48v failing on WS-8-150-DC - killed 4 ports
Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2017 5:13 pm
There are bad weeks and then there are expensively bad weeks... On going issues now with 2 separate WS-8-150-DC switches on a tower. Replaced one that we lost control of twice with a brand new one. Mounted it in the enclosure at the top of the tower. Ran a check of the Ethernet cables via the GUI - all fine - as they should be since this is a simple switch replacement.
As soon as we power up 48v POE connected to a Cambium ePMP AP, the switch makes a "pop" and then watts consumed jump up to 80 for that port. I thought it killed the radio but the radio works just fine on the Cambium POE injector at the bottom of the tower luckily.
So, my first assumption is bad Ethernet. We are using shielded braided cables with drain wire crimped into the connector. I replace both ends and test with a handheld tester and the switch. All good. Power it up in a new port (since the old port is now dead) and "pop"! Same issue. Not an Ethernet cable problem.
OK, now I try a different AP on a new cable. POP! 80 watts. That's three down. Three to go! When this happens, I can unplug everything from that Netonix port and if I turn 48v back on, it jumps back up to 80 watts on that port with nothing plugged into it. Port seems fried.
So, now I am thinking grounding issue. Maybe. We are 75' up a Rohn tower. I ran #4 green up from the base for use at the switch. Two of the three radios are bonded to this ground. The third radio is an ePMP 1000 AP with no grounding lug so it is just floating. The switch is mounted with two small bolts (through the two holes in opposite corners of the switch) to an aluminum backplate in the fiberglass enclosure. Both the switch ground lug and the aluminum plate are both connected to the #4 ground wire. The #4 runs to the bottom of the tower where it goes into a grounding rod. The tower is grounded to that rod as well at the bottom. We also ran #4 from the electrical grounding rod to the tower grounding rod. There is a Netonix in the tower shack (AC version) that is also grounded to this same ground. It's not perfect but we spent some time trying to make it much better than it was.
I then power up a small Ubiquiti radio we use for AirView on the DC switch at the top - 24v. No problem. Take that same cable, plug it into a 3rd ePMP radio and turn on 48v. Pop! Loose the port. 4 down.
I have two Ethernet cables coming up from the bottom AC powered switch that are spares in case of a top switch failure. I plug one of them into an ePMP AP and turn on 48v on the bottom switch. Works perfectly. That begins to rule out my grounding issue since they essentially share the same ground.
The old switch that we just replaced at the top never blew a 48v port and was wired identically. It, however, had other issues where we had to keep factory resetting it. It's on RMA right now.
So, I take responsibility for killing 4 ports of this brand new switch but I can't for the life of me understand why. Currently, my only thought is something on the internal circuit board related to 48v that is right next to the bolt holes is getting grounded out through my bolts holding the switch to the aluminum backplane of the enclosure. Possible??
Oh, firmware on the DC switch is 1.4.7rc18 with a Rev F board.
As soon as we power up 48v POE connected to a Cambium ePMP AP, the switch makes a "pop" and then watts consumed jump up to 80 for that port. I thought it killed the radio but the radio works just fine on the Cambium POE injector at the bottom of the tower luckily.
So, my first assumption is bad Ethernet. We are using shielded braided cables with drain wire crimped into the connector. I replace both ends and test with a handheld tester and the switch. All good. Power it up in a new port (since the old port is now dead) and "pop"! Same issue. Not an Ethernet cable problem.
OK, now I try a different AP on a new cable. POP! 80 watts. That's three down. Three to go! When this happens, I can unplug everything from that Netonix port and if I turn 48v back on, it jumps back up to 80 watts on that port with nothing plugged into it. Port seems fried.
So, now I am thinking grounding issue. Maybe. We are 75' up a Rohn tower. I ran #4 green up from the base for use at the switch. Two of the three radios are bonded to this ground. The third radio is an ePMP 1000 AP with no grounding lug so it is just floating. The switch is mounted with two small bolts (through the two holes in opposite corners of the switch) to an aluminum backplate in the fiberglass enclosure. Both the switch ground lug and the aluminum plate are both connected to the #4 ground wire. The #4 runs to the bottom of the tower where it goes into a grounding rod. The tower is grounded to that rod as well at the bottom. We also ran #4 from the electrical grounding rod to the tower grounding rod. There is a Netonix in the tower shack (AC version) that is also grounded to this same ground. It's not perfect but we spent some time trying to make it much better than it was.
I then power up a small Ubiquiti radio we use for AirView on the DC switch at the top - 24v. No problem. Take that same cable, plug it into a 3rd ePMP radio and turn on 48v. Pop! Loose the port. 4 down.
I have two Ethernet cables coming up from the bottom AC powered switch that are spares in case of a top switch failure. I plug one of them into an ePMP AP and turn on 48v on the bottom switch. Works perfectly. That begins to rule out my grounding issue since they essentially share the same ground.
The old switch that we just replaced at the top never blew a 48v port and was wired identically. It, however, had other issues where we had to keep factory resetting it. It's on RMA right now.
So, I take responsibility for killing 4 ports of this brand new switch but I can't for the life of me understand why. Currently, my only thought is something on the internal circuit board related to 48v that is right next to the bolt holes is getting grounded out through my bolts holding the switch to the aluminum backplane of the enclosure. Possible??
Oh, firmware on the DC switch is 1.4.7rc18 with a Rev F board.