On Sat, Aug 11, 2018 at 1:27 PM B.J. Guillot <bj.guillot@gmail.com> wrote:
For grins, he tried the Seattle sectors (~40 km? away), and we got a weak connection. We weren't sure exactly which sector we were hitting (he said there are two it could have been)
It's pretty simple to see which sector you are connected to. Just issue this command: /interface wireless monitor 0 status: connected-to-ess channel: 5900/5/an wireless-protocol: nv2 tx-rate: 16.2Mbps-5MHz/1S rx-rate: 16.2Mbps-5MHz/1S ssid: HamWAN bssid: E4:8D:8C:F1:6D:22 radio-name: Gold-S2/K7WAN signal-strength: -57dBm signal-strength-ch0: -57dBm tx-signal-strength: -59dBm tx-signal-strength-ch0: -59dBm tx-signal-strength-ch1: -75dBm noise-floor: -120dBm signal-to-noise: 63dB tx-ccq: 93% rx-ccq: 93% authenticated-clients: 1 current-distance: 10 wds-link: no bridge: no routeros-version: 6.41.3 last-ip: 169.48.173.167 current-tx-powers: 6Mbps:31(25/31),9Mbps:31(25/31),12Mbps:31(25/31),18Mbps:31(25/31),24Mbps:31(25/31),36Mbps:29(23/29),48Mbps:29(23/29),54Mbps:27(21/27),HT20-0:29(23/29),HT20-1:29(23/29),HT20-2:29(23/29), HT20-3:29(23/29),HT20-4:29(23/29),HT20-5:27(21/27),HT20-6:27(21/27),HT20-7:26(20/26) notify-external-fdb: no You can see the radio name right there next to the signal strength. If you can tell me your MAC, I can look you up in the logs to see what sector you connected to. Tom KD7LXL