Configuring mcs rates – Rockwell Automation 1783-WAPxxx Stratix 5100 Wireless Access Point User Manual User Manual

Page 251

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Rockwell Automation Publication 1783-UM006A-EN-P - May 2014

251

Configuring Radio Settings

Chapter 7

Use the no form of the speed command to remove one or more data rates from
the configuration. This example shows how to remove data rates basic-2.0 and
basic-5.5 from the configuration:

ap1200# configure terminal

ap1200(config)# interface dot11radio 0

ap1200(config-if)# no speed basic-2.0 basic-5.5

ap1200(config-if)# end

Configuring MCS Rates

Modulation Coding Scheme (MCS) is a specification of PHY parameters
consisting of modulation order (BPSK, QPSK, 16-QAM, 64-QAM) and FEC
code rate (1/2, 2/3, 3/4, 5/6). MCS is used in 802.11n radios, that define 32
symmetrical settings (8 per spatial stream):

MCS 0–7
MCS 8–15
MCS 16–23
MCS 24–31

MCS is an important setting because it provides for potentially greater
throughput. High throughput data rates are a function of

MCS, bandwidth, and

guard interval. 802.11 a, b, and g radios use 20 MHz channel widths. This table
shows the potential data rates based on MCS, guard interval, and channel width.

TIP

The 2.5 GHz radios don’t support 40 MHz channel width.

Table 82 - Data Rates Based on MCS Settings, Guard Interval, and Channel Width

MCS Index

Guard Interval = 800 ns

Guard Interval = 400 ns

20 Mhz Channel Width Data
Rate (Mbps)

40 Mhz Channel Width Data
Rate (Mbps)

20 Mhz Channel Width Data
Rate (Mbps)

40 Mhz Channel Width Data
Rate (Mbps)

0

6.5

13.5

7 2/9

15

1

13

27

14 4/9

30

20 Mhz Channel Width Data
Rate (Mbps)

40 Mhz Channel Width Data
Rate (Mbps)

20 Mhz Channel Width Data
Rate (Mbps)

40 Mhz Channel Width Data
Rate (Mbps)

2

19.5

40.5

21 2/3

45

3

26

54

28 8/9

60

4

39

81

43 1/3

90

5

52

109

57 5/9

120

6

58.5

121.5

65

135

7

65

135

72 2/9

152.5

8

13

27

14 4/9

30

9

26

54

28 8/9

60

10

39

81

43 1/3

90

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