Fluke Networks
-
Does anyone have any wireless issues or projects coming up at all? Or mostly concerned with wired in this group?
-
@KendallHershey said:
Does anyone have any wireless issues or projects coming up at all? Or mostly concerned with wired in this group?
I do play to replace my ancient (8+ years) cisco WAP system. replacement is in the budget for this year.
YEAH! -
@KendallHershey said:
Does anyone have any wireless issues or projects coming up at all? Or mostly concerned with wired in this group?
Not planned, but I hope to find a new client or three this year that wants to hire us to fix their stuff!
-
@Dashrender said:
@KendallHershey said:
Does anyone have any wireless issues or projects coming up at all? Or mostly concerned with wired in this group?
I do play to replace my ancient (8+ years) cisco WAP system. replacement is in the budget for this year.
YEAH!Awesome!! Are you planning on doing the survey and deployment yourself or will you be contracting that?
-
@KendallHershey said:
@Dashrender said:
@KendallHershey said:
Does anyone have any wireless issues or projects coming up at all? Or mostly concerned with wired in this group?
I do play to replace my ancient (8+ years) cisco WAP system. replacement is in the budget for this year.
YEAH!Awesome!! Are you planning on doing the survey and deployment yourself or will you be contracting that?
I plan to do everything myself.
-
@Dashrender said:
@KendallHershey said:
@Dashrender said:
@KendallHershey said:
Does anyone have any wireless issues or projects coming up at all? Or mostly concerned with wired in this group?
I do play to replace my ancient (8+ years) cisco WAP system. replacement is in the budget for this year.
YEAH!Awesome!! Are you planning on doing the survey and deployment yourself or will you be contracting that?
I plan to do everything myself.
You'll definitely want a planner/survey tool to help make sure you're maximizing your coverage - check out our planner (http://www.flukenetworks.com/enterprise-network/wireless-network/AirMagnet-Planner) and survey tool (http://www.flukenetworks.com/products/airmagnet-survey). The AirCheck (mentioned earlier) would also be a good option for post-installation maintenance and troubleshooting, or OneTouch AT which would include both wired and wireless troubleshooting in one tool, with VoIP and throughput testing as well. We're one of the only vendors that actually services every point of the wireless life cycle.
-
I know a lot of guys around here talk about SMB cost for things. How can a single shop IT guy not use this stuff? Yes there is a cost to purchase said item but, the cost saving in time and frustration, now that is where it's at!
-
@Minion-Queen said:
I know a lot of guys around here talk about SMB cost for things. How can a single shop IT guy not use this stuff? Yes there is a cost to purchase said item but, the cost saving in time and frustration, now that is where it's at!
So I'm thinking about this. I guess it boils down to - how much do I have to pay someone who already owns this equipment to come in and do a survey versus buying the equipment myself, learning to use (always a good skill - I do get this) and then using it. If the cost of purchase vs paying a company to do a survey is close, then buying starts making sense, especially when you look at the ability to use it in the future at low/no cost.
-
@KendallHershey said:
@Dashrender said:
@KendallHershey said:
@Dashrender said:
@KendallHershey said:
Does anyone have any wireless issues or projects coming up at all? Or mostly concerned with wired in this group?
I do play to replace my ancient (8+ years) cisco WAP system. replacement is in the budget for this year.
YEAH!Awesome!! Are you planning on doing the survey and deployment yourself or will you be contracting that?
I plan to do everything myself.
You'll definitely want a planner/survey tool to help make sure you're maximizing your coverage - check out our planner (http://www.flukenetworks.com/enterprise-network/wireless-network/AirMagnet-Planner) and survey tool (http://www.flukenetworks.com/products/airmagnet-survey). The AirCheck (mentioned earlier) would also be a good option for post-installation maintenance and troubleshooting, or OneTouch AT which would include both wired and wireless troubleshooting in one tool, with VoIP and throughput testing as well. We're one of the only vendors that actually services every point of the wireless life cycle.
can you provide the MSRP on these two items?
-
@Minion-Queen said:
I know a lot of guys around here talk about SMB cost for things. How can a single shop IT guy not use this stuff? Yes there is a cost to purchase said item but, the cost saving in time and frustration, now that is where it's at!
