FLEX-6000 Signature Series – Maestro User Guide
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Latency (RTT) should be no more than a few milliseconds and should not vary greatly. On a
wireless network link, this number may be much higher and can vary depending on factors
inherent to wireless networks such as signal attenuation and multipath reflections.
Max Latency (RTT) is the greatest observed value of Latency (RTT). If this number is much
higher than the real-time Latency (RTT) values, this indicates a network link that has a lot of
quality variability, which in general is not desirable.
Remote RX Rate and Remote TX Rate show the rate of information flow between Maestro and
the radio, in thousands of bits per second.
Tapping the Reset Stats button resets the network performance statistics shown in the next
line.
The network statistics show the number of lost network data packets from the radio to Maestro.
Loss of packets may cause interruptions in the receiver audio stream. On a wired LAN, packet
losses should be very small, if any. On a wireless LAN, packets may occasionally be lost due to
factors such as signal attenuation and multipath reflections.
Total packets and lost packets are tracked by the type of stream, Audio, Waterfall, Panadapter,
Meters, etc. When a Panadapter is closed, its packet statistics contribution is removed from the
displayed statistics. This can make the statistics appear to “go backward”.