WS-8-250-DC install in Western North Carolina
Posted: Sun Sep 06, 2015 7:25 pm
We're a small WISP in the Western North Carolina mountains. We had replaced a TS-5 with a $19 TP Link Gbit switch and some Gbit POE injectors a couple of months ago at our first hop while we were waiting for our WS-8-250-DC and throughput increased by about 10 - 15 Mbps to about 55 - 70 Mbps. The ToughSwitches have been a disappointment as we have grown.
When we installed our WS-8-250-DC today throughput increased to a full 100 Mbps! Now the bottlenecks have moved on down the chain.
We have another WS-8-250-DC and will be installing it at our next hop - another solar relay site in the middle of a field on a mountain. We had been powering our sites at 12 volts, but had to move to 24 volts with the addition of our AF5Xs. That meant a bunch of terminal boards, a couple of DC-DC converters and a bunch of wiring. The WS-8-250-DC cleaned all of that up, all we have is a charge controller and the WS-8-250-DC in the enclosure now.
I was worried about power usage when I heard the switch's fan running so much, but it doesn't seem to really use a lot of power. It's nice to see the overall power usage in the GUI and we'll be starting up some SNMP logging soon.
Two issues - The GUI doesn't render very well on the Chrome browser on my Android phone. I can work with this, but really do use my smartphone more than a PC these days. And more insignificantly - a regular ground lug would be nice.
We're pretty basic right now and haven't moved into VLANs and LAG, but it's good to know that these features are available. It's a great relief to see what our battery voltages are!
Thanks Netonix, we'll be ordering more!
When we installed our WS-8-250-DC today throughput increased to a full 100 Mbps! Now the bottlenecks have moved on down the chain.
We have another WS-8-250-DC and will be installing it at our next hop - another solar relay site in the middle of a field on a mountain. We had been powering our sites at 12 volts, but had to move to 24 volts with the addition of our AF5Xs. That meant a bunch of terminal boards, a couple of DC-DC converters and a bunch of wiring. The WS-8-250-DC cleaned all of that up, all we have is a charge controller and the WS-8-250-DC in the enclosure now.
I was worried about power usage when I heard the switch's fan running so much, but it doesn't seem to really use a lot of power. It's nice to see the overall power usage in the GUI and we'll be starting up some SNMP logging soon.
Two issues - The GUI doesn't render very well on the Chrome browser on my Android phone. I can work with this, but really do use my smartphone more than a PC these days. And more insignificantly - a regular ground lug would be nice.
We're pretty basic right now and haven't moved into VLANs and LAG, but it's good to know that these features are available. It's a great relief to see what our battery voltages are!
Thanks Netonix, we'll be ordering more!