Radwin 5000 HPMP User manual

USERMANUAL
RADWIN5000HPMPPOINTTO
MULTIPOINTBROADBANDWIRELESS
Release3.3.30

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 i
RADWIN 5000 HPMP
User Manual
Notice
This manual contains information that is proprietary to RADWIN Ltd (RADWIN hereafter). No
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approval by RADWIN.
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other intellectual property or other proprietary rights relating to this manual and to the
RADWIN products and any software components contained therein are proprietary products
of RADWIN protected under international copyright law and shall be and remain solely with
RADWIN.
The RADWIN name is a registered trademark of RADWIN. No right, license, or interest to
such trademark is granted hereunder, and you agree that no such right, license, or interest
shall be asserted by you with respect to such trademark.
You shall not copy, reverse compile or reverse assemble all or any portion of the User Manual
or any other RADWIN documentation or products. You are prohibited from, and shall not,
directly or indirectly, develop, market, distribute, license, or sell any product that supports
substantially similar functionality based or derived in any way from RADWIN products.Your
undertaking in this paragraph shall survive the termination of this Agreement.
This Agreement is effective upon your opening of a RADWIN product package and shall
continue until terminated. RADWIN may terminate this Agreement upon the breach by you of
any term thereof. Upon such termination by RADWIN, you agree to return to RADWIN any
RADWIN products and documentation and all copies and portions thereof.
For further information contact RADWIN at one of the addresses under Worldwide
Contacts below or contact your local distributor.
Disclaimer
The parameters quoted in this document must be specifically confirmed in writing before they
become applicable to any particular order or contract. RADWIN reserves the right to make
alterations or amendments to the detail specification at its discretion. The publication of
information in this document does not imply freedom from patent or other rights of RADWIN,
or others.
Trademarks
WinLink 1000, RADWIN 2000 and RADWIN 5000 are trademarks of RADWIN Ltd
Windows 2000, XP Pro, Vista, Windows 7 and Internet Explorer are trademarks
of Microsoft Inc.
Mozilla and Firefox are trademarks of the Mozilla Foundation.
Other product names are trademarks of their respective manufacturers.

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 ii
RADWIN Worldwide Offices
Corporate and EMEA Regional Headquarters
Corporate and EMEA Headquarters
27 Habarzel Street
Tel Aviv, 69710
Israel
Tel: +972.3.766.2900
Fax: +972.3.766.2902
Email: sales@radwin.com
North America Regional
Headquarters
900 Corporate Drive
Mahwah, NJ, 07430
USA
Tel: +1-877-RADWIN US
(+1-877 723-9468)
Tel: +1-201-252-4224
Fax: +1-201-621-8911
Email: [email protected]
Customer Support - North America:
Hours: 9 am - 6 pm EST (Mon - Fri)
Email: [email protected]
APAC Regional Headquarters
53A, Grange Road #15-02
Spring Grove ,249566
Singapore
Tel: +65.6638.7864
Email: [email protected]
RADWIN Regional Offices
RADWIN Brazil
Av. Chucri Zaidan, 920 – 9º
São Paulo, 04583-904
Brazil
Tel: +55.11.3048-4110
Email: [email protected]
RADWIN Mexico
Quinto #20 Col El Centinela
Mexico, DF, O4450
Mexico
Tel: +52 (55) 5689 8970
Email: [email protected]
RADWIN Peru
Av. Antares 213
Lima, 33
Peru
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Fax: +511-990304095
Email: [email protected]
RADWIN India
E-13,B-1 Extn., Mohan Co-operative Industrial Estate
New Delhi, 110 044
India
Tel: +91-11-40539178
Email: [email protected]
RADWIN Philippines
5 Bur Bank St.
Laguna, Belair, Santa Rosa
Laguna Philippines
Tel: +63 928 7668230
Email: [email protected]
RADWIN South Africa
P.O. Box 3554, Rivonia
Johannesburg ,2128
South Africa
Tel: +27 (0)82 551 5600
Email: [email protected]
RADWIN Italy and Spain
Piazza Arenella 7/H
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Italy
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Fax: +39335433620
Email: [email protected]
RADWIN Central America
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Tel: +503 2278-5628
Email: [email protected]
RADWIN South East Asia
All Season Mansion
87/38 Wireless Road Lumpinee
Bangkok ,10330
Thailand
Tel: +66811707503
Email: sales@radwin.com

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 iii
Regulatory Compliance
General Note
This system has achieved Type Approval in various countries around the world. This means
that the system has been tested against various local technical regulations and found to
comply. The frequency bands in which the system operates may be “unlicensed” and in these
bands, the system can be used provided it does not cause interference.
FCC - Compliance
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital
device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable
protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates,
uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with
the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is
no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment
does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by
turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by
one or more of the following measures:
• Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
• Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
• Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the
receiver is connected.
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
Changes or modifications to this equipment not expressly approved by the party responsible
for compliance could void the user's authority to operate the equipment.
Warning
It is the responsibility of the installer to ensure that when using the outdoor
antenna kits in the United States (or where FCC rules apply), only those
antennas certified with the product are used. The use of any antenna other
than those certified with the product is expressly forbidden by FCC rules 47
CFR part 15.204.
Warning
It is the responsibility of the installer to ensure that when configuring the
radio in the United States (or where FCC rules apply), the Tx power is set
according to the values for which the product is certified. The use of Tx
power values other than those, for which the product is certified, is
expressly forbidden by FCC rules 47 CFR part 15.204.
Caution
Outdoor units and antennas should be installed ONLY by experienced
installation professionals who are familiar with local building and safety
codes and, wherever applicable, are licensed by the appropriate
government regulatory authorities. Failure to do so may void the product
warranty and may expose the end user or the service provider to legal and
financial liabilities. Resellers or distributors of this equipment are not liable
for injury, damage or violation of regulations associated with the installation
of outdoor units or antennas. The installer should configure the output
power level of antennas according to country regulations and antenna type.

