Motorola Cpei 35300 Manual
User ManualUser Manual. 68P09301A65-A i FEB 2009 Table of. Disposal of Motorola Equipment in EU Countries. Desktop CPEi allows you to connect to the. Overview - 4G Desktop Modem CPEi25150 by Motorola. Your mobile device is your connection to the world and the gatekeeper to your personal data. Find the default login, username, password, and ip address for your Motorola CPEi 35775 router. You will need to know then when you get a new router, or when you reset your router. WiMAX Series M 725 Motorola Modem - MOD - Duration: 4:05. Motorolla cpei 35775 wifi security2.avi - Duration: 1:19. Mrkamoteking 6,026 views.
Clearwire has started marketing in Atlanta, GA under the. Shadow Of Your Smile Samsung Ringtone Download there. From what I gather, WiMax was tested in Portland, OR with great success, quietly launched in Las Vegas, NV and has now been deployed in Atlanta, GA. The big offer at the moment is ‘; You can get a home WiMax and a mobile WiMax connection for $45/month (or two mobile WiMax connections).
The home WiMax connection is rated at 6Mbps down/512K up and the mobile WiMax connection is rated at 4Mbps down/512K up. The home and mobile modems can either be purchased outright or leased for $4.99 per month for each device. I will go over each of the connection options in better detail: Clear WiMax Home Modem The home modem is a (also called the CPEi 150). Clear sells this device online for $79.99, or leases for $4.99/month. There aren’t a lot of instructions in the box, but I managed to figure out the five lights on top of the modem indicate the signal strength. From what I have found, you will not be able to get a decent connection unless you can find a spot in your house that can maintain at least 4/5 lights (and I have been unable to find a 5 bar spot in my house- but I have no doubt that I will spend the next few weeks looking for that perfect spot ). I was only getting 3-4Mbps so I returned to the clear Kiosk to ask a few questions.
A few things the sales person told me: • The device is directional; the side with the Motorola logo is the antenna and I should direct it to my closest WiMax Tower • The higher in elevation the modem is, the better The Clear rep pulled up a Google Earth map with a map of all the WiMax towers in Atlanta. We entered in my address and she was in the signal range of two towers (#555 and #174). The towers are north and north west of my house, so I needed to point the antenna side in that direction. Mfc110u.dll Is Missing Windows 8 Free Download on this page. Finding a good spot is most aggravating part of this entire process Setting the modem on a table, I usually get 2 bars. If I rotate the modem 15 degrees in either direction, I may gain or lose a bar. If I change the elevation of the modem by 2-3 inches the same results can happen.
If I move the modem left/right or forward/back about an inch, the same change in signal happen again! From what I gather on Motorola's site, the device utilizes MIMO (multiple in, multiple out) antennas to improve signal reception. To further complicate matters, the presence of a human body seems to assist in the signal reception (perhaps the signals are bouncing off me and reflecting back into the modem?)- so I may get a solid 4 bars and when I walk away it drops back down to 3 bars I eventually found a solid 4 bar connection in a most unexpected place; atop an external my server case in the data closet- in an area with the highest amount of random EM signals (two servers, wireless router, multiple external devices, security camera power, etc.) in my house (which they tell you to avoid). One additional factor is that the speed is not generally instantaneous when you move the router or connect to the Internet; it will start slow (300-400KBps) and go up to full speed in about a minute- so with each movement of the router you will need to wait to check your new speed. That said, once you find the sweet spot in your house, you can get some pretty decent throughput: Bandwith gauge from NewsLeecher: Note: the ‘max’ is just the speed I adjusted the graph to represent. At an average of 1.04MB/sec it is about 8.3Mbps (if I did my math right)- which is about 28% faster than my BellSouth 6Mbpx DSL connection. It may not be quite the 12Mbps burst speed that Comcast offers (which is not actually stated on their page), but it also does not have a bandwidth limit (like the 250GB/month cap for Comcast).