Channel Bonding
Channel bonding improves
the effective throughput of the wireless LAN. In contrast to legacy APs which use radio
channel spacings that are only 20 MHz wide, 11n wireless APs can use two channels at the
same time to create a 40 MHz wide channel. 11ac wireless APs can use four channels at the
same time to create an 80 MHz wide channel.
The 40 MHz channel width
is achieved by bonding the primary channel (20 MHz) with an extension channel.
Channel bonding is
predefined on both Radio 1 and Radio 2. Channel bonding is enabled by selecting the
Channel Width on the Radio tabs.
When selecting Channel Width, the following options are
available:
- 20
MHz — Channel bonding is not enabled:
- 802.11n
clients use the primary channel (20 MHz)
- Non-802.11n
clients, as well as beacons and multicasts, use the 802.11a/b/g radio
protocols.
- 40
MHz — Channel bonding is enabled:
- 802.11n
clients that support the 40 MHz channel width can use 40 MHz, 20 MHz, or the
802.11a/b/g radio protocols.
- 802.11n
clients that do not support the 40 MHz channel width can use 20 MHz or the
802.11a/b/g radio protocols.
- Non-802.11n
clients, beacons, and multicasts use the 802.11a/b/g radio protocols.
- 80 MHz — Channel bonding is enabled:
- 802.11ac
clients that support the 80 MHz channel width can use 80 MHz, 40 MHz, 20 MHz, or
the 802.11a/b/g radio protocols.
- 802.11n
clients that do not support the 80 MHz channel width can use 20 MHz, 40 MHz, or
the 802.11a/b/g radio protocols.
- Non-802.11n
clients, beacons, and multicasts use the 802.11a/b/g radio protocols.
- Auto — Channel bonding is
automatically enabled or disabled, switching between 20 MHz, 40 MHz, and 80 MHz,
depending on how busy the extension channel(s) are. If the extension channel is busy
above a prescribed threshold percentage, which is defined in the 40
MHz Channel Busy Threshold box, channel bonding is disabled.