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Figure 30. Example of Radio Page
Table 24. Radio Menu Option
Option
Description
Select 2.4 or 5 GHz
Select which band you want to make changes on.
Wireless
Select Enable to enable the wireless function.
Country
Your device is configured for operation in the U.S. only.
Output Power
Set the strength of the wireless signal that the Cable
Modem/Router transmits.
802.11 Band
Displays the current selected band.
802.11n-mode
In
Auto
mode, your Cable Modem/Router will automatically
adjust to avoid interference with neighboring devices.
Bandwidth
Specify radio frequency bandwidth, either 20MHz single, or
40MHz (dual channel), that the Cable Modem/Router will use if
802.11n mode is configured as Automatic and the Control
Channel is configured as Automatic.
Sideband for
Control Channel
(40 MHz only)
You may select Sideband and the secondary extension
channels if your Cable Modem/Router is operating at 40 MHz
bandwidth and the 802.11n-mode is configured as
Auto
.
Control Channel
Select the channel for AP operation next to the drop-down list
box. The current channel number is displayed. The list of
detailed control channel and extension channels are shown in
the Table below.
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Regulatory Mode
By default is Off. Most users will not need to change this setting.
TPC Mitigation (db)
By default is Off. Most users will not need to change this setting.
OBSS Coexistence
By default is set to 1 (Enabled). This allows the wireless
bandwidth to fall back from 40Mhz to 20Mhz when the
modem/router detects interference in the area. You may select
0 (Disabled) to disable this feature. Disabling OBSS
Coexistence can result in poor wireless performance if there is
interference in your area. Most users will not need to change
these settings.
STBC Tx
By default is set to Auto. Most users will not need to change this
setting.
Restore Wireless
Defaults
Click on the Restore Wireless Defaults button to restore the
Wireless settings.
Table 25. Country Extension Channel List
Control Channel
Sideband for
Control
Channel
Extension
Channel
US Channel 1-7
Lower
Channel
Number + 4
US Channel 5-11
Upper
Channel
Number - 4
Example 1
: If your control channel is set to 1, the extension channel will be transmitted
on channel 5. The total bandwidth of the signals on channel 1 and 5 equals 40 MHz.
Example 2
: If your control channel is set to 11, the extension channel will be transmitted
on channel 7. The total bandwidth of the signals on channel 11 and 7 equals 40 MHz.
Primary Network
The Primary Network page allows you to configure the primary wireless network and its
security settings. Strong security is the best way to prevent unauthorized wireless
network access. To access the
Primary Network
page:
1
Click
Wireless
in the menu bar.
2
Then click the
Primary Network
submenu.
Figure 31 shows an example of the menu and Table 24 describes the items you can
select.
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Figure 31. Example of Primary Network Page
Table 26. Primary Network Menu Option
Option
Description
Primary Network
Select Enable to enable primary wireless network.
Network Name (SSID)
Set the Network Name (also known as SSID) of the
wireless network. This is a 1-32 ASCII character string.
Closed Network
Select Enable to suppress broadcast of the SSID.
Mode Required
Default set to None. Choice to select None, HT and VHT.
Most users will leave this None.
Client Isolate
Prevents wireless clients on your network from
communicating with other wireless clients.
WPA
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) offers stronger encryption
than WEP. Enable WPA alone if you have a RADIUS
server (unlikely for most home users) – otherwise
WPA-PSK.
WPA-PSK
Offers stronger encryption than WEP. When enabled, you
must also enter a Pre-Shared Key that will by used by all
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wireless clients to access the wireless network.
WPA2
Offers state-of-the-art security. Enable WPA2 alone only if
you have a RADIUS server(unlikely for most home users;
otherwise use WPA2-PSK.
WPA2-PSK
Offers state-of-the-art security. When enabled, you must
also enter a Pre-Shared Key below that will by used by all
wireless clients to access the wireless network.
WPA/WPA2 Encryption
Select Enable to use WPA/WPA2 encryption. Most users
should use the default setting of TKIP+AES.
WPA Pre-Shared Key
Enter a 8-63 ASCII character string if you have enabled
WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK.
RADIUS Server
If you’re using a RADIUS server, enter it’s IP address
here. The RADIUS server may be on either public network
(WAN) or private network (LAN).
RADIUS Port
(Relevant only when the
RADIUS server is enabled)
Enter the UDP port number of the RADIUS server. The
default port is 1812.
RADIUS Key
(Relevant only when the
RADIUS server is enabled)
Enter the RADIUS Key.
Group Key Rotation
Interval
(Relevant only when the
RADIUS server is enabled)
When enabled, the Cable Modem/Router generates the
best possible random group key and updates all
key-management capable clients periodically. Set to zero
to disable periodic rekeying.
WPA/WPA2 Re-auth
Interval
Interval (in seconds) at which the Cable Modem/Router (if
using WPA-PSK key management) or RADIUS server (if
using WPA key management) sends a new group key out
to all clients. The re-keying process is the WPA equivalent
of automatically changing the WEP key for an AP and all
stations in a WLAN on a periodic basis.
WEP Encryption
WEP Encryption should be left disabled by most users. To
set WEP Encryption, first you must click on the Radio
submenu button and set 802.11n Mode to Disabled.
Then on the Primary Network page you must disable
WPA-PSK and WPA2-PSK.
WEP Encryption can be set to WEP 128-bit, 64-bit, or
Disable. Both the wireless clients and the Cable
Modem/Router must use the same WEP key.
Network Key 1-4
You can pre-define up to 4 keys for 64-bit or 128-bit WEP.
64-bit keys require 10 hexadecimal digits and 128-bit key
require 26 hexadecimal digits.
Current Network Key
Select one of the four pre-defined keys as the current
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network key.
PassPhase
Enter a word or group of printable characters and click
Generate WEP keys to generate WEP encryption key.
These characters are case sensitive.
Generate WEP Keys
Click to generate 4 WEP keys automatically.
Automatic Security
Configuration
Disable or enable WPS. WPS does not work with WEP.
Device Name
Enter a name to identify this Cable Modem/Router in WPS
network.
WPS AP Setup
PIN (Personal Identification Number) is the WDS ID
number of your PC or game machine. When a
WPS-supported device tries to connect to this Cable
Modem/Router, you have to enter its PIN into the WPS
Setup AP’s PIN field, then click
Configure
.
WPS Add Client
Select WPS mode to be deployed.
Client PIN
For devices that require a PIN, enter the PIN in the WPS
Add Client PIN’s field, and then click
Add
.
Guest Network
The Guest Network page allows you to configure a guest network. A guest network is a
small section of an organization's computer network designed for use by temporary
visitors. This guest network often provides full Internet connectivity, but it also strictly
limits access to any internal (intranet) Web sites or files.
Traditionally, you needed to use different APs to configure different Basic Service Sets
(BSSs). Your Cable Modem/Router supports Multiple SSIDs which allows you to use the
same access point to provide several BSSs simultaneously. You can then assign
various privileges to different SSIDs and associated networks.
y
Up to eight BSSs are allowed on one Cable Modem/Router simultaneously, one for
Admin access and seven for Guest Networks.
y
If you are using WEP, you must use different WEP keys for different BSSs.
y
You should use different PSKs for different BSSs if you are using WPA/WPA2.
To access the
Guest Network
page:
1
Click
Wireless
in the menu bar.
2
Then click the
Guest Network
submenu.
Figure 36 shows an example of the menu and Table 25 describes the items you can
select.
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