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 iv
Indoor Units comply with part 15 of the FCC rules. Operation is subject to the following two
conditions:
(1) These devices may not cause harmful interference.
(2) These devices must accept any interference received, including interference that may
cause undesired operation.
Canadian Emission Requirements for Indoor Units
This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003.
Cet appareil numẻrique de la classe B est conforme ảla norme NMB-003 du Canada.
China MII
Operation of the equipment is only allowed under China MII 5.8GHz band regulation
configuration with EIRP limited to 33 dBm (2 Watt).
India WPC
Operation of the equipment is only allowed under India WPC GSR-38 for 5.8GHz band
regulation configuration.
Unregulated
In countries where the radio is not regulated the equipment can be operated in any regulation
configuration, best results will be obtained using Universal regulation configuration.
Safety Practices
Applicable requirements of National Electrical Code (NEC), NFPA 70; and the National
Electrical Safety Code, ANSI/IEEE C2, must be considered during installation.
NOTES:
1. A Primary Protector is not required to protect the exposed wiring as long as the exposed
wiring length is limited to less than or equal to 140 feet, and instructions are provided to
avoid exposure of wiring to accidental contact with lightning and power conductors in
accordance with NEC Sections 725-54 (c) and 800-30.
In all other cases, an appropriate Listed Primary Protector must be provided. Refer to Articles
800 and 810 of the NEC for details.
2. For protection of ODU against direct lightning strikes, appropriate requirements of NFPA
780 should be considered in addition to NEC.
3. For Canada, appropriate requirements of the CEC 22.1 including Section 60 and additional
requirements of CAN/CSA-B72 must be considered as applicable.
Warning
• Where Outdoor units are configurable by software to Tx power values
other than those for which the product is certified, it is the responsi-
bility of the Professional Installer to restrict the Tx power to the certi-
fied limits.
• This product was tested with special accessories - indoor unit (IDU or
PoE), FTP CAT-5e shielded cable with sealing gasket, 10 AWG
grounding cable - which must be used with the unit to insure compli-
ance.

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 v
Brief
Table of Contents
Part 1: Basic Installation
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Site Preparation
Chapter 3 Hardware Installation
Part 2: Sector Installation
Chapter 4 Getting Started with the RADWIN Manager
Chapter 5 Installing the Sector
Part 3: Sector Management
Chapter 6 Managing the Sector
Chapter 7 Direct HSU Configuration
Chapter 8 Bringing Up a Mobility Sector
Chapter 9 Monitoring and Diagnostics
Part 4: Site Synchronization
Chapter 10 Hub Site Synchronization
Chapter 11 Using the RADWIN GSU
Part 5: Advanced Installation Topics
Chapter 12 Software Upgrade
Chapter 13 VLAN Functionality with RADWIN 5000 HPMP
Chapter 14 False Radar Mitigation Facilities
Chapter 15 FCC/IC DFS Considerations
Chapter 16 Quality of Service
Part 6: Field Installation Topics
Chapter 17 Pole and Wall Installation
Chapter 18 Lightning Protection and Grounding Guidelines
Chapter 19 Link Budget Calculator
Chapter 20 Spectrum View
Chapter 21 Using the Web Interface
Part 7: Product Reference
Appendix A Technical Specifications
Appendix B Wiring Specifications
Appendix C MIB Reference
Appendix D RF Exposure
Appendix E Setting Antenna Parameters
Appendix F Regional Notice: French Canadian
Index

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 vi
Full
Table of Contents
Part 1: Basic Installation
Chapter 1 Introduction
Welcome to RADWIN 5000 HPMP!...............................................................1-1
RADWIN 5000 HPMP Highlights....................................................................1-1
Some Terminology ......................................................................................1-2
What’s New in Release 3.3.30 ......................................................................1-2
Conventions Used in this Manual ..................................................................1-9
Chapter 2 Site Preparation
Planning the Sector Site...............................................................................2-1
The Site Survey...........................................................................................2-1
Stage 1: Preliminary Survey .........................................................................2-2
Stage 2: Physical Survey..............................................................................2-3
Stage 3: RF Survey......................................................................................2-4
RF Planning for Dense Installations and Collocated Sites ................................2-4
Chapter 3 Hardware Installation
Safety Practices...........................................................................................3-1
Package Contents........................................................................................3-2
Additional Tools and Materials Required...................................................... 3-11
Hardware Installation Sequence ................................................................. 3-12
Outdoor installation ................................................................................... 3-13
Aligning HSUs to a HBS.............................................................................. 3-19
Part 2: Sector Installation
Chapter 4 Getting Started with the RADWIN Manager
What we will do here...................................................................................4-1
Installing the RADWIN Manager Application ..................................................4-1
Getting Started with the RADWIN Manager ...................................................4-3
The RADWIN Manager log-on Concept..........................................................4-6
Log-on Errors and Cautions..........................................................................4-8
Three Sector Display Views ..........................................................................4-9
Continuing with our Example Sector ........................................................... 4-13
Exploring the RADWIN Manager Main Window - HBS ................................... 4-16
Exploring the RADWIN Manager Main Window - HSU................................... 4-27
Logging on to a HSU ................................................................................. 4-27
Setting RADWIN Manager Preferences ........................................................ 4-30
What Comes Next?.................................................................................... 4-34
Chapter 5 Installing the Sector
Scope of this Chapter ..................................................................................5-1
Concepts ....................................................................................................5-1
Working with Nomadic HSUs ........................................................................5-2
Workflow....................................................................................................5-2
Default RADWIN 5000 HPMP Settings...........................................................5-3
Configuring the Sector out of the Box - IP Addresses .....................................5-6
Configuring a fixed HSU From the HBS........................................................ 5-17
Configuring a nomadic HSU From the HBS .................................................. 5-22
Registering a fixed HSU for service ............................................................. 5-24
Registering a nomadic HSU for service........................................................ 5-28
Registering the HSUs for Service ................................................................5-31
Choosing Diversity Antenna Mode During Registration.................................. 5-31
Deactivating the HBS................................................................................. 5-31

