I miss the dbm readout on my phone.  Apple killed it a few versions of IOS ago. 
 

From: Brian Webster 
Sent: Sunday, November 8, 2020 11:35 AM
To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] LTE vendors

Remember RSRP values are going to be 30 db stronger than the signal you will 
actually need to deliver bandwidth. While it’s easy to get excited when you see 
something working and the device says the signal level is say -100, that is the 
narrow pilot signal level the device is reporting which is about 30 db stronger 
than the full width channel you are using to deliver throughput. Modeling in 
RMD for the -100 signal is not what you want to do. Model signal levels like 
you normally would for other bands.

 

If you look at the MCS tables for these devices you will notice that the signal 
levels needed to deliver speed are more like what you are accustomed to.

 

Thank you,

Brian Webster

www.wirelessmapping.com

 

From: AF [mailto:af-boun...@af.afmug.com] On Behalf Of Matt Hoppes
Sent: Sunday, November 8, 2020 12:44 PM
To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] LTE vendors

 

-100 would be full modulation on LTE. That being said please consider Cambium 
450 - you’ll save yourself a ton of headache in the short and long run and have 
a better experience. 





On Nov 8, 2020, at 12:38 PM, Jeremy Grip <g...@nbnworks.net> wrote:

  

  Thought I’d pick up this thread again because I’m looking hard at CBRS LTE 
for my densely forested town, largely because of its alleged foliage 
penetration. 

   

  What’s anybody understand the EIRP limit for a 20Mhz channel to be now in 
CBRS 3.65? Can I assume that modeling RSSI in a tool like RMD can serve as a 
rough equivalent of RSRP? Vendor is telling me that where he heatmaps a -100dBm 
signal represents full modulation—does that make any sense? Maybe he’s being a 
little slimy and referring to uplink modulation on a 1T4R UE?

   

  And David—you started this thread and said you were trialling those various 
platforms—anything to report? Did you get your hands on the Baicells and/or 
Airspan stuff?

   

  From: AF <af-boun...@af.afmug.com> On Behalf Of Adam Moffett
  Sent: Monday, September 14, 2020 8:50 AM
  To: af@af.afmug.com
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] LTE vendors

   

  For CBRS, depending on antenna and channel size, yes it's probably legal.  
When I went to that Telrad training session a few years ago, CBRS was still a 
hypothetical thing and everyone there was operating under an NN license with 
the 1W/Mhz EIRP limit.

  And yeah that's how ALL wireless works.  At the moment in time when the AP is 
talking to a station at 1Mbps, the capacity of the channel is 1Mbps.  At the 
moment in time when the AP is talking to a station at 300Mbps, the capacity is 
300Mbps.  The average capacity over time is going to be a function of how much 
time is spent talking to each station at each rate.  If you literally had one 
at 1Mbps and one at 300Mbps and both were allocated equal airtime then your 
capacity would be 150.5Mbps.  It's true that a 5Mbps UE won't make the capacity 
of the eNB 5Mbps, but it is true that while the channel is being used to talk 
to that UE, the channel is only running at 5Mbps.  My point was, if someone is 
testing with a single UE and happy that they're getting 5Mbps, then they're 
forgetting that they won't actually get 5Mbps when there are other UE operating 
at the same time, and that the weak connections they install are weakening 
efficiency of the whole sector.  I know you know this, I think you're just 
misinterpreting what I said.

   

  On 9/14/2020 8:39 AM, Matt Hoppes wrote:

    Hold on. 30dBm is well within legal power for CBRS. 

     

    Also a station connected getting 5 megabits is not dragging the entire 
sector down to 5 megabits. That’s not how LTE works. 






      On Sep 14, 2020, at 8:34 AM, Adam Moffett mailto:dmmoff...@gmail.com 
wrote:

       

      Attenuation in 3.5ghz is on average 15db per 100meters of foliage.  I got 
that number from a Telrad engineer, and it seemed to hold up experimentally.  
Whether it's Wimax, LTE, etc, there's no reason that would be different.   