That's a great point - we had one university that used to verify the connection of all ports in all of the dorms. With student help it used to take them 4 full weeks running around with a laptop and a clipboard verifying each drop, and with a LinkSprinter they could cut the project time down to one week. And with the online results management platform that automatically flags failed tests (and stored all of the test information), their follow time on any issues decreased dramatically as well!
Another school district I talked to had multiple locations, and left a LinkSprinter with each on-site admin (because it's so simple anyone can use it). And when someone had an issue they would go plug it in, the IT team could see the results remotely, and sometimes they could avoid a truck roll to the district which saved them a ton of time and money. Then they had a LinkRunner that all of their techs shared for some more advanced troubleshooting. Quite a cool set up!
-
@KendallHershey said:
@dafyre It runs on the 2.4 band, but they are for checking wired only, it's just a way to communicate from the Linksprinter to your mobile device.
But we do have a killer wireless troubleshooting tool called AirCheck that can tell you all kinds of information like signal strength, detecting rogua APs, interference testing (if you have a crazy microwave or something), etc. But that tool is definitely a bit pricier around $2,000.
http://www.flukenetworks.com/enterprise-network/network-testing/AirCheck-Wi-Fi-TesterThanks!
-
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
I know a lot of guys around here talk about SMB cost for things. How can a single shop IT guy not use this stuff? Yes there is a cost to purchase said item but, the cost saving in time and frustration, now that is where it's at!
So I'm thinking about this. I guess it boils down to - how much do I have to pay someone who already owns this equipment to come in and do a survey versus buying the equipment myself, learning to use (always a good skill - I do get this) and then using it. If the cost of purchase vs paying a company to do a survey is close, then buying starts making sense, especially when you look at the ability to use it in the future at low/no cost.
The MSRP of the Survey/Planner bundle is $4,360. The skill is very valuable to learn! But, that's always the key question. We've got a ton of resources to help you learn about migrating to 11ac, for example, if you're interested: http://www.flukenetworks.com/content/802-11ac-University?ls=PRML&lsd=WLAN11acUni
But I think either way, you're going to want a post-install troubleshooting tool. Wireless can be extremely tricky. Sometimes something like getting a new microwave in the kitchen could cause issues for the users on the other side of the wall. In my experience, it can require more upkeep than something more static like a wired infrastructure. It's very dependent on many different factors.
-
@KendallHershey said:
The MSRP of the Survey/Planner bundle is $4,360.
And there's the reason we'll never own one. A survey will cost less than $1000. It would take dozens or more calls after a survey to make it worth the cost.
Definitely a tool meant for someone who does this regularly.
-
Didn't think I had any questions for Fluke, but I do! What's the pricing on your gigabit network taps?
-
@Dashrender said:
@KendallHershey said:
The MSRP of the Survey/Planner bundle is $4,360.
And there's the reason we'll never own one. A survey will cost less than $1000. It would take dozens or more calls after a survey to make it worth the cost.
Definitely a tool meant for someone who does this regularly.
Yea, I will say most of the users I talk to of these tools are installers. Or someone with multiple locations that they're doing deployments for.
-
@KendallHershey said:
... (because it's so simple anyone can use it)...
Even a caveman ?
Sorry... I couldn't resist!
-
@dafyre said:
@KendallHershey said:
... (because it's so simple anyone can use it)...
Even a caveman ?
Sorry... I couldn't resist!
LOL - No soup for you!
-
@KendallHershey and the winner of the LinkSprinter 300 is????
-
@travisdh1 said:
Didn't think I had any questions for Fluke, but I do! What's the pricing on your gigabit network taps?
It can range - from several hundred dollars for a single port inline tap to 100K for multiple port 10/40G taps. I could track down more info for you if you like, just let me know.
-
@KendallHershey said:
@travisdh1 said:
Didn't think I had any questions for Fluke, but I do! What's the pricing on your gigabit network taps?
It can range - from several hundred dollars for a single port inline tap to 100K for multiple port 10/40G taps. I could track down more info for you if you like, just let me know.
I'd be interested in that too. I can already think of a couple of good uses for it!