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Posted 20 hours ago

Ubiquiti Networks UBI-UAP-AC-PRO 24/5Ghz 450/1300Mbps 122m - (Enterprise Computing > Routers) PoE injector included

£9.9£99Clearance
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Is there a way to set up a UAP(stand-alone) without a controller, on a PC. I could only find a way to do it with a smartphone. If you need to cover a large area with a lot of people, like a venue or stadium, then the Wireless BaseStation is the access point that your need. It has an amazing throughput of 5 Gbps and can support up to 1500 concurrent clients. Normally for in-house use would the 2 lite ap’s be more than enough. Personally, I always use an LR on the ground floor (so it extends also a bit into the garden) and a lite on the first floor. With an apartment, two lite’s would be enough.

I would go for the Unifi 6 Pro if you can get them, and if the ceilings are high, then maybe use pendant mounts to lower them to approximately 5 / 7 mtr above the ground. Two routers are indeed required to create such a failover principle. Multiple subnets on the same LAN are not a problem. The BaseStation only offers a 5Ghz Tri-band radio, so no 2.4Ghz radio. You can choose between Small Cell and Large Cell setup, allowing you to optimize the installation for maximum coverage. The last step is to disable the wifi on your old router because the UAP is strong enough to cover your entire house. You can’t just unplug your router, you need it for your internet connection. To disable the wifi on your router, you need to log in to the admin interface of your router (most of the time you will find it on http://192.168.1.1 or http://192.168.1.254), find the Wireless settings, and turn it off. I am looking to extend the WiFi coverage of my company. We currently have installed 3 Ubiquiti devices (x3 Unifi UAP-AC-Pro, x1 Unifi UAP-AC-LR) on 2.4GHz radio. I am planning to change to only 5GHz radio due to the on going interference issue with 2.4 radio, from our customer’s 2.4 WiFi network. Could you advise which models we should go to cover the entire manufacturing building of 80,000sqf?

Enterprise 48 PoE

This is a message from a fellow Dutchman living abroad, where not everyone is always as helpful as we would like them to be. I configured the first Unifi AP AC PRO with the name SSID: home and i was successfully, i turned off the device and disconnected. Then i configured the next device with different SSID name but when i turn on my mobile wifi i see the same name from the first device i named as HOME, what is the problem Zoals ze zeggen van een programmeur “een goeie programmeur is een luie programmeur” gaat dit blijkbaar niet op voor systeembeheerders :p

My main router is in my office in the far reaches of my house. The NanoHD is in the stairwell between the first and second floor of the house (this may change to 2 NanoHDs in the future. I won’t go into detail too much about the actual placement of the Access Point, the Unifi Access Points come with perfectly clear installation instructions on how to mount the Access Point.The UniFi HD is designed for high-density environments, like a school or concert venue. The UniFi HD has two ethernet ports, where 1 port can be used to bridge to another access point or as an extra uplink. For in-house placements, the UniFi 6 Lite and the Long Range models are most of the time the best fit. To determine where to place the Access Point you need to keep in mind that the Unifi Access Point has a doughnut shape coverage with the Access Point in the middle. I wonder what I did wrong. Do you know if there is an instruction how to configure multiple AP’s? It drives me nuts that I have spent quite some money on this, and still my network shows horrible performance. Make sure that you have Java11 JRE installed on your device. If you don’t have it installed, then the installation will warn you about it. Step 3 – Install Unifi Controller Well to controller the access point you will need the Unifi Controller. You can run them through a netgear switch, that won’t be a problem, as long as they can get power (with the PoE adapter or with the netgear switch)

I have looked arround for a quantification the difference for home use (4 persons, 2 phones, TV, Tablets, 5-6 computers, internet, fileserver, streaming, gaming, IoT-devices…) – can you give some quidance on your thoughts on these products for me as a home user? Note I have split the table in two, in the first table you will find all ceiling and wall mounted access points, and in the second the In-Wall and Range Extenders.Power Method:- Passive Power over Ethernet (48V)- 802.3af/802.3at Supported (Supported Voltage Range: 44 to 57VDC)

Press and hold the reset button for 10 seconds (do this with caution, you do not need a lot of pressure)I was stumbling on it while searching for solutions for implementing a separate WiFi network (IP@ range and SSID) for my IoT devices. Hi Rudy, thanks to both your guides I now have installed both an ERX router and a Unify AP AC LR. Both work great, but… I have one problem. Hi – The AC just hangs up on provisioning and never does anything after that. This is after I did a factor reset. The UniFi AC-PROcombines enterprise performance, unlimited scalability, and a central management controller. UniFi 802.11AC Dual‑Radio Access Points (APs) have a refined industrial design and can be easily installed using the included mounting hardware.

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