      LTE can connect with almost nothing for a signal.  So a person testing 
with a single base station and a single UE might run around and say "wow I've 
got 5 megs here and No LOS!", but I think they forget that the entire base 
station's capacity is 5meg when it's talking to that single UE at 5mbps.  It's 
impressive that it worked, but is that actually useful as a fixed ISP?  

      Another thing I noticed is that Telrad could turn the Tx Power all the 
way to +30dbm, and people were actually doing it, and Telrad support seemed to 
be encouraging them to do it.  At a training session someone in Telrad support 
told me, "Adam, if you're worried about the legal EIRP limit then you're the 
only one worried about it."  So if you're 8-10db stronger than the legally 
operating product, and you can technically connect with a signal too weak for 
the other product, that certainly makes people feel like there's better 
penetration. 

      There may also be some "magic" in how LTE allocates resource blocks and 
gets feedback from the UE's (CQI) on which resource blocks are working best for 
each unit, but I think that's a matter of getting the most value possible out 
of a trashy signal.  If you're a fixed operator building for capacity and 
performance then you hopefully won't be installing with a trashy signal anyway.

      My biggest issue of all is that all of the WISP priced LTE stuff is 
clunky and buggy.  Frankly, that was true of WiMax too.  It seemed like 
Telrad's bridging modes never quite worked right for example.  You were better 
off building an L2 tunnel on your own box behind the UE.  

      -Adam

       

      On 9/14/2020 12:19 AM, Ken Hohhof wrote:

        Ever since I got bamboozled into deploying a WiMax basestation, I have 
been skeptical of tree penetration hype.

         

        We have been deploying Cambium 450 in 3.5 GHz / CBRS and it’s great, 
but it doesn’t “penetrate” trees.  OK, an SM within a mile can go through 1 or 
2 trees, depending on the size/density/type of tree.  And with the usual caveat 
that trees near the customer are more problematic than trees in the middle of 
the path.

         

        Some people say otherwise, but there were all sorts of glowing 
testimonials for the WiMax equipment as well.

         

        Maybe LTE has magic properties.  I doubt it, but I haven’t tried it, I 
don’t want to repeat the WiMax fiasco.  So I could be wrong.  But when I’m 
wrong, usually it’s because I wasn’t pessimistic enough and things are even 
worse than I feared.  Only on rare occasions do I expect a lion behind the door 
and there’s a beautiful lady.  Usually there’s 2 lions.

         

        Certainly turning on CBRS made all our 3.5 GHz Cambium stuff work 
better, we got several dB higher xmt power, and usually cleaner spectrum.  But 
the cleaner spectrum thing is only true until other operators fire up their 
stuff in 3550-3650.  Even if you get a PAL, it’s not like nobody can use that 
frequency in the whole county.  The interference at the edge of your PAL 
protection zone should be below some level that the SAS uses when authorizing 
nearby operators to transmit.  But that level isn’t -99 dBm.

         

        LTE gear may be designed with better receiver sensitivity, that will 
help if the noise floor is really really low.  On the other hand, does most LTE 
gear use the highest allowed EIRP?  What about the CPE?  That was another 
problem with the WiMax stuff, the CPE was 3rd party stuff that typically had 
kind of wimpy xmt power and not particularly high antenna gain.  Maybe that’s 
not true of LTE gear, I haven’t looked into it.  But pull out a Cambium 3 GHz 
450b high-gain SM spec sheet and compare to the LTE CPE.

         

        From: AF mailto:af-boun...@af.afmug.com On Behalf Of Trey Scarborough
        Sent: Sunday, September 13, 2020 4:43 PM
        To: af@af.afmug.com
        Subject: Re: [AFMUG] LTE vendors

         

        Has anyone done a comparison or know of a whitepaper between LTE and 
Cambium? I am mainly looking at tree penetration or lower DB signals to actual 
throughput comparison. I have been told that LTE gets a little better tree 
penetration but if that is at a low rate that really doesn't help any. 

        On 9/12/2020 10:03 AM, Darin Steffl wrote:

          It comes down to complexity. Ericsson, Nokia, etc are all cellular 
brands and to run and manage those complex LTE networks, you need full time 
engineers to manage, debug, and optimize things. 

