Access points

📘 CCNA 200-301 v1.1

📡 1.1.d Access Points (APs)

🔹 What is an Access Point?

  • An Access Point (AP) is a device that lets wireless devices (phones, laptops, tablets, etc.) connect to a wired network.
  • An Access Point (AP) is a device that provides Wi-Fi (wireless connectivity).
  • It connects to the wired network (switch or router) using an Ethernet cable.
  • Phones, laptops, tablets connect to the AP using Wi-Fi.

Simple terms:

  • An Access Point (AP) is a device.
  • It plugs into a switch or router with an Ethernet cable.
  • It creates Wi-Fi, so phones, laptops, tablets can join the network wirelessly.
  • That’s it. Nothing more.

📱 Phone → connects to Wi-Fi → through the Access Point → into the wired network (switch/router) → internet


🔹 Difference: Access Point vs Router vs Switch

  • Router – Connects different networks together (e.g., your home network to the internet).
  • Switch – Connects wired devices inside a network using MAC addresses.
  • Access Point – Provides wireless access to the network (Wi-Fi).

🔹 Standalone AP vs Controller-based AP

  • Standalone AP
    • Works on its own.
    • Configured individually.
    • Good for small networks (like a small office or home).
  • Controller-based AP
    • Controlled by a Wireless LAN Controller (WLC).
    • Settings are pushed to all APs from one place.
    • Used in enterprise networks (schools, universities, companies).

🔹 How it Works

  1. The AP is connected to the switch/router (often powered with PoE = Power over Ethernet).
  2. Wireless devices connect to the AP using Wi-Fi.
  3. The AP forwards their traffic into the wired LAN and then to the internet.

🔹 Wireless Standards (IEEE 802.11)

These are the “Wi-Fi generations.” Important for CCNA:

  • 802.11a → 5 GHz, fast for its time.
  • 802.11b → 2.4 GHz, slower, long range.
  • 802.11g → 2.4 GHz, faster than b.
  • 802.11n (Wi-Fi 4) → 2.4 & 5 GHz, MIMO (multiple antennas).
  • 802.11ac (Wi-Fi 5) → 5 GHz, very fast.
  • 802.11ax (Wi-Fi 6) → 2.4 & 5 GHz, more devices, better efficiency.

💡 Exam Tip: Know the difference between 2.4 GHz (longer range, slower, more interference) and 5 GHz (faster, shorter range).

2.4 GHz = longer range, more interference, slower.

5 GHz = shorter range, less interference, faster


🔹 What Are Wi-Fi Standards?

  • They are rules and guidelines (protocols) that define how Wi-Fi works.
  • Each standard (802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, etc.) sets the frequency, speed, and features that Wi-Fi devices must follow.
  • They make sure that a laptop from one company (Dell, HP, etc.) can talk to an Access Point from another company (Cisco, TP-Link, Netgear, etc.).

🔹 Who Makes These Standards?

  • The IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers).
  • Specifically, their group called IEEE 802.11 Working Group.
  • That’s why all Wi-Fi standards start with 802.11.

🔹 Why Do We Need Standards?

  • Without standards, every vendor would make Wi-Fi differently → devices wouldn’t work together.
  • Standards guarantee compatibility and interoperability across all devices.
  • They also improve Wi-Fi over time: faster speeds, less interference, more capacity, more security.

🔹 How Do They Work?

Each standard defines:

  1. Frequency band (2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and now 6 GHz in Wi-Fi 6E).
  2. Channel width (how much spectrum is used).
  3. Maximum speed (throughput).
  4. Modulation (how data is encoded into radio waves).
  5. Extra features (like MIMO, OFDMA, better security).

For example:

  • 802.11b → slow, only 2.4 GHz, very limited.
  • 802.11n → added MIMO (multiple antennas) and both 2.4 & 5 GHz → much faster.
  • 802.11ax (Wi-Fi 6) → added OFDMA (efficient sharing of channels) → supports many devices at once.

Who Should Follow Them?

  • Vendors (Cisco, Aruba, Netgear, TP-Link, Apple, Samsung, Intel, etc.) → must build devices that comply.
  • Enterprises/Network Engineers (like CCNA students) → must design Wi-Fi networks based on these standards.
  • End users → just benefit automatically, since their devices will work with any certified Wi-Fi network.

