IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n SMC SMCWTVA100 Intel WiDi adapter() WLAN 11n Dual Band Dongle USERS GUIDE VERSION 1.0 All rights reserved. All trade names are registered trademarks of respective manufacturers listed. This manual may not be copied in any media or form without the written consent of original maker. 1. Introduction ............................................................... 1 2. Wireless LAN Basics ...................................................... 3 3. IP ADDRESS ............................................................ 4 4. Install Driver/Utility ................................................. 5 4.1 Windows XP/Vista/7................................................... 5 5. Wireless Network Configuration ............................................ 7 5.1 Utility Icon .............................................................. 7 5.2 Client Mode (Default Setting)........................................ 7 6. Technical Specifications ................................................ 14 7. Troubleshooting .............................................................. 16 8. Glossary ....................................................................... 17 Thank you for your purchase of the WLAN Adapter. Featuring wireless technology, this wireless networking solution has been designed for both large and small businesses, and it is scalable so that you can easily add more users and new network features depending on your business scale. FEATURES Support Microsoft XP(32bit/64bit) / Vista(32bit/64bit) / 7(32bit/64bit) Operating distance of up to 300 meters in free space. 300/270/240/180/120/90/60/54/48/36/30/24/22/18/12/11/6/5.5/2/1 Mbps selectable Data Rate according to client adapter default antennas. 64/128-bit WEP , WPA, WPA2, WPS 2.400GHz ~ 2.4835GHz unlicensed ISM Frequency Band. Modulation Method. 5GHz UNII, Midband, ISM bands. IEEE 802.11b : DSSS (Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum). IEEE 802.11a/g n : OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing). Easy operation and setting up. SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS Windows System : XP(32bit/64bit) / Vista(32bit/64bit) / 7(32bit/64bit).PCs must have a device driver installed. It allows you to communicate with WLAN 11n USB Client Adapter. 1 BEFORE YOU START 1. Confirm Box Contents WLAN 11n USB Client Adapter Quick Start Guide Driver CD CONNECTING YOUR WLAN 11n USB Client Adapter TO PC Quick Start Guide Connect your WLAN 11n USB Client Adapter to your PC. Install driver. GETTING TO KNOW WIRELESS LAN ADAPTER LED Status ON Adapter connects to remote. BLINKING - WLAN Adapter is active. 2 Wireless LAN network defined by IEEE 802.11a/b/g standard committee could be configured as :
Ad Hoc wireless LAN. Infrastructure wireless LAN. Ad Hoc network is a group of PCs installed with wireless LAN cards, this group of PCs is called a BSS (Basic Service Set). PCs in this group can use their wireless LAN cards to communicate with each other, but can not connect to the Internet. Ad Hoc Wireless Network Infrastructure Wireless Network The most obvious difference between Infrastructure wireless network and Ad Hoc wireless network is that the PCs in Infrastructure wireless network can access the resource in the Internet through Access Point. Depending on your requirement, you can easily set up your PCs network to be a Ad Hoc or Infrastructure wireless network. Generally speaking, if in your network, there is an Access Point in it, we recommend you to set your network as an Infrastructure, so it can connect to the Internet. 3 To use the WLAN 11n USB Client Adapter with a computing device, the WLAN Adapter must be equipped with a proper Interface. All drivers and supporting software for the WLAN Adapter must be installed and configured first. Ask your system administrator for the following information, which you may need to provide during driver installation :
Your Wireless Client Name. Your Wireless SSID. Your computers unique client name and workgroup name. For your network account, your user name and password. Your IP address, gateway address, and subnet mask if youre not using a DHCP client. Any computer on a network is identified by a unique network address. There are two methods to assign a network address to a computer on a TCP/IP network :
Static IP addressing. Dynamic IP addressing (DHCP Client). In network with static IP addressing, the network administrator manually assigns an IP address to each computer. Once a static IP address is assigned, a computer uses the same IP address every time it reboots and logs on to the network. You may manually change the IP address in the Network Properties dialog box. Network using static IP address is easy to set up and do not require additional network management software. In network with dynamic IP addressing, a DHCP server in the network dynamically assigns IP addresses to all clients every time they log on to the network. Network using dynamic IP address requires setting up and running a DHCP Server. 4 The installation & driver CD will automatically activate the autorun installation program after you insert the disk into your CD drive. Step 1 :
