The WAG511 user can use thirteen channels in non-turbo mode.
The WAG511 user can use five channels in
turbo mode.
Note: The available channels supported by the wireless products in various countries
are different.
Note: The available channels supported by the wireless products in various countries are
different. For example, Channels 1 to 11 are supported in the U.S. and Canada, and Channels
1 to 13 are supported in Europe and Australia.
802.11a
IEEE 802.11a utilizes 300 MHz of bandwidth in the 5 GHz Unlicensed National Information
Infrastructure (U-NII) band. Though the lower 200 MHz is physically contiguous, the FCC
has divided the total 300 MHz into three distinct domains, each with a different legal
maximum power output.
IEEE 802.11a uses Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM), a new encoding
scheme that offers certain benefits over a spread spectrum in channel availability and data rate.
The 802.11a uses OFDM to define a total of 8 non-overlapping 200 MHz channels across the
2 lower bands; each of these is divided into 52 subcarriers and each carrier is approximately
300 KHz wide. By comparison, 802.11b or 802.11g uses only 3 non-overlapping channels.
Channel Frequency
36 5.180 GHz
40 5.200 GHz
44 5.220 GHz
48 5.240 GHz
52 5.260 GHz
56 5.280 GHz
60 5.300 GHz
64 5.320 GHz
149 5.745 GHz
153 5.765 GHz
157 5.785 GHz
161 5.805 GHz
165 5.825 GHz
Turbo Mode: Off
Channel Frequency
42 5.210 GHz
50 5.250GHz
58 5.290 GHz
152 5.760 GHz
160 5.800 GHz
Turbo Mode: On
23
U-NII Band Low Middle High
Frequency (GHz) 5.150 – 5.250 5.250 – 5.350 5.725 – 5.825
Max. Power Output 50 mW for US,
200 mW for Canada,
Europe, & Australia.
250 mW for US,
200 mW for Europe
& Australia,
1 Watt for Canada.
1 Watt for US &
Australia,
4 Watts for Canada,
25 mW for Europe.
22
IEEE 802.11a Channel Allocations