Installation guide

4-118 Motorola RF Switch System Reference Guide
4. Select a mesh index from amongst those displayed and select the Details button for additional (more
granular) information on the mesh index selected.
5. Select a mesh index from those displayed and click the Graph button for additional radio performance
information in graphical format.
4.7.9 Smart RF
When invoked by an administrator, Smart RF (or self-monitoring at run time) instructs radios to change to a
specific channel and begin beaconing using their maximum available transmit power. Within a well planned
deployment, any associated radio should be reachable by at least one other radio. The Smart RF feature
records signals received from its neighbors as well as signals from external, un-managed radios. AP to AP
distance is recorded in terms of signal attenuation. The information from external radios is used during
channel assignment to minimize interference.
Smart RF management is comprised of the following two phases:
Smart RF Calibration Phase
Smart RF Monitoring Phase
Smart RF is well suited for clustered environments. Smart RF interacts with a number of existing features,
(such as radio detection, MU load balancing and self-healing).
4.7.9.1 Smart RF Calibration Phase
Smart RF calibration is initiated by an administrator during initial deployment or can be scheduled at a
specified frequency or time of the day. Smart RF instructs adopted radios to scan legal channels and measure
signal strength from associated radio and other device signals detected within the environment.
Smart RF conducts the following network management activities:
Automatically calibrates associated radio's maximum power capability
Automatically assigns certain radios to be detectors
Automatically assign channels to radios to avoid channel overlap and interference from external RF
sources
Automatically calculates the transmit power of working radios
Automatically configures self-healing parameters. Radio assume the roles of caretaker and caregiver.
When a radio is down, it is referred to as the caretaker. Neighbor radios raising their transmit power to
cover for the failed radio are referred to as caregivers. Smart RF calibration automatically chooses
caregiver radios along with the power needed to cover.
4.7.9.2 Smart RF Monitoring Phase
Smart RF monitoring occurs continuously. It includes the following monitoring activities:
Self-healing to monitor whether a radio is down
Interference monitoring using retry stats
Defines coverage holes and discerns transmit rates and MU signal strength. When necessary, Smart RF
increases MU power to maintain coverage
Extensible to future smart-tuning. For example, distinguish between AP to AP interference and static
interference