           

          Cambium is so easy, in comparison, there's very little extra learning 
to do in order to get it running great. Ericsson LTE probably would require 
months of training and needing to hire someone just to run the gear or hire 
expensive consultants to do it for you. 

           

          On Sat, Sep 12, 2020, 9:49 AM Kurt Fankhauser 
<lists.wavel...@gmail.com> wrote:

            450m is the only way to do, especially if your already using the 
450 platform in other parts of your network, there is an operator in my area 
with the Ericson system and they had a ton of issues with getting it up and 
running, not even sure if they ever got it all resolved.

             

            On Fri, Sep 11, 2020 at 9:00 PM Sean Heskett <af...@zirkel.us> 
wrote:

              Yup what josh said lol.

               

              We tried the LTE thing and glad we switch to 450m...much easier.

               

              -Sean

               

               

              On Fri, Sep 11, 2020 at 4:43 PM Josh Luthman 
<j...@imaginenetworksllc.com> wrote:

                Having done one LTE vendor and 450m the only mistake I made was 
not buying the 450m sooner.




                 

                Josh Luthman
                24/7 Help Desk: 937-552-2340
                Direct: 937-552-2343
                1100 Wayne St
                Suite 1337
                Troy, OH 45373

                 

                 

                On Fri, Sep 11, 2020 at 5:54 PM Adam Moffett 
<dmmoff...@gmail.com> wrote:














                  And yeah, 450m might be expensive, but so is all the LTE 
stuff. 

                  You'll max out the legal EIRP with 450m, and get 8x8 MIMO.  I 
think

                  part of the magic with LTE is that it will connect with 
ridiculously

                  low signal, but on a fixed system you probably won't really 
want the

                  trashy signals anyway. 





                  Cambium also has LTE for whatever it's worth.  The CBRS 
version

                  is supposed to be available relatively soon (though I forget

                  precisely when).

                   

                  I don't know if I state it as "fewer issues since there is no

                  EPC", but definitely fewer complexities and fewer things to 
worry

                  about.  The connection from eNB to EPC has to be pristine,

                  and the EPC comes with its own set of new terminology and new

                  concepts to figure out.  





                   







                   

                  On 9/11/2020 4:06 PM, Darin Steffl

                  wrote:



















                    I have seen lots to people doing 450M in CBRS

                    stating coverage is nearly the same as LTE but way better 
speeds

                    and triple the aggregate capacity due to mu-mimo.







                     

                    Way fewer issues too since there is no EPC. Just

                    straight layer 2 with no bullshit. 

                     









                     

                    On Fri, Sep 11, 2020, 2:39 PM

                    David Coudron <david.coud...@advantenon.com>

                    wrote:





                     

                       

                       

                       

                      We are looking at a new area to

                      expand out network that has a lot more tree cover than

                      our current footprint.   We are thinking with the

                      combination of CBRS and LTE, that we might be able to

                      offer better coverage than with traditional fixed

                      wireless options.   We have started conversations with

                      the following vendors, wondering if anyone has any hands

                      on experience with any of them and what their

                      impressions were:

                       

                      Blinq

                       

                      Airspan

                       

                      Baicells

                       

                      Ericsson

                       

                       

                       

                      The Ericsson equipment is in a class

                      by itself price wise, but the others are similarly

                      priced, and somewhere around double the price of PMP 450

                      stuff.   Normally we would add more tower sites for

                      better coverage, but this project will need to be done

                      before the end of the year and building towers isn’t an

                      option.   We have good enough spread on the towers that

                      we think we can do this with PMP 450 APs, but are

                      thinking we’d get even better coverage out of LTE.   Any

                      opinions on the reliability and the manageability of the

                      four vendors above?   Sorry for such an open ended

                      question, but not sure what to ask to be more

                      specific.   We know that we will have the LTE stuff to

                      deal with like access to an EPC and so on, so not so

                      much worried about that as more the manufacturers

                      themselves.   Baicells concerns us as they may get

                      lumped in with Huawei.

                       

                       

                       

                      Thoughts?

                       

                       

                       

                      Regards,

                       

                       

                       

                      David Coudron

                       

                       

                       

                       



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--  Trey ScarboroughVP Engineering3DS Communications LLCp:9729741539 




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