Advantages of outdoor wireless bridge

 

In a dynamic business environment, the most successful organizations will be the ones that are most adaptive to change. Organizations must modify their networks accordingly to keep up with the latest business changes. Extending the network to outdoor locations, new buildings over long distances, or even across a street can be especially challenging.
Business does not happen just indoors—as wireless LAN (WLAN) devices proliferate, the need to provide them connectivity extends outdoors. Applications such as hot spots, outdoor surveillance, outdoor inventory control, or outdoor baggage handling all stretch the need for WLAN access. And it is not just providing access to client devices—remote networks need to be connected as well. These networks could be in remote buildings, or mobile networks that are located outside. These applications can be deployed cost-effectively with equipment designed specifically for these environments, such as outdoor wireless bridge

What happens to outdoor wireless bridge link when it rains? The answer—nothing. It is a common misconception that environmental factors such as rain, sleet, or snow can bring down a outdoor wireless link. Even at torrential rainfall rates experienced in the stormiest of locations, the wireless signal is negligibly degraded at the frequencies where wireless devices operate.

An outdoor wireless bridge is useful in many situations, including:

• Outdoor corporate WLAN access
• Facilities with harsh environments (manufacturing, warehouse, etc.)
• Voice-over-WLAN service outdoors
• WLAN access for Ethernet-enabled devices without wireless capabilities
• Disaster recovery
• Quick turnup while waiting on leased-line installation
• Connections with physical obstacles
• Redundancy (alternative path, full backup, partial backup)
• Point-to-point and point-to-multipoint configurations
• Augmenting network capacity