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 vii
Deregistering an HSU ................................................................................ 5-32
Where has my HSU gone?.......................................................................... 5-33
Saving the HBS Settings for Reuse as a Template........................................5-33
Creating Nomadic Entries for a Sector from a HBS Template ........................ 5-33
Part 3: Sector Management
Chapter 6 Managing the Sector
Scope of this Chapter ..................................................................................6-1
Configuring a HBS .......................................................................................6-1
HSU Connection Table ............................................................................... 6-21
Configuring an HSU from the HBS Main Window..........................................6-22
Replacing an HSU...................................................................................... 6-34
Updating HSU Services .............................................................................. 6-36
Suspending an HSU ................................................................................... 6-36
Changing the Sector Band.......................................................................... 6-37
Configuration with Telnet........................................................................... 6-44
Chapter 7 Direct HSU Configuration
Scope of this Chapter ..................................................................................7-1
Configuring an HSU .....................................................................................7-1
Chapter 8 Bringing Up a Mobility Sector
Scope of this Chapter ..................................................................................8-1
Concepts ....................................................................................................8-1
What You Need...........................................................................................8-2
Getting Started ...........................................................................................8-2
Preparing the HBS.......................................................................................8-3
Registering HMUs........................................................................................8-6
Saving the HBS Settings for Reuse as a Template........................................8-10
Creating a Sector from a HBS Template ...................................................... 8-10
Chapter 9 Monitoring and Diagnostics
Retrieving Link Information (Get Diagnostics)................................................9-1
Link Compatibility........................................................................................9-4
Throughput Checking ..................................................................................9-5
Recent Events.............................................................................................9-7
Performance Monitoring...............................................................................9-9
RADWIN Manager Traps ............................................................................9-14
Active Alarms............................................................................................ 9-15
Other Diagnostic Aids ................................................................................ 9-16
Part 4: Site Synchronization
Chapter 10 Hub Site Synchronization
What is Hub Site Synchronization?............................................................. 10-1
Hardware Installation ................................................................................ 10-2
ODU/HSS Unit Connection Pinout ............................................................... 10-6
Radio Frame Pattern (RFP).........................................................................10-6
Sector Configuration and HSS .................................................................... 10-8
Chapter 11 Using the RADWIN GSU
What is it for............................................................................................. 11-1
RADWIN GSU Functionality ........................................................................ 11-1
Typical GSU Scenarios ............................................................................... 11-1
GSU Redundancy ...................................................................................... 11-3
RADWIN GSU Kit Contents......................................................................... 11-4
RADWIN GSU Installation...........................................................................11-4
GSU Monitoring and Diagnostics............................................................... 11-16
GSU Telnet Support................................................................................. 11-16
Software Update for GSUs........................................................................ 11-17

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 viii
Part 5: Advanced Installation Topics
Chapter 12 Software Upgrade
What is the Software Upgrade Utility?......................................................... 12-1
Upgrading an Installed Sector .................................................................... 12-2
Downgrading HSU Software .......................................................................12-5
Chapter 13 VLAN Functionality with RADWIN 5000 HPMP
VLAN Tagging - Overview .......................................................................... 13-1
Scope of this Chapter ................................................................................ 13-1
Requirements............................................................................................ 13-1
VLAN Tagging ........................................................................................... 13-1
VLAN Configuration Using the RADWIN Manager ......................................... 13-5
Chapter 14 False Radar Mitigation Facilities
Who needs it ............................................................................................ 14-1
DFS and False Radar Mitigation .................................................................. 14-1
Configuring False Radar Mitigation.............................................................. 14-2
FCC/IC Considerations ............................................................................... 14-3
Chapter 15 FCC/IC DFS Considerations
FCC 5.4GHz Device Registration ................................................................. 15-1
Registering the Device............................................................................... 15-1
TDWR Table ............................................................................................. 15-5
Chapter 16 Quality of Service
Prerequisites ............................................................................................. 16-1
QoS - Overview......................................................................................... 16-1
Setting up QoS.......................................................................................... 16-1
Part 6: Field Installation Topics
Chapter 17 Pole and Wall Installation
ODU Mounting Kit Contents........................................................................ 17-1
Mounting an ODU on a Pole ....................................................................... 17-2
Mounting an ODU on a Wall....................................................................... 17-3
Mounting a Small Form Factor HSU............................................................. 17-4
Mounting an External Antenna ................................................................... 17-5
Mounting a Connectorized ODU Horizontally................................................ 17-5
Chapter 18 Lightning Protection and Grounding Guidelines
Grounding for Antenna Cable ..................................................................... 18-1
Grounding for Indoor/Outdoor Units ........................................................... 18-2
The RADWIN Lightning Protection Kit ......................................................... 18-3
Using Lightning Protectors and Grounding................................................... 18-3
Mounting RADWIN Lighting Protection unit .................................................18-6
Internal ESD Protection circuits .................................................................. 18-7
Chapter 19 Link Budget Calculator
Overview .................................................................................................. 19-1
Calculations .............................................................................................. 19-2
About the Fresnel Zone.............................................................................. 19-3
Running the Link Budget Calculator ........................................................... 19-5
Chapter 20 Spectrum View
What is Spectrum View.............................................................................. 20-1
Who needs it ............................................................................................ 20-1
Scope of this Chapter ................................................................................ 20-1
Two Ways to Run Spectrum View ............................................................... 20-1
Where is the Spectrum View Data stored .................................................... 20-2
Spectrum View Main Window: HBS ............................................................. 20-2
Spectrum View Display Function Buttons..................................................... 20-4
Running Spectrum View from the HBS ........................................................ 20-5

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 ix
Running Spectrum View from a HSU........................................................... 20-7
Zooming in and out ................................................................................... 20-9
Chapter 21 Using the Web Interface
What is it For ............................................................................................21-1
Who Needs it ............................................................................................ 21-1
How it Works ............................................................................................ 21-2
What it Provides........................................................................................ 21-4
Prerequisites ............................................................................................. 21-4
Special Considerations Working with the WI................................................21-4
Scope of this Chapter ................................................................................ 21-5
Logging on ............................................................................................... 21-5
HBS Management...................................................................................... 21-6
HSU Management ................................................................................... 21-12
Part 7: Product Reference
Appendix A Technical Specifications
Scope of these Specifications .......................................................................A-1
ODU - HBS and HSU....................................................................................A-1
HSU-610 - HSU with AC Power Feeding.........................................................A-4
IDU-H (Aggregation Unit) ............................................................................A-5
GbE PoE Device - Indoor, AC........................................................................A-6
PoE Device - Outdoor, DC ...........................................................................A-7
GSU ...........................................................................................................A-8
Lightning Protector......................................................................................A-9
Fast Ethernet CAT-5e cable repeater...........................................................A-10
Antenna Characteristics .............................................................................A-11
Appendix B Wiring Specifications
ODU-PoE Cable (HBS and HSU)....................................................................B-1
HBS/HSS Unit Connection Pinout ..................................................................B-1
User Port Connectors..................................................................................B-2
DC Power Terminals ....................................................................................B-2
SU2-AC Power Terminal...............................................................................B-2
Appendix C MIB Reference
Introduction................................................................................................C-1
Interface API ..............................................................................................C-1
Private MIB Structure ..................................................................................C-2
MIB Parameters ..........................................................................................C-3
RADWIN Manager Traps ............................................................................C-35
Appendix D RF Exposure
Appendix E Setting Antenna Parameters
Antenna Issues ...........................................................................................E-1
About Single and Dual Antennas...................................................................E-1
Considerations for Changing Antenna Parameters..........................................E-3
Appendix F Regional Notice: French Canadian
Procédures de sécurité ................................................................................F-1
Installation sur pylône et mur.......................................................................F-3
Index

