@pgrovesnz wrote:
@NolanHerring wrote:
Sounds good
What I will tell you is that with the 2.4GHZ radio 'OFF' and MESHING set to Disabled, the AP will still show the 2.4GHz radio power at whatever value it is going to randomly choose. So you'll just have to ignore that, and know that there isn't anything emitting from it.
If it does behave like that that is terrible behavior when tuning a network at a stadium environment.
We have 11 MR53E access points with narrow patch antennas. For the 2.4GHz to work better and avoid multiple APs on the same channel we want to completely disable the 2.4 on some APs (6 of them). The rest of the APs have the power level dropped to below 8.
Having any AP at full power will cause issues on the other APs using the same channel.
The only solution at the moment is to set the AP power on the APs to low and hopefully cause any other issues.
Wait, hold on a minute I think there is some confusion here.
You are correct you will want to disable some, but it is going to be truly impossible to eliminate any CCI/CCC on 2.4GHz. If your still using that band, it will be better to have 'some contention and full coverage', vs 'no contention and poor coverage'.
Your concerned that when you set them to OFF, that the power output value changes on the dashboard from lets say you had 8dBm, to 23dBm. That happens when I turn it to OFF. You can safely ignore this.
They are indeed 'OFF' in the sense that they will not be broadcasting any wireless from your configured SSIDs. So you would be much better off turning those 6 that you want to disable into the OFF mode versus low power. Low power means that they will indeed still be on and broadcasting and you don't want that if your trying to tune things.
Set them to OFF, they won't send any more traffic, and ignore that silly default dBm value you see on the dashboard.
MESHING is going to be there if you set to OFF or low power. It will be there at max power and lowest data rate no matter what setting you use. Just like Cisco's RRM, this can't be edited. The only way to stop that is to disable meshing all together.
So your best solution is to use 25.13, disable meshing, and turn off those 6 access point 2.4GHz radios, and you'll be golden as far as trying to accomplish what you are trying to do. Insert any vendor and you'll end up in the same end state. Meraki just takes a little more tweaking to maneuver into that position (calling support etc.).