User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Introduction
- Product Description
- Technology and Benefits
- Applications
- Configuration Options – RF, IP, DFS
- Power and Grounding
- Administration Systems
- Specifications
- Radio specifications (common to all formats)
- Specifications for PMP 430 (5.4 & 5.8-GHz) SM and PTP 230 (5.4 & 5.8-GHz) BH radio with integrated antenna
- Specifications for PMP 400 (4.9 & 5.4-GHz) AP/SM and PTP 200 (4.9 & 5.4-GHz) BH radio with integrated antenna
- Specification for PMP 400/430 AP and PTP 200 BH connectorized radio
- Specifications for PMP 400/430 kitted, connectorized radio (antenna included)
- Performance
- Planning
- Configuring
- Installation
- Regulatory and Legal Notices
- Important Note on Modifications
- National and Regional Regulatory Notices
- U.S. Federal Communication Commission (FCC) Notification
- Industry Canada (IC) Notification
- Regulatory Requirements for CEPT Member States (www.cept.org)
- European Union Notification for 5.8 GHz Product
- Equipment Disposal
- EU Declaration of Conformity for RoHS Compliance
- UK Notification
- Luxembourg Notification
- Czech Republic Notification
- Greece Notification
- Brazil Notification
- Labeling and Disclosure Table for China
- Exposure Separation Distances
- Legal Notices
- Limit of Liability
PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Series Motorola PMP Solutions User Guide Supplement
Issue 6.0 May 2011 Page 42 of 77
Use MIR (Maximum Information Rate) settings to cap the SM’s bandwidth use, but let the link run
at as high an operation rate as the RF environment will allow. This ensures that any transmission
uses as little “air time” as possible, leaving more “air time” for other SMs.
4.2 TRANSMITTER OUTPUT POWER (AND NO JITTER)
The AP/BHM’s Transmitter Output Power is configured on the AP/BHM’s “Configuration =>
Radio” page.
Table 12: PMP 400/430 and PTP 200/230 Tx output power
Radio/
Frequency
Channel
Size
Region(s)
Transmit
Output Power
Range
TX
Default
Setting
Antenna
Gain
(18 dBi –
1dB cable
loss)
Max
EIRP
(Tx +
Antenna
Gain)
PMP 430
5.8 GHz
OFDM
5 MHz
United States and Canada
-30 to +19 dBm
19 dBm
17 dBm
36 dBm
Europe and India
-30 to +13 dBm
13 dBm
17 dBm
30 dBm
10 MHz
United States and Canada
-30 to +19 dBm
19 dBm
17 dBm
36 dBm
Europe and India
-30 to +16 dBm
16 dBm
17 dBm
33 dBm
20 MHz
United States, Canada,
Europe and India
-30 to +19 dBm
19 dBm
17 dBm
36 dBm
PMP 430
5.4 GHz
OFDM
5 MHz
United States, Canada,
Europe, India, Russia,
Brazil and Australia
-30 to +7 dBm
7 dBm
17 dBm
24 dBm
10 MHz
-30 to +10 dBm
10 dBm
17 dBm
27 dBm
20 MHz
-30 to +13 dBm
13 dBm
17 dBm
30 dBm
PTP 230
5.8 GHz
OFDM
10 MHz
United States and Canada
-30 to +19 dBm
19 dBm
17 dBm
36 dBm
Europe and India
-30 to +16 dBm
16 dBm
17 dBm
33 dBm
20 MHz
United States, Canada,
Europe and India
-30 to +19 dBm
19 dBm
17 dBm
36 dBm
PTP 230
5.4 GHz
OFDM
10 MHz
United States, Canada,
Europe, India, Russia,
Brazil and Australia
-30 to +7 dBm
7 dBm
17 dBm
24 dBm
-30 to +10 dBm
10 dBm
17 dBm
27 dBm
20 MHz
-30 to +13 dBm
13 dBm
17 dBm
30 dBm
PMP 400
PTP 200
5.4 GHz
OFDM
10 MHz
United States, Canada,
Europe, India, Russia,
Brazil and Australia
-30 to +12 dBm
10 dBm
17 dBm
27 dBm
PMP 400
PTP 200
4.9 GHz
OFDM
10 MHz
United States, Canada,
Europe, India, Russia,
Brazil and Australia
-30 to +18 dBm
18 dBm
17 dBm
35 dBm
For the PMP 400 5.4-GHz OFDM to meet 27 dBm EIRP with the connectorized 18 dBi antenna
(with 1 dB of cable loss) that comes with the 5440AP or 5441AP, or the integrated 17 dBi antenna
that comes with a 5440BH or 5441BH, the maximum setting allowed is 10 dBm (the default)
since 27-17=10.