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 x
List of Figures
FIGURE 1-1 SINGLE SECTOR BASE STATION..............................................................1-4
FIGURE 1-2 SMALL FORM FACTOR ANTENNA IN CONNECTORIZED ODU .............................1-4
FIGURE 1-3 HIGH GAIN INTEGRATED ANTENNA...........................................................1-4
FIGURE 1-4 CONNECTORIZED ODU.........................................................................1-4
FIGURE 1-5 SMALL FORM FACTOR HSU WITH AC POWER FEEDING .................................1-5
FIGURE 1-6 IDU-H FRONT VIEW - SINGLE CONFIGURATION ..........................................1-5
FIGURE 1-7 IDU-H FRONT VIEW - DOUBLE CONFIGURATION .........................................1-6
FIGURE 1-8 GENERAL GSU CONFIGURATION .............................................................1-6
FIGURE 1-9 LEFT: RADWIN LIGHTNING PROTECTOR RIGHT: USING RADWIN LIGHTNING PROTECTORS
1-7
FIGURE 1-10 USING AN ETHERNET REPEATER WITH LIGHTNING PROTECTORS. ...................1-8
FIGURE 3-1 ODU MOUNTING KIT...........................................................................3-3
FIGURE 3-2 RADWIN 5505 HSU - REAR AND METAL TIE ...........................................3-3
FIGURE 3-3 MOUNTING ADAPTER............................................................................3-3
FIGURE 3-4 ODU FORM FACTORS: TOP - STANDARD ODU PACKAGE, BOTTOM - SMALL FORM FACTOR
HSU....................................................................................................................3-4
FIGURE 3-5 EXTERNAL ANTENNAS FOR USE WITH RADWIN 5000 HBS - LEFT: 60° OR 90° FLAT EX-
TERNAL; RIGHT: 120° INTEGRATED.............................................................................3-5
FIGURE 3-6 EXTERNAL ANTENNAS FOR USE WITH RADWIN 55XX HSU - LEFT: STANDARD INTEGRATED;
CENTER AND RIGHT, PARABOLIC, DIFFERENT SIZES AND GAINS............................................3-6
FIGURE 3-7 GBE POE DEVICE................................................................................3-6
FIGURE 3-8 RUGGEDIZED DC-POE DEVICE: INPUT IS -20 TO -60 VDC (SINGLE INPUT) .....3-7
FIGURE 3-9 IDU-H KIT CONTENTS .........................................................................3-8
FIGURE 3-10 IDU-H FRONT VIEW - SINGLE CONFIGURATION.........................................3-8
FIGURE 3-11 IDU-H FRONT VIEW - DOUBLE CONFIGURATION........................................3-9
FIGURE 3-12 IDU-H FRONT PANEL .........................................................................3-9
FIGURE 3-13 IDU-H POWER CONNECTORS ............................................................. 3-10
FIGURE 3-14 HSS INTERCONNECTION UNIT............................................................ 3-10
FIGURE 3-15 GENERAL GSU CONFIGURATION.......................................................... 3-11
FIGURE 3-16 TYPICAL HSU INSTALLATION WITH EXTERNAL ANTENNA............................ 3-12
FIGURE 3-17 RADWIN LIGHTNING PROTECTOR RIGHT: USING RADWIN LIGHTNING PROTECTORS3-
15 FIGURE 3-18 SING AN ETHERNET REPEATER WITH LIGHTNING PROTECTORS..................... 3-16
FIGURE 3-23 BEEP SEQUENCE FOR ANTENNA ALIGNMENT............................................ 3-20
FIGURE 4-1 PINGING THE BASE STATION. .................................................................4-5
FIGURE 4-3 EXTENDED LOG-ON WINDOW .................................................................4-6
FIGURE 4-4 LOG ON WINDOW EXPOSING THE USER TYPES. ...........................................4-7
FIGURE 4-5 UNSUPPORTED DEVICE MESSAGE .............................................................4-8
FIGURE 4-6 UNREACHABLE DEVICE MESSAGE .............................................................4-8
FIGURE 4-7 INVALID USER TYPE OR PASSWORD..........................................................4-9
FIGURE 4-8 DEFAULT SECTOR DISPLAY - TABLE VIEW................................................ 4-10
FIGURE 4-9 SECTOR DISPLAY - MAP VIEW .............................................................. 4-11
FIGURE 4-10 SECTOR DISPLAY - LIST VIEW ............................................................ 4-12
FIGURE 4-13 HBS MAIN BUTTON MENU ................................................................. 4-16
FIGURE 4-14 SECTOR STATUS PANEL..................................................................... 4-16
FIGURE 4-15 BASE STATION DETAIL PANEL ............................................................ 4-17
FIGURE 4-16 EVENTS LOG PANEL ......................................................................... 4-19
FIGURE 4-17 EVENTS LOG FILTER SELECTION .......................................................... 4-19
FIGURE 4-18 HBS MAIN WINDOW (REDUCED) - UP TO 32 HSUS............................... 4-19
FIGURE 4-19 HBS MAIN WINDOW (REDUCED) - INDICATING APROBLEM....................... 4-20
FIGURE 4-20 HSU DISPLAY - DETAIL..................................................................... 4-21
FIGURE 4-21 HSU DISPLAY - CONTEXT MENU (RIGHT CLICK)....................................... 4-22

