Are Wireless
Site Surveys Worth The Cost?
At the time of
wireless network design: there weren't many wireless network planning tools. So,
to design wireless for a new building, we took a floor plan and literally
plotted the locations of access points, power settings, channel settings, etc.
A wireless engineer should always be on site. They were about to install a Wireless Site Survey
Cost that included the access point model they had planned to
use, antennas and some software running on a laptop. Then they physically
walked around the building to test the coverage area in the real world.
Needless to say, it was a very long but necessary process to ensure that the
system had the coverage it needed and that the system did not actually
interfere with itself (which can happen when two access points in the same area
use the same channel).
The world of
wireless design is different today: For example, most wireless networking
solutions for a university or hospital campus wireless network will
automatically adjust power and channel settings so you don't have to set
everything up manually. This makes the planning process much easier. Another
tool we have now that we didn't have in the old days is a fantastic wireless
planning software that will fill a floor plan with access point locations,
expected coverage and also tell you the angles of the signal transmitted by the
antennas ... interesting things for wireless network fanatics like us.
Here
are some reasons why I think you will need a wireless engineer to work with you
in the design:
1) Devices and applications are complex: wireless planning is no longer just about
covering an area. It is about being able to support the capacity of devices on
the network, sometimes 3 to 5 devices per user. And it's about being able to
deliver the performance levels required by applications. Even if you are using
predictive wireless planning software, most are based on coverage only. You
need to have a plan that also includes capacity and performance.
2) Wireless networks are essential: when started implementing the wireless
infrastructure years ago, most of the systems we were installing were primarily
for accessing wireless access points. Like wireless student networks in schools
or guest access in retail stores. Of course, since then, wireless speeds have
become faster and faster (wireless gigabit is coming) and everything becomes
mobile. Today we have hospitals with wireless insulin pumps, nurse call systems
and barcode scanners for prescription drugs, all over Wi-Fi. These same school
systems that we started implementing years ago now stream video wirelessly and
many test systems use Wi-Fi. Today's wireless networks are not pleasant, it is
a critical system that can never fail.
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