tbutler@ofb.biz
Regular Contributor
Howdy, folks,
I've run a brand new Cat 6 cable through an empty conduit between buildings. The length is a bit longer than I thought -- approximately 260 ft. (the underground conduit isn't as direct as I hoped). In addition, on my cable run, I left about 20 ft of slack -- 10 ft on one end, 7 on the other -- "just in case."
I have been trying to put Trendnet 8-port unmanaged gigabit "GreenNet" switches between the different runs. They were cheap ($25) and seemed to be well liked. So, I have one of those in the church office; the cable then runs 280 ft to the next switch. When I plug the two together, the lights do not light up on either switch (both of which work, otherwise). However, I plugged in a lowly Linksys WRT54G router instead and was able to establish a 10/100 connection successfully.
Thus, I'm wondering if the Trendnet switch's "GreenNet" functionality is causing me trouble. Apparently, it automatically reduces power to the ports to try to lower energy consumption. I'm wondering if it simply is trying to be too green and is thus unable to accomplish what a very basic -- non-green -- Linksys router can do.
Question: Does anyone know of an affordable (preferably sub-$50) gigabit switch that might emit a signal with more power to edge me closer to the 100 meter limit on Ethernet? I'd rather not stick to using the Linksys WRT54G as my switch in this particular location...
Thanks!
I've run a brand new Cat 6 cable through an empty conduit between buildings. The length is a bit longer than I thought -- approximately 260 ft. (the underground conduit isn't as direct as I hoped). In addition, on my cable run, I left about 20 ft of slack -- 10 ft on one end, 7 on the other -- "just in case."
I have been trying to put Trendnet 8-port unmanaged gigabit "GreenNet" switches between the different runs. They were cheap ($25) and seemed to be well liked. So, I have one of those in the church office; the cable then runs 280 ft to the next switch. When I plug the two together, the lights do not light up on either switch (both of which work, otherwise). However, I plugged in a lowly Linksys WRT54G router instead and was able to establish a 10/100 connection successfully.
Thus, I'm wondering if the Trendnet switch's "GreenNet" functionality is causing me trouble. Apparently, it automatically reduces power to the ports to try to lower energy consumption. I'm wondering if it simply is trying to be too green and is thus unable to accomplish what a very basic -- non-green -- Linksys router can do.
Question: Does anyone know of an affordable (preferably sub-$50) gigabit switch that might emit a signal with more power to edge me closer to the 100 meter limit on Ethernet? I'd rather not stick to using the Linksys WRT54G as my switch in this particular location...
Thanks!
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