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 xi
FIGURE 4-22 HBS MAIN WINDOW - MAP VIEW....................................................... 4-22
FIGURE 4-23 HBS/HSU STATUS LIGHTS................................................................ 4-23
FIGURE 4-24 NAVIGATION TOOL BAR .................................................................... 4-23
FIGURE 4-25 HSU STATUS BOXES - DETAIL, INDICATING PROBLEMS.............................. 4-25
FIGURE 4-26 HSU STATUS BOXES - DETAIL, NORMAL OPERATION. LEFT: FIXED HSU RIGHT: NOMADIC
HSU.................................................................................................................. 4-25
FIGURE 4-27 HSU DISPLAY - CONTEXT MENU (RIGHT CLICK). SAME AS Figure 4-21 ..... 4-26
FIGURE 4-28 HSU ONHBS DISPLAY - EXTRACT. SCROLL RIGHT FOR MORE HSU FIELDS ... 4-26
FIGURE 4-29 LOGGING ON TO AHSU ................................................................... 4-28
FIGURE 4-30 OPENING RADWIN MANAGER WINDOW - HSU...................................... 4-28
FIGURE 4-31 HSU MAIN BUTTON MENU ................................................................. 4-29
FIGURE 5-1 LOGGING ON WITH FACTORY DEFAULT IP ADDRESS .....................................5-6
FIGURE 5-2 LOGGING ON WITH LOCAL CONNECTION ..................................................5-7
FIGURE 5-3 MAIN WINDOW FOR UN-CONFIGURED HBS ODU ........................................5-8
FIGURE 5-4 ACTIVATED HBS RECOGNIZING INSTALLED BUT UNCONFIGURED HSUS........... 5-17
FIGURE 5-7 HBS NOMADIC CONFIGURATION........................................................... 5-28
FIGURE 5-8 FULLY FUNCTIONAL MIXED FIXED AND NOMADIC SECTOR - TABLE VIEW .......... 5-29
FIGURE 5-9 FULLY FUNCTIONAL SECTOR, TWO FIXED ONE NOMADIC HSU - MAP VIEW....... 5-30
FIGURE 5-10 FULLY FUNCTIONAL SECTOR: TWO FIXED ONE NOMADIC HSU - MAP VIEW WITH DETAILS
5-31
FIGURE 6-1 VLAN FOR MANAGEMENT .....................................................................6-7
FIGURE 6-2 SECTOR SECURITY SETTINGS ............................................................... 6-10
FIGURE 6-5 CHANGING THE COMMUNITY STRING ..................................................... 6-13
FIGURE 6-6 ALTERNATIVE COMMUNITY DIALOG BOX ................................................. 6-13
FIGURE 6-7 DATE AND TIME CONFIGURATION ......................................................... 6-15
FIGURE 6-8 CHANGE DATE AND TIME.................................................................... 6-15
FIGURE 6-9 SETTING ETHERNET SERVICES .............................................................. 6-16
FIGURE 6-10 HBS COLLOCATED CLIENT OR INDEPENDENT UNIT................................... 6-17
FIGURE 6-11 HBS COLLOCATED MASTER................................................................ 6-17
FIGURE 6-12 RESTORE FACTORY SETTINGS AND LICENSE ACTIVATION .......................... 6-20
FIGURE 6-13 HSU INTERCOMMUNICATION - CONNECTION TABLE................................. 6-22
FIGURE 6-14 HSU CONFIGURATION WINDOW (HBS) ................................................ 6-23
FIGURE 6-15 HSU CONFIGURATION - SETTING ANTENNA TYPE AND PARAMETERS ............. 6-24
FIGURE 6-16 HSU CONFIGURATION - IP ADDRESSES ................................................ 6-25
FIGURE 6-17 UNIT 10.101 IS DOWN AND UNIT 10.1023IS AVAILABLE AND NOT REGISTERED6-34
FIGURE 6-21 TELNET SESSION LOG ON TO THE HBS................................................. 6-44
FIGURE 6-22 TELNET MANAGEMENT WINDOW - HSU ................................................ 6-46
FIGURE 7-1 DIRECT OR OVER THE AIR CONNECTION TO AREGISTERED HSU .....................7-2
FIGURE 7-2 DIRECT CONNECTION TO ASTAND-ALONE HSU OUT OF THE BOX ....................7-2
FIGURE 7-3 HSU CONFIGURATION - AIR INTERFACE FOR REGISTERED FIXED HSU.............7-4
FIGURE 7-4 HSU CONFIGURATION - AIR INTERFACE FOR STAND-ALONE HSU ...................7-4
FIGURE 7-5 HSU CONFIGURATION - AIR INTERFACE FOR REGISTERED NOMADIC HSU OR HMU7-5
FIGURE 7-6 HSU CONFIGURATION - AIR INTERFACE FOR ASTAND-ALONE NOMADIC HSU OR HMU7-5
FIGURE 7-7 HSU CONFIGURATION - AIR INTERFACE UNREGISTERED HSU .......................7-5
FIGURE 8-1 MOBILE HBS AFTER INITIAL LOG-ON .......................................................8-3
FIGURE 8-2 HBS MOBILITY CONFIGURATION ............................................................8-4
FIGURE 9-3 TYPICAL INCOMPATIBLY MESSAGES FOR HSUSON HBS DISPLAY.....................9-4
FIGURE 9-4 THIS HSU REQUIRES ASOFTWARE UPGRADE .............................................9-5
FIGURE 9-5 RECENT EVENTS: LEFT- HBS, CENTER HSU FROM HBS, RIGHT HSU DIRECT...9-8
FIGURE 9-6 PERFORMANCE MONITORING: LEFT- HBS, CENTER HSU FROM HBS, RIGHT HSU DIRECT
9-9
FIGURE 9-7 SETTING THE UPPER TRAFFIC THRESHOLD ............................................... 9-10
FIGURE 9-8 HBS - PERFORMANCE MONITORING REPORT - VALID DATA ......................... 9-10
FIGURE 9-9 HBS - PERFORMANCE MONITORING REPORT - SHOWING INVALID DATA ......... 9-11