Insert CD-ROM. Language and click Next button. the installation CD into your Setup Choose the Step 2 :
Installation descriptions shown. Click Next to continue. Click Install to begin the installation 5 Installing & configuring WLAN utility Installing Drivers. Step 3 :
Click Finish to complete installation 6 WLAN 11n USB Client Adapter uses its own management software. All functions controlled by users are provided by this application. When you insert the WLAN Adapter into your laptop or desktop, a icon should appear in the Windows System Tray automatically. 5.1 Utility Icon Client mode utility running but no WLAN Adapter plugged Client mode utility running and WLAN Adapter scan available network. Client mode utility running and WLAN Adapter can not scan any AP 5.2 Client Mode (Default Setting) Wireless Device Control :
Show Tray Icon Show icon or not show icon in system tray. Radio Off Stop wireless signal. Disable Adapter Stop wireless device. Virtual WiFi disallowed Soft AP off 7 5.2.1 GENERAL SETTING Once device is set, double click on that icon and the configuration window will pop up as shown. It shows the current connected network. The signal strength and link quality are displayed also. The bar graph displays the quality and strength of the link between the node and its Access Point. Link Quality is a measurement of receiving and transmitting performances over the radio. Network Address displays current MAC Address, IP Address, Subnet. and Gateway. Click Renew IP button to refresh IP address leased from wireless AP. 5.2.2 PROFILE SETTING In profile tab, you can Add, Remove, Edit, Duplicate and Set Default to manipulate profile content manually. Strongly recommend to use profile after you do Available Network. 8 5.2.3 AVAILABLE NETWOEK SETTING Click Available Network tab and it will show all available networks that radio can reaches. Select proper SSID & BSSID you want to connect. Click Refresh button to force and rescan available networks currently. Select one of SSIDs, and click Add to Profile to create profile that can be configured more wireless parameters. In this page, you can edit your profile name, configure wireless security like WEP, WPA, WPA2, 802.1x etc. After finishing setup, click OK button to save configuration 5.2.4 Status Status page tab, shows all wireless, networking and device driver version in details. 9 5.2.5 Statistics Statistics page tab will show real-time TX/RX relative counters to check or evaluate the wireless performance. Click Reset button to set counter to zero. 5.2.6 Wi-Fi Protected Setup An easy and secure setup solution for Wi-
Fi network. you can choose PIN Code or Push Button method to connect to an AP. Pin method:
Step 1 :
Push the PIN button. 10 Step 2 :
Select a specific AP Step 3 :
Enter the PIN code into your AP. Step 4 :
Select AP that you want to configure. Step 5:
Wait for configuring your wireless AP to be the security setting. 11 PBC method:
Step 1 :
Push the PBC button. Step 2 :
Push the physical button on our AP or visual button on he WPS config page. 5.2.6 Virtual WiFi(Soft AP) Setup Click to Enable Virtual WiFi. Push config button to set. 12 Enter Soft AP SSID and Security Key. 13 Product Name WLAN 11n Dual Band Dongle Standard 802.11a/b/g/n Data Transfer Rate 1,2,5.5,6,11,12,18,22,24,30,36,48,54,60,90,120,180,240,270 and maximum of 300Mbps Modulation Method BPSK/QPSK/16-QAM/64-QAM Frequency Band 2.4GHz and 5GHz ISM Band Spread Spectrum IEEE 802.11b: DSSS (Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum) IEEE 802.11a/g/n: OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) RF Output Power Operation Mode
<13dBm@11n/11a,< 17dBm@11b,< 15dBm@11g Ad hoc, Infrastructure, Soft AP Receiver Sensitivity 11Mbps -80dBm@8%,54Mbps -70dBm@10%,300Mbps -64dBm@10%
Operation Range Indoor@Up to 100 meters,Outdoor@Up to 280 meters LED OS Support Security Interface Power Consumption Power Win XP / Vista / Windows 7 64 bit/128 bit WEP, TKIP, AES USB 2.0 Transmit: around 420 mA Receive: around 280 mA Operating Temperature 0 50 C ambient temperature Storage Temperature
-10 ~ 70C ambient temperature Humidity Dimension 5 to 90 % maximum (non-condensing) 59x24x10.3mm 14 Symptom :
The LED is off. Remedy :
Make sure the PC Card is inserted properly. Otherwise contact your vendor. Symptom :
The LED is always on not blinking. Remedy :
Make sure that you have installed the driver from attached CD. Otherwise contact your vendor. Symptom :
The LED is blinking but the PC Card icon does not appear in your icon tray. Remedy :
Make sure that you have installed the Utility from the attached CD. Symptom :
The PC Card is linking, but cant share files with others. Remedy :
