ap1140getstart.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 2 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Revised: Month Day, Year, OL-16415-01 1 About this Guide This Guide provides instructions on how to install and configure your Cisco Aironet 1140 Series Access Point. It also covers ====TBD===== 2 Taking Out What You Need Follow these steps: Step 1 Unpack and remove the access point and the accessory kit from the shipping box. Step 2 Return any packing material to the shipping container and save it for future use.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 3 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Figure 2 Access Point Ports and Connections 1 Power jack 4 Security padlock connection 2 Console port? 5 Kensington lock connection 3 Ethernet port 6 4 Installing the Access Point The access point can be mounted on a ceiling, wall, or flat horizontal surface such as a table or desk top.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 4 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Step 2 TBD === NEED ILLUSTRATIONS Mounting the Access Point Using Existing Mounting Hardware 1100 Series Follow these steps to mount the access point on an existing 1100 series installation. Step 1 TBD ==== ILLUSTRATION(S) Step 2 TBD 1200 Series Follow these steps to mount the access point on an existing 1200 series installation.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 5 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Step 2 Connecting Power The access point is 802.3af (13 watts) compliant and can be powered by any of the following 802.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 6 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL LWAPP enabled access points are compatible with CAPWAP and conversion to a CAPWAP controller is seamless. Deployments can have a mix of CAPWAP and LWAPP software running on the controllers. The CAPWAP enabled software will allow for access points to join either a controller running CAPWAP or LWAPP.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 7 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL 6 Troubleshooting Guidelines for Using Cisco Aironet Lightweight Access Points Keep these guidelines in mind when you use a 1140 series lightweight access point: • The access point can only communicate with Cisco controllers, such as the 2106 series wireless LAN controllers or 4400 series controllers. • The access point does not support Wireless Domain Services (WDS) and cannot communicate with WDS devices.
ap1140getstart.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 9 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Table 1 shows the access point LED status indications for various conditions. Table 1 LED Status Indications Message Type Ethernet LED Radio LED Status LED Message Meaning Amber – DRAM memory test in progress. Green Green Green DRAM memory test OK. – Red – Board initialization in progress. – Blinking Green Blinking Green Initializing Flash file system. – Green Green Flash memory test OK.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 10 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Table 1 LED Status Indications (continued) Message Type Ethernet LED Radio LED Status LED Message Meaning Boot loader warnings – – Blinking red Ethernet link not operational. Red – Red Ethernet failure. Amber – Blinking blue Configuration recovery in progress. (Mode button pushed for 2 to 3 seconds). – Red Red Image recovery in progress. (Mode button pressed for 20 to 30 seconds).
ap1140getstart.fm Page 11 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Table 1 LED Status Indications (continued) Message Type Ethernet LED Radio LED Status LED Message Meaning Cisco IOS errors Blinking amber – – Transmit or receive Ethernet errors. – Blinking amber – Maximum retries or buffer full occurred on radio. Red Red – Software failure; try disconnecting and reconnecting power. – – Cycling General warning, insufficient inline power.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 12 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Models Certification Numbers AIR-(L)AP1141N-A-K9 LDK102069 AIR-(L)AP1142N-A-K9 LDK102070 Manufacturer: Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA This device complies with Part 15 rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: 1. This device may not cause harmful interference, and 2.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 13 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Caution Within the 5.15 to 5.25 GHz band (5 GHz radio channels 34 to 48) the UNII devices are restricted to indoor operations to reduce any potential for harmful interference to co-channel Mobile Satellite System (MSS) operations. VCCI Statement for Japan Warning This is a Class B product based on the standard of the Voluntary Control Council for Interference from Information Technology Equipment (VCCI).
ap1140getstart.fm Page 14 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Cet appareil numerique de la classe B respecte les exigences du Reglement sur le material broilleur du Canada. This device complies with Class B Limits of Industry Canada. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: 1. This device may not cause harmful interference, and 2. This device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.