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 xii
FIGURE 9-10 HSU - PERFORMANCE MONITORING REPORT - BOTH VALID AND INVALID DATA (1 OF 3)
9-12
FIGURE 9-11 HSU - PERFORMANCE MONITORING REPORT - BOTH VALID AND INVALID DATA (2 OF 3)
9-12
FIGURE 9-12 HSU - PERFORMANCE MONITORING REPORT - BOTH VALID AND INVALID DATA (3 OF 3)
9-13
FIGURE 10-1 INTERFERENCE CAUSED BY COLLOCATED UNITS ....................................... 10-1
FIGURE 10-2 COLLOCATED UNITS USING HUB SITE SYNCHRONIZATION (1) .................... 10-2
FIGURE 10-3 COLLOCATED UNITS USING HUB SITE SYNCHRONIZATION (2) .................... 10-2
FIGURE 10-4 HSS INTERCONNECTION UNIT............................................................ 10-3
FIGURE 10-5 HSS WIRING SCHEMATIC.................................................................. 10-4
FIGURE 10-6 HSS SYNC SIGNAL PATH WITH ODU 1 AS HSS MASTER........................... 10-4
FIGURE 10-7 CASCADING TWO HSS UNITS ............................................................. 10-5
FIGURE 10-8 CASCADING THREE HSS UNITS ........................................................... 10-5
FIGURE 10-9 RADIO FRAME PATTERN.................................................................... 10-7
FIGURE 10-10 HSS SETTINGS WINDOW................................................................. 10-9
FIGURE 10-11 SETTING HBS AS HSM OR HSC....................................................... 10-9
FIGURE 10-12 HBS AS HSM ............................................................................ 10-10
FIGURE 11-1 GSU SCENARIO - INDEPENDENT DISTRIBUTED SITES................................ 11-2
FIGURE 11-2 GSU SCENARIO - COMMUNICATING DISTRIBUTED SITES ........................... 11-2
FIGURE 11-3 PHASE SHIFTED TRANSMISSION - PHASE SHIFT IS 1/2 THE RFD ................. 11-3
FIGURE 11-4 MAKE THE GSUSTHE FIRST TWO COLLOCATED UNITS .............................. 11-4
FIGURE 11-5 GENERAL GSU CONFIGURATION.......................................................... 11-5
FIGURE 11-6 GSU MAIN WIDOW AT STARTUP ......................................................... 11-6
FIGURE 11-7 SITE CONFIGURATION: SYSTEM .......................................................... 11-7
FIGURE 11-8 SITE CONFIGURATION: GPS SYNC UNIT............................................... 11-8
FIGURE 11-9 SITE CONFIGURATION: MANAGEMENT ................................................ 11-11
FIGURE 11-10 SITE CONFIGURATION: INVENTORY.................................................. 11-12
FIGURE 11-11 SITE CONFIGURATION: SECURITY.................................................... 11-13
FIGURE 11-12 SETTING THE DATE AND TIME FOR TRAP REPORTING ............................ 11-14
FIGURE 11-13 SITE CONFIGURATION: OPERATIONS ................................................ 11-15
FIGURE 11-14 SITE CONFIGURATION: OPERATIONS ................................................ 11-16
FIGURE 12-1 SOFTWARE UPGRADE UTILITY - MAIN WINDOW...................................... 12-2
FIGURE 12-5 SOFTWARE UPGRADE IN PROGRESS - NOTE THE STOP BUTTON ................... 12-4
FIGURE 12-6 SOFTWARE UPGRADE COMPLETED SUCCESSFULLY ..................................... 12-4
FIGURE 13-1 VLAN SCENARIOS HANDLED BY RADWIN 5000 HBS.............................. 13-2
FIGURE 13-2 SEPARATING CLIENT DATA STREAMS USING DOUBLE TAGGING ..................... 13-2
FIGURE 17-1 LARGE CLAMP ................................................................................ 17-1
FIGURE 17-2 SMALL CLAMP ................................................................................ 17-1
FIGURE 17-3 ARM ............................................................................................ 17-1
FIGURE 17-4 MOUNTING ON APOLE ..................................................................... 17-2
FIGURE 17-5 MOUNTING ON AWALL .................................................................... 17-3
FIGURE 17-6 RADWIN 5505 HSU - REAR AND METAL TIE ....................................... 17-4
FIGURE 17-7 MOUNTING ADAPTER........................................................................ 17-4
FIGURE 18-1 GROUNDING ANTENNA CABLES............................................................ 18-2
FIGURE 18-2 RADWIN LIGHTNING PROTECTION KIT................................................ 18-3
FIGURE 18-3 GROUNDING ATYPICAL POLE INSTALLATION........................................... 18-4
FIGURE 18-4 GROUNDING ATYPICAL WALL INSTALLATION .......................................... 18-5
FIGURE 18-5 ODU LIGHTNING PROTECTOR AND GROUNDING...................................... 18-5
FIGURE 18-6 LIGHTNING PROTECTOR AND GROUNDING AT BUILDING ENTRY POINT ........... 18-7
FIGURE 19-1 FRESNEL ZONE ............................................................................... 19-4
FIGURE 19-3 LINK BUDGET WINDOW - STARTUP ...................................................... 19-5
FIGURE 19-4 RADWIN 5000 HPMP LBC MAIN WINDOW ........................................ 19-6
FIGURE 19-5 BAND SELECTOR ............................................................................. 19-7

