Note
This report does not support Smart RF. For information on Channel Inspection Report for Smart RF, see Channel Inspector Report — Smart RFConfigure radio channels from the device group configuration Profile or override the Profile configuration for an individual AP. Then, run this report against radio channels that are configured as Fixed Channel. Select to jump to the AP radio configuration.
The Channel Inspector widget does not address radio frequency noise from non-Wi-Fi sources.
While the BSSID identifies the AP interface that the station is using, the SSID identifies the overall service being used. The BSSID has the same structure as an AP MAC address, but you can have multiple BSSIDs coming off the same physical interface. The SSID is typically a human readable word, like “FreeWi-Fi”.
Field | Description |
---|---|
Frequency | Radio Frequency channels with the beacon channel (primary) denoted with brackets. The following is an 80 MHz channel example showing [5220] as the beacon channel. 44: (5180 5200 [5220] 5240). |
Noise | Level of measured internet noise on the selected channel. |
Ranking | Ranks selected channel against other available
channels. Ranking is indicated by 1-5 stars. The higher the
rank value, the more stars, and the more desirable the
channel. The algorithm takes four input parameters:
|
Interference Types | Describes the channel interference in relation to the operating channel. |
Overlap | Applicable for 40MGz and 80MGz channels only. The 20MGz channel is designated as the primary and the other channels are designated as secondary extension channels. If the primary channel of one AP is the same as the extension channel of another AP it is considered overlapping. Overlapping is the worst type of interference. |
Co-Channel | All the APs on the same channel as the target AP are
competing. Using Distributed Control Function (DCF) collisions are avoided because
the APs know to avoid each other; however, the more traffic on the channel the
greater the chance of collisions. Throughput slows but all packets get
through. Example Notation, Co-Channel 20 44: (5220) indicates that there is co-channel interference on the beacon channel 5220. |
Adjacent | APs on adjacent channels are close enough to interfere but not close enough to know they are interfering. They do not have the benefit of DCF. |