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Receving from 2.4 and sending to 5 ghz

Anonymous
Not applicable
Hi all,

Need to understand one thing. As we know that before 802.11ac MU-MIMO, it was single user communication. I just wanted to know if below scenario is applicable in real life (no specific to ruckus)

  1. 1 client associated to AP on 2.4 Ghz, another client associated to AP on 5 Ghz
  2. On radio medium, only 1 device can sent at a time
  3. if client 1 (2.4 ghz) is sending data, will client 2 (5 ghz) will recieve it simultaneously ?
I think in point 3, the communication should be bidirectional isnt it without any hold up since both clients are operating on different frequencies ?
7 REPLIES 7

Anonymous
Not applicable
You are correct.

All you need to know is that WiFi is 50% duty cycle and the MAC layer can either be based on throughput fairness (equal amount of frames) or airtime fairness (equal amount of airtime) and this is radio dependant.

Anonymous
Not applicable
so which one does Ruckus support ? throughput fairness ? or airtime fairness ?

Anonymous
Not applicable

john_d
Valued Contributor II
A simultaneous dual-band AP can be thought of as two separate AP's operating independently: One serving 2.4GHz and one serving 5GHz. So yes, it would be possible (and has nothing to do with 802.11ac MU-MIMO) for separate clients to be either sending or receiving at the same time on 2.4GHz and 5GHz. It's merely a "convenience" that the most popular AP configuration is shipping a two-in-one dual band.


On the consumer market, you also see weirder configurations, like AP's that have two 5GHz radios and one 2.4GHz one.

But this kind of scenario isn't MU-MIMO, it's just you are saturating more of your channel spectrum with additional AP's.