Make sure the file and printer sharing function is enabled. You can enable the function by checking the icon of My Computer -> Control Panel -> Network -> file and printer sharing -> I want to be able to give others to access to my files. Symptom :
Slow or poor performance under AP mode Remedy :
Try to select another channel for the communicating group or move your device closer to the Access Point. 16 IEEE 802.11 Standard The IEEE 802.11 Wireless LAN standards subcommittee, which is formulating a standard for the industry. Access Point An internetworking device that seamlessly connects wired and wireless networks together. Ad Hoc An Ad Hoc wireless LAN is a group of computers, each with a WLAN adapter, connected as an independent wireless LAN. Ad Hoc wireless LAN is applicable at a departmental scale for a branch or SOHO operation. BSSID A specific Ad Hoc LAN is called a Basic Service Set (BSS). Computers in a BSS must be configured with the same BSSID. DHCP Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol - a method in which IP addresses are assigned by server dynamically to clients on the network. DHCP is used for Dynamic IP Addressing and requires a dedicated DHCP server on the network. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum This is the method the wireless cards use to transmit data over the frequency spectrum. The other method is frequency hopping. Direct sequence spreads the data over one frequency range (channel) while frequency hopping jumps from one narrow frequency band to another many times per second. ESSID An Infrastructure configuration could also support roaming capability for mobile workers. More than one BSS can be configured as an Extended Service Set (ESS). Users within an ESS could roam freely between BSSs while served as a continuous connection to the network wireless stations and Access Points within an ESS must be configured with the same ESSID and the same radio channel. Ethernet Ethernet is a 10/100Mbps network that runs over dedicated home/office wiring. Users must be wired to the network at all times to gain access. Gateway A gateway is a hardware and software device that connects two dissimilar 17 systems, such as a LAN and a mainframe. In Internet terminology, a gateway is another name for a router. Generally a gateway is used as a funnel for all traffic to the Internet. IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Infrastructure An integrated wireless and wired LAN is called an Infrastructure configuration. Infrastructure is applicable to enterprise scale for wireless access to central database, or wireless application for mobile workers. ISM Band The FCC and their counterparts outside of the U.S. have set aside bandwidth for unlicensed use in the so-called ISM (Industrial, Scientific and Medical) band. Spectrum in the vicinity of 2.4 GHz, in particular, is being made available worldwide. This presents a truly revolutionary opportunity to place convenient high-speed wireless capabilities in the hands of users around the globe. Local Area Network (LAN) A LAN is a group of computers, each equipped with the appropriate network adapter card connected by cable/air, that share applications, data, and peripherals. All connections are made via cable or wireless media, but a LAN does not use telephone services. It typically spans a single building or campus. Network A network is a system of computers that is connected. Data, files, and messages can be transmitted over this network. Networks may be local or wide area networks. Protocol A protocol is a standardized set of rules that specify how a conversation is to take place, including the format, timing, sequencing and/ or error checking. SSID A Network ID unique to a network. Only clients and Access Points that share the same SSID are able to communicate with each other. This string is case-sensitive. Static IP Addressing A method of assigning IP addresses to clients on the network. In networks with Static IP address, the network administrator manually assigns an IP address to each computer. Once a Static IP address is assigned, a computer 18 uses the same IP address every time it reboots and logs on to the network, unless it is manually changed. Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) The Temporal Key Integrity Protocol, pronounced tee-kip, is part of the IEEE 802.11i encryption standard for wireless LANs. TKIP is the next generation of WEP, the Wired Equivalency Protocol, which is used to secure 802.11 wireless LANs. TKIP provides per-packet key mixing, a message integrity check and a re-keying mechanism, thus fixing the flaws of WEP. Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) TCP/IP is the protocol suite developed by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). It is widely used in corporate Internet works, because of its superior design for WANs. TCP governs how packet is sequenced for transmission the network. The term TCP/IP is often used generically to refer to the entire suite of related protocols. Transmit / Receive The wireless throughput in Bytes per second averaged over two seconds. Wi-Fi Alliance The Wi-Fi Alliance is a nonprofit international association formed in 1999 to certify interoperability of wireless Local Area Network products based on IEEE 802.11 specification. The goal of the Wi-Fi Alliances members is to enhance the user experience through product interoperability. The organization is formerly known as WECA. Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) The Wi-Fi Alliance put together WPA as a data encryption method for 802.11 wireless LANs. WPA is an industry-supported, pre-standard version of 802.11i utilizing the Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP), which fixes the problems of WEP, including using dynamic keys. Wide Area Network (WAN) A WAN consists of multiple LANs that are tied together via telephone services and / or fiber optic cabling. WANs may span a city, a state, a country, or even the world. Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) Now widely recognized as flawed, WEP was a data encryption method used to protect the transmission between 802.11 wireless clients and APs. However, it used the same key among all communicating devices. WEPs problems are well-known, including an insufficient key length and no automated method for distributing the keys. WEP can be easily 19 cracked in a couple of hours with off-the-shelf tools. Wireless LAN (WLAN) A wireless LAN does not use cable to transmit signals, but rather uses radio or infrared to transmit packets through the air. Radio Frequency
(RF) and infrared are the commonly used types of wireless transmission. Most wireless LANs use spread spectrum technology. It offers limited bandwidth, usually under 11Mbps, and users share the bandwidth with other devices in the spectrum; however, users can operate a spread spectrum device without licensing from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Fragment Threshold The proposed protocol uses the frame fragmentation mechanism defined in IEEE 802.11 to achieve parallel transmissions. A large data frame is fragmented into several fragments each of size equal to fragment threshold. By tuning the fragment threshold value, we can get varying fragment sizes. The determination of an efficient fragment threshold is an important issue in this scheme. If the fragment threshold is small, the overlap part of the master and parallel transmissions is large. This means the spatial reuse ratio of parallel transmissions is high. In contrast, with a large fragment threshold, the overlap is small and the spatial reuse ratio is low. However high fragment threshold leads to low fragment overhead. Hence there is a trade-off between spatial re-use and fragment overhead. Fragment threshold is the maximum packet size used for fragmentation. Packets larger than the size programmed in this field will be fragmented If you find that your corrupted packets or asymmetric packet reception (all send packets, for example). You may want to try lowering your fragmentation threshold. This will cause packets to be broken into smaller fragments. These small fragments, if corrupted, can be resent faster than a larger fragment. Fragmentation increases overhead, so you'll want to keep this value as close to the maximum value as possible. RTS (Request To Send) Threshold The RTS threshold is the packet size at which packet transmission is governed by the RTS/CTS transaction. The IEEE 802.11-1997 standard allows for short packets to be transmitted without RTS/CTS transactions. Each station can have a different RTS threshold. RTS/CTS is used when the data packet size exceeds the defined RTS threshold. With the CSMA/CA transmission 20 mechanism, the transmitting station sends out an RTS packet to the receiving station, and waits for the receiving station to send back a CTS (Clear to Send) packet before sending the actual packet data. This setting is useful for networks with many clients. With many clients, and a high network load, there will be many more collisions. By lowering the RTS threshold, there may be fewer collisions, and performance should improve. Basically, with a faster RTS threshold, the system can recover from problems faster. RTS packets consume valuable bandwidth, however, so setting this value too low will limit performance. Beacon Interval In addition to data frames that carry information from higher layers, 802.11 includes management and control frames that support data transfer. The beacon frame, which is a type of management frame, provides the "heartbeat"
of a wireless LAN, enabling stations to establish and maintain communications in an orderly fashion. Beacon Interval represents the amount of time between beacon transmissions. Before a station enters power save mode, the station needs the beacon interval to know when to wake up to receive the beacon
