Wireless Equipment


Mimosa-C5c-Point-to-Point-Backhaul-&-Point-to-Multipoint-Client-Radio

Mimosa C5c Point-to-Point Backhaul & Point-to-Multipoint Client Radio 4.9–6.4 GHz

The Mimosa C5c is a flexible connectorized client radio solution for accommodating short and long range PTP and PTMP, as well as custom antenna solutions. Incorporating unique support for Mimosa’s SRS technology, the C5c enables the fastest speeds and is the most scalable wireless access solution available today. The C5c is ideal for professionally-installed rural Fixed Wireless and long range applications for point-to-point backhaul links.

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Features


  • Gigabit Ethernet:10/100/1000-BASE-T
  • Management Services:Mimosa cloud monitoring and management. SNMPv2 & Syslog legacy monitoring. HTTPS. HTML5 based web UI
  • Smart Spectrum Management:Active scan monitors/logs ongoing RF interference across channels with no service impact; Dynamic auto-optimization of channel and bandwidth use
  • Security:WPA2 PSK & Enterprise 802.1x; Radius provisioning, COA, DM (from A5); 128-bit AES with hardware acceleration
  • VLANs:Per subscriber VLAN; Q-in-Q, triple tagging; Management VLAN
  • QoS:Supports 4 pre-configured QoS levels

Description


ADD SUBSCRIBERS WITH EASE
Auto-Provisioning together with the Mimosa Install App, now dramatically reduces subscriber installation time, automates device provisioning and allows seamless device integration into an ISP network.

FLEXIBLE ANTENNA OPTIONS
Connect to virtually any dual polarization antenna to custom-engineer longer distance client links. The C5c supports 2x2:2 MIMO dual connector RP-SMA for easy cabled antenna connectivity and can be mounted to any pole via hose clamps, or easily clipped onto antenna supporting compatible clip-on mounting bracket systems.

SPECTRUM REUSE SYNCHRONIZATION (SRS) CLIENT
In SRS mode, all uplink and downlink transmissions are scheduled by the Access Point (A5/A5c), which greatly improves medium access protocol (MAC) efficiency, allows interference coordination, and reduces jitter. In contrast, in WiFi-Interop mode, clients need to contend with each other to access the channel, which leads to reduced MAC efficiency, higher interference levels, and higher jitter.