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 xiii
FIGURE 19-6 CALCULATION OF DISTANCE FROM SITE COORDINATES ............................. 19-8
FIGURE 19-7 CLIMACTIC C FACTORS..................................................................... 19-9
FIGURE 19-8 CLIMACTIC C FACTOR DESCRIPTION................................................... 19-10
FIGURE 19-9 WORLD MAP SHOWING C FACTOR CONTOURS....................................... 19-10
FIGURE 19-10 LBC - RESULTS SECTION .............................................................. 19-11
FIGURE 20-1 SPECTRUM VIEW DATA PANEL FOR THE HBS, READY FOR DATA .................. 20-4
FIGURE 20-2 SPECTRUM VIEW ANALYSIS COLOR CODES ............................................. 20-6
FIGURE 20-3 HSU SPECTRUM ANALYSIS IN COMPLETE ISOLATION FROM THE SECTOR......... 20-8
FIGURE 20-4 HSU SPECTRUM ANALYSIS WITHIN THE SECTOR ...................................... 20-8
FIGURE 21-1 WEB INTERFACE - LOG ON ................................................................ 21-5
FIGURE 21-2 WEB INTERFACE - MAIN WINDOW, HBS............................................... 21-6
FIGURE 21-3 SECTOR STATUS PANEL..................................................................... 21-7
FIGURE 21-4 HSU HAYDN DEREGISTERED .............................................................. 21-7
FIGURE C-1 TOP LEVEL SECTIONS OF THE PRIVATE MIB..............................................C-2
FIGURE C-2 PRODUCT MIB...................................................................................C-3
FIGURE F-1 GRANDE CLAME...................................................................................F-3
FIGURE F-2 PETITE CLAME .................................................................................... F-3
FIGURE F-3 BRAS ...............................................................................................F-3
FIGURE F-4 MONTAGE SUR UN PYLÔNE ....................................................................F-4
FIGURE F-5 MONTAGE SUR UN MUR ........................................................................F-5

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 xiv
List of Tables
TABLE 4-1 PC REQUIREMENTS FOR THE RADWIN MANAGER APPLICATION ......................4-1
TABLE 4-2 PRECONFIGURED SETUP .........................................................................4-3
TABLE 4-3 USER TYPES, DEFAULT PASSWORDS AND FUNCTION .......................................4-7
TABLE 4-4 RADIO PLAN FOR ASMALL SECTOR ......................................................... 4-13
TABLE 4-6 HBS MAIN BUTTON BAR FUNCTIONS........................................................ 4-16
TABLE 4-8 HSU STATUS BALL COLOR CODES........................................................... 4-21
TABLE 4-9 HBS/HSU STATUS LIGHT COLOR CODES .................................................. 4-23
TABLE 4-10 NAVIGATION TOOL BAR BUTTON UNCTIONS ............................................. 4-23
TABLE 4-11 HBS MAIN WINDOW LIST DISPLAY CONTEXT MENU AND BUTTON BAR FUNCTIONS4-27
TABLE 4-12 HSU MAIN BUTTON BAR FUNCTIONS...................................................... 4-29
TABLE 5-1 DEFAULT SETTINGS...............................................................................5-3
TABLE 5-2 PARAMETER VALUES USED IN THE DEMONSTRATION SECTOR ............................5-4
TABLE 6-1 HBS TELNET - DISPLAY COMMANDS ....................................................... 6-45
TABLE 6-2 HBS TELNET - SET IMMEDIATE COMMANDS.............................................. 6-45
TABLE 6-3 HBS TELNET - SET COMMANDS REQUIRING RESET ..................................... 6-45
TABLE 6-4 HSU TELNET - DISPLAY COMMANDS ....................................................... 6-46
TABLE 6-5 HSU TELNET - SET IMMEDIATE COMMANDS ............................................. 6-46
TABLE 6-6 HSU TELNET - SET COMMANDS REQUIRING RESET..................................... 6-47
TABLE 9-1 GET DIAGNOSTICS DATA AND DESCRIPTION ...............................................9-1
TABLE 9-2 HBS PERFORMANCE MONITORING FIELDS ................................................ 9-10
TABLE 9-3 HSU PERFORMANCE MONITORING FIELDS ................................................ 9-13
TABLE 9-4 RADWIN MANAGER TRAP MESSAGES ..................................................... 9-14
TABLE 10-1 ODU/HSS UNIT CONNECTION PINOUT.................................................. 10-6
TABLE 10-2 RADIO FRAME PATTERN TABLE - RADWIN 5000 HBS ............................. 10-7
TABLE 10-3 RADIO FRAME PATTERN TABLE - RADWIN 2000 .................................... 10-7
TABLE 10-4 RADIO FRAME PATTERN TABLE - WINLINK 1000 ..................................... 10-7
TABLE 10-5 LEGEND FOR RADIO FRAME PATTERN TABLES .......................................... 10-7
TABLE 10-6 EXTERNAL PULSE STATUS ................................................................. 10-10
TABLE 12-1 SWU FILES BY PRODUCT.................................................................... 12-3
TABLE 13-1 PORT SETTINGS - INGRESS DIRECTION................................................... 13-4
TABLE 13-2 PORT SETTINGS - EGRESS DIRECTION.................................................... 13-4
TABLE 13-3 FURTHER VLAN CONFIGURATION OPTIONS AND RESULTS BY TAG MODE......... 13-7
TABLE 15-1 LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE LOCATIONS OF TDWRS................................... 15-5
TABLE 16-1 DEFAULT PRIORITIES AN DALLOCATION BY VLAN ID AND DIFFSERV............. 16-1
TABLE 17-1 BILL OF MATERIALS: ODU MOUNTING KIT.............................................. 17-1
TABLE 17-2 MOUNTING ADAPTER KIT FOR RADWIN 5505 HSU................................. 17-4
TABLE 20-1 SPECTRUM VIEW ANALYSIS DISPLAY BUTTONS FUNCTIONALITY .................... 20-5
TABLE 21-1 PRECONFIGURED SETUP...................................................................... 21-2
TABLE B-1 ODU-POE RJ-45 CONNECTOR PINOUT .....................................................B-1
TABLE B-2 HBS/HSS UNIT CONNECTION PINOUT ......................................................B-1
TABLE B-3 FAST ETHERNET CONNECTOR PINOUT .......................................................B-2
TABLE B-4 TERMINAL BLOCK 2-PIN -48VDC.............................................................B-2
TABLE B-5 SU2-AC POWER PIN ASSIGNMENTS...........................................................B-2
TABLE C-1 SUPPORTED RFC 1213 VARIABLES ..........................................................C-3
TABLE C-2 PRIVATE MIB PARAMETERS ....................................................................C-5
TABLE C-3 MIB TRAPS ......................................................................................C-30
TABLE D-1 SAFETY DISTANCES FOR RADWIN 5000 HPMP FCC AND IC PRODUCTS ........ D-1
TABLE D-2 SAFETY DISTANCES FOR RADWIN 5000 HPMP ETSI PRODUCTS.................. D-1
TABLE E-1 MIMO - DIVERSITY SETTINGS.................................................................E-2
TABLE E-2 RADWIN 5000 HPMP AIR RATES ..........................................................E-3

