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Who can explain the specifications of the UniFi Outdoor AC?
There is a need to put UniFi Outdoor AC in the area. Just for an open hotspot. So that people can safely work on the Internet. BUT there are a lot of questions that you don't want to leave "for later" because of the high cost of this piece of iron. And the experience with it or the demo of the axis ... I never found it.
1 how much such piece of iron can pull out percent of clients? devices will be the most diverse.
2 external devices at the initial stage 100 megabits. whether it will be possible to play automatically with the maximum channel width limit. (1 client - 100 megabits, 2 - 50, 30 - 30, and so on.). And is there generally an opportunity to limit the channel to the user?
3 Will such a piece of iron survive -50 on the street?
4 how it works with ip-tv via udp-multicast that comes from the wan port (if any).
5 if you put the piece of iron in ac mode and make n the junior, then how will the piece of iron behave when these two standards are connected at the same time?
6 the device has 2 ports. whether they should both be looking at the network. or can it be reassigned to wan (one or two)?
well, the last one. what can you recommend with 200 users, a 300 megabit channel with
simultaneous Skype work (50 people), browsing sites (100 people). YouTube (20 people), well, all sorts of background managers on all devices + mail .... so that the percent can digest all this in real time and not choke on the waffle?
as an option, you can consider mikrotik, tsiska (if it does not cost like a flight into space).
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1) 30 active clients are pulled
2) not out of the box, and this is not a task for an access point
3) somewhere in the datasheets I saw that it works up to -30
4) inside Linux, it works
5) did not test
6) just like and 4
It's not about the performance of the point itself, but about wi-fi technology - there should not be many clients at one point, otherwise it becomes completely bad with speed. I would advise you to put several points at the rate of one for 20-30 clients. In addition, for such an abundance of clients, it is logical to use the point only as a bridge, transfer routing to a separate server / router. Multicast routing and nat eat up a lot of resources
if something else, then look at Ruckus - smart-wifi.ru/outdoor/zf7762.html The truth is like flying into space. Holds voice and video well. 1 point holds up to 265 clients
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