Millemeter-Wave Fixed Wireless Access Using IEEE 802.11ay
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 12:54 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
IEEE 802.11ay incorporates scheduling, beamforming, and link maintenance to support millimeter-wave fixed wireless access.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
IEEE 802.11ay defines new PHY and MAC specifications that enable 100 Gbps communications in the 60 GHz millimeter-wave band. Among the various use cases supported by IEEE 802.11ay, fixed wireless access differentiates itself due to its unique requirements and characteristics. Key elements incorporated into IEEE 802.11ay, including scheduling, beamforming, and link maintenance, efficiently support fixed wireless access. IEEE 802.11ay is thus a viable and strong candidate to form the basis of future generations of standards-compliant mmWave fixed wireless access networks.
What carries the argument
Scheduling, beamforming, and link maintenance mechanisms defined in the IEEE 802.11ay PHY and MAC layers.
If this is right
- Future mmWave fixed wireless networks can adopt IEEE 802.11ay without needing proprietary extensions.
- The standard supplies built-in tools for maintaining high-capacity links under fixed conditions.
- Cost-efficient 100 Gbps service becomes feasible as an alternative or complement to wired access.
- Standards bodies can reference IEEE 802.11ay directly when specifying next-generation FWA equipment.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Operators could integrate 802.11ay FWA with existing Wi-Fi infrastructure more readily than with fully custom mmWave systems.
- The emphasis on beamforming suggests easier adaptation to dense urban deployments where line-of-sight paths vary.
- Link maintenance procedures may reduce the frequency of manual site visits compared with earlier mmWave approaches.
Load-bearing premise
Fixed wireless access has unique requirements and characteristics that the scheduling, beamforming, and link maintenance elements in IEEE 802.11ay support efficiently.
What would settle it
A deployment measurement or simulation demonstrating that IEEE 802.11ay cannot sustain the required link stability or capacity for typical fixed wireless access scenarios at 60 GHz.
Figures
read the original abstract
IEEE 802.11ay defines new PHY and MAC specifications that enable 100 Gbps communications in the 60 GHz millimeter-wave (mmWave) band. Among the various use cases supported by IEEE 802.11ay, fixed wireless access, a cost-efficient high-performance alternative and/or complement to conventional fixed access, differentiates itself due to its unique requirements and characteristics. In this article, our goal is to identify and describe key elements incorporated into IEEE 802.11ay, including scheduling, beamforming, and link maintenance, that efficiently support fixed wireless access. IEEE 802.11ay is thus a viable and strong candidate to form the basis of future generations of standards-compliant (i.e., non-proprietary) mmWave fixed wireless access networks.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript identifies and describes key elements of the IEEE 802.11ay standard (scheduling, beamforming, and link maintenance) and argues that these features efficiently support the unique requirements of millimeter-wave fixed wireless access (FWA), positioning 802.11ay as a viable and strong candidate for standards-compliant mmWave FWA networks.
Significance. A clear mapping of 802.11ay capabilities to FWA use cases could help practitioners evaluate the standard as a non-proprietary option. The manuscript's descriptive approach provides an accessible overview of relevant standard features, but the absence of any performance data, simulations, or comparisons means the efficiency and viability claims remain untested.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that the identified elements 'efficiently support' FWA's unique requirements and make 802.11ay a 'viable and strong candidate' rests solely on identification and description; no simulations, measurements, link-budget calculations, reliability analysis, or comparisons to proprietary mmWave FWA solutions are provided anywhere in the manuscript to substantiate efficiency or viability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive feedback on our manuscript. The paper is intended as a descriptive overview mapping IEEE 802.11ay features to FWA requirements rather than an empirical performance study.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that the identified elements 'efficiently support' FWA's unique requirements and make 802.11ay a 'viable and strong candidate' rests solely on identification and description; no simulations, measurements, link-budget calculations, reliability analysis, or comparisons to proprietary mmWave FWA solutions are provided anywhere in the manuscript to substantiate efficiency or viability.
Authors: We acknowledge that the manuscript contains no simulations, measurements, or quantitative comparisons. The central claims are qualitative and rest on the analysis of how the standard's specified mechanisms (e.g., scheduled access, beamforming training, and link maintenance procedures) are designed to address FWA-specific challenges such as directional links, blockage, and the need for high reliability in fixed deployments. The contribution is the identification and explanation of these mappings, not empirical validation of performance. We will revise the abstract and introduction to replace 'efficiently support' with 'are designed to support' and 'viable and strong candidate' with 'a standards-compliant candidate', and add a short limitations paragraph noting the absence of performance evaluation. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No circularity; descriptive mapping to external standard
full rationale
The paper contains no equations, derivations, fitted parameters, or predictions. It identifies scheduling, beamforming, and link maintenance features from the independently defined IEEE 802.11ay standard and asserts they support FWA requirements, but performs no reduction of any claim to its own inputs or self-citations. The central viability statement is an interpretive conclusion, not a constructed result. This matches the default expectation of no significant circularity.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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Facebook, ”Terragraph: Solving the Urban Bandwidth Challenge,” avail- able at https://terragraph.com (Accessed on Jun. 20, 2019). BIOGRAPHIES Cheng Chen is a Wireless Standards Research Engineer with the Next Generation and Standards Group at Intel Corporation. He has been an active contributor to IEEE 802.11ay, and was heavily involved in the definition o...
work page 2019
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