ap1140getstart.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 16 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL This device complies with the EMC requirements (EN 60601-1-2) of the Medical Directive 93/42/EEC. For 2.4 GHz radios, the following standards were applied: • Radio—EN 300.328-1, EN 300.328-2 • EMC—EN 301.489-1, EN 301.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 17 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Note This equipment is intended to be used in all EU and EFTA countries. Outdoor use may be restricted to certain frequencies and/or may require a license for operation. For more details, contact Cisco Corporate Compliance. For 54 Mbps, 5 GHz access points, the following standards were applied: • Radio—EN 301.893 • EMC—EN 301.489-1, EN 301.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 18 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Wireless Telecommunications Systems with basic restrictions or reference levels related to Human Exposure to Radio Frequency Electromagnetic Fields from 300 MHz to 40 GHz. The minimum separation distance from the antenna to general bystander is 20cm (7.9 inches).
ap1140getstart.fm Page 19 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL English Translation This equipment operates in the same frequency bandwidth as industrial, scientific, and medical devices such as microwave ovens and mobile object identification (RF-ID) systems (licensed premises radio stations and unlicensed specified low-power radio stations) used in factory production lines. 1.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 20 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL All Access Points Chinese Translation English Translation Administrative Rules for Low-power Radio-Frequency Devices Article 12 For those low-power radio-frequency devices that have already received a type-approval, companies, business units or users should not change its frequencies, increase its power or change its original features and functions.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 21 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Article 14 The operation of the low-power radio-frequency devices is subject to the conditions that no harmful interference is caused to aviation safety and authorized radio station; and if interference is caused, the user must stop operating the device immediately and can't re-operate it until the harmful interference is clear.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 22 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL English Translation Low-power Radio-frequency Devices Technical Specifications 4.7 Unlicensed National Information Infrastructure 4.7.5 Within the 5.25-5.35 GHz band, U-NII devices will be restricted to indoor operations to reduce any potential for harmful interference to co-channel MSS operations. 4.7.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 23 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Note DHCP Option 43 is limited to one access point type per DHCP pool. You must configure a separate DHCP pool for each access point type. The 1140 series access point uses the type-length-value (TLV) format for DHCP Option 43. DHCP servers must be programmed to return the option based on the access point’s DHCP Vendor Class Identifier (VCI) string (DHCP Option 60).
ap1140getstart.fm Page 24 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Type + Length + Value Type is always f1(hex). Length is the number of controller management IP addresses times 4 in hex. Value is the IP address of the controller listed sequentially in hex. For example, suppose that there are two controllers with management interface IP addresses, 10.126.126.2 and 10.127.127.2. The type is f1(hex). The length is 2 * 4 = 8 = 08 (hex).
ap1140getstart.fm Page 25 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Table 2 Access Point Specifications (continued) Category Specification Safety UL1950 CSA C22.2, No. 60950-00 UL 60950 Third Edition IEC 60950 Second Edition, including Amendments 1-4, with all national deviations EN 60950:1992, including Amendments 1-4 UL 2043 (Plenum rating) EMI and Susceptibility FCC Part 15.07 and 15.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 26 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Table 3 lists the channel identifiers, channel center frequencies, and maximum power levels for each channel allowed by the –A regulatory domain for a 2.4-GHz radio with up to 10-dBi antennas. Table 3 Channels and Maximum Conducted Power in the –A Regulatory Domain with up to 4-dBi Antennas Maximum Conducted Power Levels (dBm) in the –A Regulatory Domain for the 2.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 27 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Table 4 lists the channel identifiers, channel center frequencies, and maximum power levels for each channel allowed by the –A regulatory domain for a 5-GHz radio with up to 6-dBi antennas.
ap1140getstart.fm Page 28 Monday, June 16, 2008 8:49 AM REVIEW DRAFT—CISCO CONFIDENTIAL Table 4 Channels and Maximum Conducted Power in the –A Regulatory Domain with up to 3-dBi Antennas (continued) Maximum Conducted Power Levels (dBm) in the –A Regulatory Domain for the 5-GHz Radio with up to 3-dBi Antennas 802.