the FCC does NOT require the use of a license in order to operate a radio transmitter in

this range). This means that commercially available radio devices other than wireless LAN

devices are permitted to use the same frequency band as 802.11b/g. Consequently, these

co-existing radio devices can interfere or “jam” the wireless LAN (and vice versa). Ironically,

the most troublesome devices are cordless telephones and microwave ovens.

Fortunately, higher quality cordless phones tend to “listen” for a clear channel before

becoming active and will thus avoid interfering with a wireless LAN (i.e., the cordless phone

seeks a clear channel for itself so naturally avoids being interfered with or being a source

of interference). Jamming from microwave ovens is more severe but is usually restricted

to the upper frequency range for 802.11b/g (it should be noted that 802.11b/g divides

the available frequency band into 11 channels. The higher numbered channels are most

susceptible to microwave oven interference).

In each instance, jamming occurs only when the cordless telephone or microwave oven is

active.

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