🔹 Modes of Access Points

  • Root Mode (Normal AP mode) – Connects wireless devices to the wired LAN.
  • Repeater Mode – Extends wireless coverage (but halves bandwidth).
  • Bridge Mode – Connects two networks wirelessly (AP ↔ AP).
  • Workgroup Bridge – AP acts as a client to connect wired-only devices.

🔹 Which AP Modes Do Clients (phones/laptops) Connect To?

  • Root Mode (Normal AP Mode) → ✅ Yes, clients connect here to get internet.
  • Repeater Mode → ✅ Yes, clients connect, but speed is slower.
  • Workgroup Bridge → ❌ Clients do not connect. Only wired devices behind it use it.
  • Bridge Mode → ❌ Clients do not connect. It’s only for linking two wired networks.

🔹 Simple Rule for Students

  • If you are a wireless client (phone, laptop, tablet) → you connect only to Root Mode or sometimes a Repeater.
  • Bridge Mode and Workgroup Bridge are for network-to-network connections or wired-only devices, not for normal Wi-Fi users.

🔹 Security in Access Points

  • Open Wi-Fi – No password (NOT secure).
  • WEP – Old, weak (don’t use).
  • WPA / WPA2 / WPA3 – Stronger encryption, WPA3 is latest.
  • Enterprise Mode – Uses a RADIUS server for authentication (e.g., schools, businesses).

💡 Exam Tip: Cisco loves WPA2/WPA3 with AES encryption.


🔹 PoE (Power over Ethernet)

  • Many APs use PoE, meaning they get power + data from the same Ethernet cable.
  • Saves having to plug in an adapter.

🔹 Key CCNA Terms

  • SSID – The Wi-Fi network name.
  • BSSID – Unique MAC address of the AP’s radio.
  • Channel – Frequency used by Wi-Fi. Choosing the right channel avoids interference.
  • Roaming – When a device moves between APs without losing connection (common in enterprises).

Summary for Students

  • APs = Wi-Fi entry point into the network.
  • Can be standalone or controller-based.
  • Uses IEEE 802.11 standards.
  • Supports modes (root, repeater, bridge).
  • Security is critical → WPA2/WPA3.
  • Often powered by PoE.
  • Remember SSID, BSSID, channels, roaming.

Summary for CCNA:
“An Access Point is a device that connects to a switch/router using Ethernet and provides wireless access (Wi-Fi) for devices. It can be standalone or controller-based, supports IEEE 802.11 standards, uses PoE, and must be secured with WPA2/WPA3.”


🔹 Difference Between Access Points and Home Routers

Access Point (AP)

  • A device that provides Wi-Fi only.
  • Connects to a switch or router using Ethernet.
  • Does not assign IP addresses.
  • Does not do routing.
  • Used in enterprises/schools where there are already routers and switches managing the network.

Home Router

  • A 3-in-1 device:
    • Router (connects to the internet).
    • Switch (for wired LAN ports).
    • Access Point (for Wi-Fi).
  • Provides DHCP (IP addresses).
  • Does routing and NAT.
  • Perfect for homes or small offices.

🔹 Where Does an Access Point Connect?

  • In enterprise networks:
    • The AP connects to a switch (with PoE for power + data).
    • The switch connects to the enterprise router/firewall.
    • Example flow:
      📱 Phone → 📡 Access Point → 🔌 Switch → 🌐 Router/Firewall → Internet

Summary for CCNA

  • Home Router = Router + Switch + Access Point (all-in-one).
  • Access Point = Wi-Fi only device, needs a switch/router to function.
  • In enterprises, APs connect to switches (and then to routers) to give wireless access.

🔹 How an Enterprise Access Point is Connected

  1. Access Point (AP)
    • Mounted on the wall or ceiling.
    • Needs both power and network data.
    • Usually powered by PoE (Power over Ethernet).
  2. Patch Cable → Patch Panel
    • The AP is connected with a short patch cable into a wall/ceiling port.
    • That port leads to the patch panel in the comms room.
  3. Patch Panel → Switch (Access/Distribution)
    • From the patch panel, another cable connects to the network switch.
    • The switch provides PoE and forwards traffic.
  4. Switch → Router/Firewall → Internet
    • The switch is connected upstream to the distribution/core switch and then to the router/firewall, which leads to the internet.

Summary for Students:

  • APs are not floating standalone devices.
  • They are wired into the network through a patch panel → switch.
  • The switch then connects up the hierarchy (distribution → core → router).
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