🚀 Elevate Your Connectivity Game!
The Ubiquiti LBE-M5-23-US LiteBeam M5 is a powerful 5GHz outdoor airMAX CPE designed for long-range connectivity, featuring a 23dBi antenna gain and a lightweight design for easy installation. With a range of over 10 kilometers, this device is perfect for both residential and commercial applications, ensuring reliable performance in various environments.
Wireless Type | 5 GHz Radio Frequency |
Brand | Ubiquiti Networks |
Item model number | LBE-M5-23X2 |
Item Weight | 1.76 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 19.69 x 19.69 x 11.02 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 19.69 x 19.69 x 11.02 inches |
Color | White |
Manufacturer | UBNT Systems |
ASIN | B0166YREMK |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | November 14, 2015 |
D**
Top notch!
Excellent well priced solution that increased the speed of our M2 Loco Ubiquity connection from around 5 Mbs to 65 Mbs over a line of sight .2 mile link. Can’t beat the effect of a 23 dbi gain parabolic antenna! Have had excellent results over the years with several different Ubiquity products. I am an independent IT contractor and have had 1 ubiquity product out of about 100 over the years fail and that was due to storm based electrical surge here in Florida. The setup is not overly complicated but also not a completely consumer friendly event either. However there are so many Youtube and various sources for walkthroughs on setup that most people should have little issue with configuring . While setup is a bit challenging for the novice, the upside is that once complete it is a set and forget experience. You likely never need to revisit on the lifetime of the product.
B**H
a bit of setup but worth it
I had some ueevii radios that worked about 8 months and have up. I think they were fighting with my other wifi devices and the radios burned up. On the suggestion of a friend, I'm trying these guys. Took about 30 minutes to program a setup but they've been working great for a month so far. Will update after a while.
M**0
Works well
Setup instructions suck, ut it works well after watching several YT vids. great signal easy to alighn, great price and range
F**A
Crazy how well they work!
They work!It took some fiddling, but I found the settings needed to blast them straight through some thick trees over about 200 feet. I had to use the 10mhz band instead of the faster 20 or 40mhz ones, but this was necessary to cut through the trees. Still, it gets 25mbps download speed on the other end. That's with a speed test on the other end, not what the dishes say. The dishes say the speed is 36-51mbps, but I get about half that. I assume it's signal loss. Still, that's enough bandwidth to stream a 4k video!Due to the trees, they don't work at all when it rains, because the trees are covered in water and that is an extremely effective wifi signal blocker. They continue not to work until after the tree leaves have dried, so a short shower can mean hours of no internet. That's just in my case, however.When I tested them outdoors, I had them about 100 feet apart, aimed a each-other with clear line-of-sight, and the speeds were way higher than my internet even is. Well over 100mbps.It's kinda crazy how I can have broadband internet in an isolated shack like this.
C**D
Unreliable and questionable.
Update againAfter buying more Ubiqui devices since they were highly recommended by a friend of a friend, I decided to buy other devices for my home network. Today they decided to basically jam the network and prevent everything from working.If you can avoid these products, do so. They are questionable, sketchy to interact with and unreliable.Updating as I finally got it working, skip to the bottom for how to set this up because the instructions, website and other documentation aren't terribly helpful. I'm keeping this one star not for it's function, but by how absolutely stupid this thing has been to set up, how unhelpful the set up documentation is, how obtuse the phone app is to set up point to point and how many other people seem to have the same problem as I have.I have never had to try and hook up two like devices that were so insistent to not talking to one another in my life. And I had to hook up mixed devices for the military, fix bantam cables and a lot of cable making and set up for a lot of one off devices.I can't call myself an expert. I've handled Cisco devices, done a few hundred installs and device set ups with all kinds of military and civilian equipment, had to do a lot of cross patching but I'm a bit rusty on some of this stuff and this has told me I need a big refresher.I have reset these to factory default multiple times, followed the instructions and the app's scan and set up option and now I'm basically succumbing to youtube the depths of technical pages and youtube videos that blast obnoxious music spoken by someone I don't understand to try and get this to work. I now know far more about this device than I ever wanted to know.Here's been my story thus far.Get the boxes, great. The physical devices feel well made, light and like they should do their job. Thinking this is an established IT company I assumed plug and play features using the app. So like an idiot I physically set them up point to point to service a distant location and gets started.Remember that app and thinking these would be plug and play? Nope. The app turns them into a