USERMANUAL
RADWIN5000HPMPPOINTTO
MULTIPOINTBROADBANDWIRELESS
Release3.3.30
Part1:BasicInstallation

RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 1-1
Chapter 1
Introduction
Welcome to RADWIN 5000 HPMP!
RADWIN 5000 HPMP delivers up to 250Mbps and is the ideal choice for last mile enterprise
connectivity and high-end applications that demand assured performance with guaranteed
bandwidth per subscriber.
RADWIN 5000 HPMP sector base station delivers up to 250Mbps, providing the highest end
user capacity in the market to best support data and high resolution video applications, today
and tomorrow. By delivering high capacity over a single radio unit, RADWIN solution saves
valuable tower space, eases maintenance efforts and reduces the total cost of ownership per
megabit. Offering a variety of powerful subscriber units (HSUs), RADWIN 5000 HPMP enables
service capacity of up to 50Mbps for enterprise customers.
RADWIN 5000 HPMP subscriber units may now be
•setatfixedlocations
• nomadic - move about within and across contiguous sectors covering a specific area
such as an airport or sport complex. Service is provided when the vehicle is stationary.
• mobile - set on railway carriages with extremely fast hand-over across successive
track sectors
RADWIN 5000 HPMP Highlights
• High capacity Sector Base Station
• 250 Mbps aggregate throughput
• Ethernet connectivity
• High capacity end user equipment - 5, 10, 20, 25, 50Mbps
• Up to 32 Subscriber Units per sector
• Guaranteed SLA and capacity per Subscriber Unit
• Small and constant latency - 4 to 20msec typical under full sector load
• Wide range of frequency bands - 4.9 to 6.4 GHz
• Mobility and Nomadic functionality

Some Terminology Chapter 1
RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 1-2
Some Terminology
A Point to Multipoint network is typically abbreviated to PtMP. The PtMP networks
described in this Manual are of course, radio links.
A PtMP link consists of at least one high Base Station radio linked to several Subscriber
Unit radios. The SUs are sometimes called Customer Premises Equipment (CPEs). The
terminology comes from the field of telephony.
The RADWIN 5000 HPMP product suite supports considerably higher capacity than other cur-
rent technologies (such as Wi-Max). We distinguish between generic BSs and SUs and RAD-
WIN units, relabeling the latter, HBSs and HSUs (H = high capacity).
The radio links are effected by using a sector antenna with the HBS. The HSUs use direc-
tional antennas aligned to the HBS.
A Sector consists of a HBS and a group of HSUs within the angular sector covered by the
HBS antenna. A Sector is typically 60°, 90° or 120° depending of course on the choice of
antenna.
HBSs may be collocated to provide sectorial coverage up to 360°.
The RF characteristics of a Sector will be common to each radio: Frequency (regulation),
band and channel bandwidth. Adjacent Sectors in a PtMP network will typically use different
frequencies and non-overlapping bands to mitigate HBS self interference.
A HSU may be defined as fixed, nomadic or mobile.
A fixed HSU is just that - installed at a fixed location.
A nomadic HSU is attached to a vehicle that moves about within a sector and across sectors
inside a well defined area. Service is provided when the vehicle is stationary.
A mobile HSU (HMU) provides service while the vehicle to which it is attached is moving or
stationary. The vehicle is typically a railway carriage, a car (automobile) or a ship.
What’s New in Release 3.3.30
Release 3.3.30 is a LA release, which in addition to many hardware improvements, has three
completely new features:
• Increased capacity to 250Mbps
• Small form factor HBS of 25Mbps with integrated antenna
• Enhanced robustness by Adaptive Interference Sensitivity
• Split Sector ID to differentiate between fixed and Mobility/Nomadic HSUs
• A single HSU may be assigned up to 63 time slots.

Key features of RADWIN 5000 HPMP Chapter 1
RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 1-3
Key features of RADWIN 5000 HPMP
»250 Mbps aggregate throughput
»Separate uplink and downlink configurable Maximum Information Rate (MIR) per HSU
»Advanced OFDM & MIMO 2x2 for nLOS performance
»Enhanced interference mitigation capability
»Inter & intra site sync to reduce self interference
»Long range – up to 40 km/25 miles
»Dedicated traffic bandwidth allocation ensuring SLA & latency
»Low and constant latency – min < 3ms, typical 4 to 20ms
»Channel bandwidth – 5/10/20/40 MHz
»Regulation - FCC/ETSI/WPC/MII/Universal
»Multi band HBSs and HSUs
»Simple to deploy
»Web Interface for sector management
»Fully integrated with RADWIN Legacy solutions:
• Coexists with RADWIN 2000 and WinLink 1000 products
• Common RADWIN Manager
• Common RNMS
»SFP support when connecting to a IDU-H in place of a PoE device
»Mobility and Nomadic support
Note
There are only two functional changes to the RADWIN Manager since
release 3.3.10. Visually, the RADWIN Manager has only changed in one
other repect: The icons representing the HSU types for the Map view (only)
are more indicative of what they are:
fixed HSU nomadic HSU HMU
The HSU icons seen on the Map view, may be different from those in this
edition of the User Manual.

RADWIN 5000 HPMP Components Chapter 1
RADWIN 5000 HPMP User Manual Release 3.3.30 1-4
RADWIN 5000 HPMP Components
RADWIN 5000 HBS High Capacity Base Station
The HBS consists of RADWIN 5000 HBS HBS ODU, a sector dual-
pole antenna and a PoE device, which provides a LAN interface to
user equipment.
A single HBS supports up to 32 HSUs.
Figure 1-1: Single Sector Base Station
RADWIN 55xx HSU High Capacity Subscriber Units
A standard HSU consists of a RADWIN 55xx HSU ODU. It may be a small form factor (SFF)
model with a built in antenna, or a regular integrated or connectorized unit. The latter should
use a dual pole antenna for best performance.
An AC power feeding version is also available:
Figure 1-2: Small form factor
antenna in connectorized ODU
Figure 1-3: High gain integrated
antenna
Figure 1-4: Connectorized ODU
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