Cambium PTP600 Series
Point-to-Point solutions for 2.5 GHz license holders
In
2004, the U.S. government established the Educational Broadband Service
(EBS) to transmit instructional material utilizing low-power broadband
systems and also provide high-speed Internet access. Operating in the
2.5 GHz licensed spectrum, the Cambium PTP 25600 solutions are designed
to support the stringent requirements of a wide variety of EBS
applications, including:
- Building-to-building and campus connectivity
- Backbone operations
- Internet access and email
- Distance learning
- Voice-over-IP and video surveillance
Point-to-Point Connectivity for U.S. Federal, Military, and NATO agencies
With
the PTP 48600 and the PTP 45600, Cambium has two defined band
Point-to-Point licensed solutions designed to support U.S. government
entities and NATO licensees with cost-effective, high-throughput
connectivity. Operating in the 4.8 and 4.5 GHz spectrums and up to 200
and 300 Mbps Ethernet data rates respectively, these FIPS 140-2
certified bridges support applications such as:
- Battlefield communications
- Public safety
- Video surveillance and border security
- Tactical military operations
- Training and simulation networks
- Building-to-building and campus connectivity
- Multi-point-to-point ad hoc application
PTP 49600 for Public Safety
Operating
in the 4.9 GHz public safety spectrum, PTP 49600 bridges deliver up to
300 Mbps throughput and support numerous critical applications
including:
- Real-time access to missing-person images, DMV records, video feeds, medical data, building blueprints, vehicle locations, evacuation routes and road closures, building floor plans, fire hydrant locations, and much more
"When reliability is critical and one of your
endpoints is a 30-foot (9-meter) buoy on the open sea, you need to have a
very reliable system or you could find yourself on that buoy at any
time of day and in any weather conditions. The PTP 600 was
the only solution that could provide a high-performance, carrier-grade
connection in this environment. With the excess throughput, we can begin
to explore new opportunities that the bandwidth enables." -Dominic Landucci, National Undersea Research Center