sww wrote:Upgraded first one last night from 1.3.9 and upon reboot it locked up. My tech said he found it with all LEDs on solid. Odd thing was all the backhauls were still powered up by it, but each was showing no ethernet link. I had him replace it with another one on site and I have this one sitting in on my desk. I'll try to log into it later and see if I can get into it. Do you want any information from it before I do anything? This particular switch had a pre-existing problem where the board was not reading any of the voltages or temperatures so it may be a fluke, but I havn't tried to update any others yet. This is a WS-8-250-DC.
If the switch was not reading voltages and temperatures then the unit was either damaged or located near an FM tower or similar RF signal that was interfering with the I2C communications.
When you set it up on your bench I would test it out. If the temp and voltages are not reading at your office then the unit is damaged most likely from a surge in which case you need to compare your grounding technique to those shown in these posts:
viewtopic.php?f=30&t=188viewtopic.php?f=30&t=1429Also as this is a DC switch I sure hope you had the Earth Ground lug hooked up to the Earth Ground as that is the only way the switch can get access to Earth Ground properly other wise it is getting access to Earth Ground from the tower through the Ethernet cables which is bad and will result in damage to the switch.
After you read the grounding posts above you need to ask yourself these questions:1) Does the tower have multiple ground rods?
2) Is the tower ground bonded to the electric service ground (if AC power is available at this site)
ALL GROUND RODS ON A SITE NEED TO BE BONDED TOGETHER OR YOU HAVE A GROUND POTENTIAL DIFFERENCE WHICH IS BAD, GROUND IS NOT GROUND, EVERY GROUND ROD HAS A DIFFERENT IMPEDANCE TO GROUND OR GROUND POTENTIAL DIFFERENCE.3) Do I have an insulated dedicated ground wire and bus from the grounding system to each radio/mount
4) Is the Ethernet cable length to the switch at least 10% longer from the radio to the switch to the ground rods so that static discharges will see the intended ground path as shorter and less resistance than going through the Ethernet cable and switch to get to ground?
If you answer no to any of the above questions you will incur damage again and again.If the I2C bus is damaged or being interfered with then the upgrade process may get messed up, but I would bet more on a damaged unit causing an upgrade error over interference?
You can test the switch on your bench as outlined on Post #2 of the RMA instructions thread:viewtopic.php?f=6&t=1259