I have a pretty common scenario but haven't found a simple solution with Meraki equipment and hoping the community can help out with some ideas and feedback.
We have a 2-building scenario with a length of <50 feet between them but because of outside factors we cannot run cabling between them. Each building is basically a Faraday cage for RF because of corrugated steel walls.
I would like to use two MR76 devices (acting as bridged stations) with directional ANT-25 or ANT-27 antennas for each side of the wireless bridge between buildings and then a nameless MR within the remote building to serve up a very low bandwidth client (overall throughput is not a concern, it could be
Two things:
First:
I am told by Cisco that the only fully-supported config that can be done on the remote side of the bridge is by putting a L3 switch...otherwise they all have to run in mesh mode. Getting a L3 switch is both time, space and cost prohibitive right now.
I was also told by Cisco that when in mesh mode, you can run a L2 switch on the remote side but it's only good for supplying PoE and connecting wired clients to the segmented meshed SSID LAN. All wireless traffic will have to bounce through the mesh. I can bust a hole in the wall to wire the exterior bridge but according to them, the interior and exterior APs will still only mesh through the wall still with this design. That's a headscratcher but understandable maybe...but still frustrating that this configuration isn't available according to the engineer.
This doesn't seem to make sense. Why can't the interior AP serving up wireless to clients connect wired through the L2 switch to get to the exterior bridge as if it was a wired client on the remote LAN?
Second:
Frequently Asked Questions for Cisco Meraki Access Point Antennas - Cisco Meraki
According to this on an MR76, the ANT-25 or 27 antennas need to be used in pairs to handle both a vertical and horizontal polarization for each (2.4 & 5Ghz) band. My question is: If I am only interested in horizontal polarization, purely from a connectivity perspective, it seems to me that you could run dual band in two different directions with another antenna configuration--from one top (2.4 Ghz) & one bottom (5 Ghz) connector for one antenna and one top and one bottom connector for the other? I could then punch a hole through the wall for the the antenna cables and put one ANT-25 antenna outside and use the omnis inside for dual band in both directions. With the MR76 being dual-stream instead of quad-stream I don't see why this wouldn't provide the needed coverage.
Am I missing another possible solution?