paperweight. I'm not joking. It'll auto config an IP and password and says it's sending a signal but that's a lie. The app is actually really impressive. connecting to this I can see a whole range of frequencies for potential connections.Want to know what it doesn't see? The other dish.Yes they are both broadcasting and they simply refuse to see it. Oh and the router at the distant end? Doesn't like talking to it with the WAN port. Cool. Okay so I gotta figure out what I'm doing wrong here. Instructions aren't helpful either as they direct me to do pretty much what the app does and turn it into an expensive connected paperweight.So I take them down, put them in a room, face one another, factory reset them both, access them to figure out what settings needs to be established to get them to see and talk to one another. It's amazing how many times these will just decide sop and need to be reset once again. Even if I wasn't configuring that device, it'll just decide to stay on but not let me connect or do anything but be a small heater.Why did I get this?Well I had a point to point set up using another device that worked pretty much out of the box. Plugged it in, quick set up, they talked, no problems. Except for some reason Zoom has issues with it. Configuration changes and trying to prioritize traffic didn't help with the constant cut outs so this was recommended by an far better IT guy than I am.Anyway here's hoping I can get these set up. I know I'm doing something wrong, the biggest complaint I have is that the directions an app don't seem to have any of the answers and looking online and finding similar people with similar problems feels pretty damning, especially since this comes so incredibly highly rated.Oh and just to add icing on the cake here, one of them claims to be sending and receiving 6mb of data from the distant end but the other end doesn't even display the signal or MAC.||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| HOW TO SET THIS UP |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||How to set this up, point to point with a home station sending data to a distant router as easy as possible. This should be good for you hooking up a shed or whatever from your house to somewhere on your property or distant point.1. If using a phone, Download the app.2. Unpack and set up the two devices, connect them on the same network so you can access them both for set up. I kid you not you can't connect to them using the app at the distant end if you have it set up right. That means no, you can't use the app to use it to align the dish except by connecting to the AP.3. Use the app to connect to one, set as AP (Access Point). This is going to be where it connects to the internet. Go to settings, name the SSID (I did a name then PtP as Point to Point as an identifier), changethe password to a nice, long sentence with numbers and whatever.4. Name the other one Station and set it in the config as station. Using the app, use the three dots on the top right to select Site Survey. This will show you a list of signals that update every second. I can't find a way to get the updates to slow down so be ready to watch what you want to connect to bounce around like a game of ping pong.5. Select the SSID named signal, select connect. Go down, double check to make sure the password updated, if not, type in the password. This will be the last time you will connect to this device for some reason. Why? I don't know. That's just how it is.6. Unplug and set these up how you will have them. Now you can connect the Station to the WAN port of the distant end router.Note: If you have to set up the station on the distant end, you can't connect through the WAN port of your router or you won't be able to access the device. Connect it to a port and go to step 4. Once done, disconnect from the LAN port and into the WAN port.That should do it. Good luck!
P**E
Works great!
I needed Internet service to a detached garage and this did the trick. I tried two different Ethernet over power (EOP) style extenders and those worked just fine around the main house (great choice if they work for you), but the 'distance' (all the wire and various breakers) between the main house and garage was too much and neither could reach that far. This wireless bridge worked perfectly.The only issue for me was that the setup instructions, while technically precise, are not very clear on the actual process to set these up. A quick search and YouTube came through with a video providing a good explanation of the process so I did not deduct from rating on that basis. Setup does take a modest degree of technical savvy, but not too bad.
K**N
Exceded expectations
I set this up in conjunction with the cheapest WiFi unit I could find to use in a building about 1200ft from the house. I get the same speed in the out building as I do in the house. Everyone can connect to WiFi when visiting. We have very poor cell coverage in this area, so WiFi is a real life saver for calls, texts, and Internet.
B**E
Easy installation
Installed very quickly and easily. I would have liked more documentation on the setup and configuration. Finally went to YouTube and found a good tutorial from a user. I'm only going from my main house to my detached garage about 60 feet. Shows a signal strength of 100% which I would expect at that distance with perfect line of site.
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