Rocket M9's losing associations
Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2018 11:19 am
Not sure if this section of the forum is still active, but I thought it might be worthwhile to post here....
We have a couple of Rocket M9's on a T-Mobile tower. They work well to get into areas with heavy foliage. On July 5th, we had a huge rainstorm area come through that area, and a combination of lightning and rain downed the site. The climber actually found water inside the enclosure on the bottom of the AM-9M13 sector antenna that one of the M9's reside in, so the rain was probably torrential and sideways at the peak of the storm. Dried all that out, and thought we were in the clear.
We had to replace every radio on the tower, save for a Mikrotik Dyna Dish. In addition to the two M9's, this included a Rocket M2 AP and a Rocket Prism 5AC that we use for a backhaul connection. We also replaced the Netonix WS-8150-AC switch, even though all the Ethernet cables there had recently been replaced with the "flooded" type to prevent water migration. But the key difference is, the Rocket M2 AP was replaced with one of the new Rocket 2AC units that have a lot more capacity for the legacy subscriber units.
Since that replacement, the M9 AP's have been regularly losing all station associations. I set up a watchdog timer on both of them to automatically reboot if a particular customer can't be pinged. That has activated multiple times on both of the units, and each time all stations come back with good signal like they always had. So it's not interference of any kind that I can see. The units are back-to-back, and have good isolation. Nose levels are -89 and -104.
The only thing I can think is that there might be some interaction with the new 2AC AP, even though they are in entirely different bands. Would be interested to know what others think about this problem. The ping watchdogs are doing what I need them to do, but it's a last-choice solution.
Thanks,
Doug N
We have a couple of Rocket M9's on a T-Mobile tower. They work well to get into areas with heavy foliage. On July 5th, we had a huge rainstorm area come through that area, and a combination of lightning and rain downed the site. The climber actually found water inside the enclosure on the bottom of the AM-9M13 sector antenna that one of the M9's reside in, so the rain was probably torrential and sideways at the peak of the storm. Dried all that out, and thought we were in the clear.
We had to replace every radio on the tower, save for a Mikrotik Dyna Dish. In addition to the two M9's, this included a Rocket M2 AP and a Rocket Prism 5AC that we use for a backhaul connection. We also replaced the Netonix WS-8150-AC switch, even though all the Ethernet cables there had recently been replaced with the "flooded" type to prevent water migration. But the key difference is, the Rocket M2 AP was replaced with one of the new Rocket 2AC units that have a lot more capacity for the legacy subscriber units.
Since that replacement, the M9 AP's have been regularly losing all station associations. I set up a watchdog timer on both of them to automatically reboot if a particular customer can't be pinged. That has activated multiple times on both of the units, and each time all stations come back with good signal like they always had. So it's not interference of any kind that I can see. The units are back-to-back, and have good isolation. Nose levels are -89 and -104.
The only thing I can think is that there might be some interaction with the new 2AC AP, even though they are in entirely different bands. Would be interested to know what others think about this problem. The ping watchdogs are doing what I need them to do, but it's a last-choice solution.
Thanks,
Doug N