michaelawhite wrote:
I have 1 time capsule 1TB and two extreme base stations all running in a 3 station WDS. Seems to work generally...
..My first time machine backup would not complete via wireless and I was forced to connect to time capsule by Ethernet to get time machine to work at all. Is that because the WDS is slow. All stations have good signal to each other.
I'd have to write that WDS might be a bit of a Time Machine killer in terms of performance. I tried it , but abandoned it as an option as data rates were much lower, defeating the point imo of having a home 802.11n network. This is why my TC is set in +extend wireless network mode+ , allowing the AEBS to be 5GHz
N mode.
I noticed some lively discussion in the rest of the topic:
My understanding is that WDS cuts the bandwidth in half.
Approx 1/2 per hop, if you think about it WDS works well for say a network where you want to cover a large area with wireless for internet surfin', but isn't so good for networks where data rate acrosss netowrk is criticl, and for TC this is a factor I think.
Since WDS is an 802.11g feature, using WDS forces the Time Capsule to operate in the slower 802.11g mode.
I don't think WDS is just an 802.11 feature, it may have first come along when 802.11g was ats its height, but 802.11N routers can operate WDS, AEBS N being a prime example.
In the material you quoted from "Designing AirPort Networks" there is zero reference to WDS so I don't see how you can reach your conclusion.
It's not ideal document for in-depth info on the AEBSN implementation of WDS.
The problem is not the number of hops. The problem is that EVERY base station in a WDS setup is using the SAME channel. Therefore if ANY base station is communicating wirelessly with ANYTHING no other traffic is allowed on the ENTIRE network.
The exact logic of this statement does not seem applicable to the AEBS as I use it at home.
Under the section "Setting up WDS network", page 42 says: "You can connect AirPort Extreme 802.11n Base Stations or Time Capsules and use the 5 GHz frequency band in the network. " Doesn't that imply the WDS can operate in 5GHz band?
AS near as I can tell in WDS mode you only have option of 802.11N (b/g compatible radio mode).