(and learn whether there are buffered frames at the access point). Preamble Type There are two preamble types defined in IEEE 802.11 specification. A long preamble basically gives the decoder more time to process the preamble. All 802.11 devices support a long preamble. The short preamble is designed to improve efficiency (for example, for VoIP systems). The difference between the two is in the Synchronization field. The long preamble is 128 bits, and theshort is 56 bits. WPA2 It is the second generation of WPA. WPA2 is based on the final IEEE 802.11i amendment to the 802.11 standard. Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) The Temporal Key Integrity Protocol, pronounced tee-kip, is part of the IEEE 802.11i encryption standard for wireless LANs. TKIP is the next generation of WEP, the Wired Equivalency Protocol, which is used to secure 802.11 wireless LANs. TKIP provides per-packet key mixing, a message integrity check and a re-keying mechanism, thus fixing the flaws of WEP. 21 802.1x Authentication 802.1x is a framework for authenticated MAC-level access control, defines Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) over LANs (WAPOL). The standard encapsulates and leverages much of EAP, which was defined for dial-up authentication with Point-to-Point Protocol in RFC 2284. Beyond encapsulating EAP packets, the 802.1x standard also defines EAPOL messages that convey the shared key information critical for wireless security. Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) Security issues are a major concern for wireless LANs, AES is the U.S. governments next-generation cryptography algorithm, which will replace DES and 3DES. 22 Federal Communication Commission Statement (FCC, U.S.) 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 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. This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions:
(1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. FCC Caution:
Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate this equipment. IMPORTANT NOTES FCC Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. This equipment should be installed and operated with minimum distance 20cm between the radiator &
your body. Co-location warning:
This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. Limited Channels fixed for use in the US:
IEEE 802.11b or 802.11g or 802.11n(HT20) operation of this product in the U.S. is firmware-limited to Channel 1 through 11. IEEE 802.11n(HT40) operation of this product in the U.S. is firmware-limited to Channel 3 through 9. IEEE 802.11an(HT20) DTS band operation of this product in the U.S. is firmware-limited to Channel 5745.0 through 5825.0 MHz. IEEE 802.11an(HT40) DTS band operation of this product in the U.S. is firmware-limited to Channel 5755.0 through 5795.0 MHz. IEEE 802.11an(HT20) UNII band operation of this product in the U.S. is firmware-limited to Channel 5180.0 through 5240.0 MHz. IEEE 802.11an(HT40) UNII band operation of this product in the U.S. is firmware-limited to Channel 5190.0 through 5230.0 MHz. OEM integration instructions:
This device is intended only for OEM integrators under the following conditions:
The antenna must be installed such that 20 cm is maintained between the antenna and users, and the transmitter module may not be co-located with any other transmitter or antenna. The module shall be only used with the external antenna(s) that has been originally tested and certified with this module. As long as 3 conditions above are met, further transmitter test will not be required. However, the OEM integrator is still responsible for testing their end-product for any additional compliance requirements required with this module installed (for example, digital device emissions, PC peripheral requirements, etc.). Validity of using the module certification:
In the event that these conditions cannot be met (for example certain laptop configurations or co-location with another transmitter), then the FCC authorization for this module in combination with the host equipment is no longer considered valid and the FCC ID of the module cannot be used on the final product. In these circumstances, the OEM integrator will be responsible for re-evaluating the end product
(including the transmitter) and obtaining a separate FCC authorization. Custom design antennas may be used, however the OEM installer must following the FCC 15.21 requirements and verify if new FCC approval will be necessary. End product labeling:
This transmitter module is authorized only for use in device where the antenna may be installed such that 20 cm may be maintained between the antenna and users. The final end product must be labeled in a visible area with the following:
Contains FCC ID: YZKSMCWTVA100. Information that must be placed in the end user manual:
The OEM integrator has to be aware not to provide information to the end user regarding how to install or remove this RF module in the user's manual of the end product which integrates this module. The end user manual shall include all required regulatory information/warning as show in this manual.