  BigCreek God Is Good. Premium join:2002-06-25 Heber Springs, AR
| reply to pmurdock Re: hub or switch at solar powered POP?
Unless I'm missing something, I don't think a splitter is going to do what you want. They're good for stuffing two Ethernet devices onto one cat5 cable but you still need the ports at the other end.
You need some type of Ethernet hub or switch to connect three devices together.
Perhaps Google for "low power ethernet switch" and see what turns up. -- SBC Pro Static DSL; Linux. Terrific wife & kids; live on a farm by Big Creek. Software & network consultant. |
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  pmurdock Paul Murdock
join:2001-09-13 Riverton, UT
| Basically this is what I have setup. The backhaul radio comes into a PVC box and has a female RJ-45 connector on it - which currently connects directly to 1 access point. I want in essence to "split" off that 1 female port into two female ports - (1) one for the AP, and (2) two for the battery voltage monitor. Don't really think there is a need for a powered hub is there? The cable distances are all less than 10 feet.
the pics - of the solar pop or the battery voltage monitor? 
cheers, Paul |
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  pmurdock Paul Murdock
join:2001-09-13 Riverton, UT
| If I do go with an Ethernet switch what about this one?
»www.controlsysteminnovators.com/itm00045.htm
It shows a power draw of 52 mA with all 5 ports linked up worst case scenario. I will have 3 of those ports so perhaps the current draw will be ~30 mA of constant draw. That's gonna drain the battery BIG time! All just to add a device to allow me to watch the battery because drainage is already an issue!
I've found a number of ethernet splitters, any suggestions on a good approach or should I just manually wire the connectors together.
cheers, Paul |
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  BigCreek God Is Good. Premium join:2002-06-25 Heber Springs, AR
| said by pmurdock :I've found a number of ethernet splitters, any suggestions on a good approach or should I just manually wire the connectors together. Could you post links for some of them so we could see what exactly they are. -- SBC Pro Static DSL; Linux. Terrific wife & kids; live on a farm by Big Creek. Software & network consultant. |
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  pmurdock Paul Murdock
join:2001-09-13 Riverton, UT
| I was thinking of something like this..
»cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi···ame=WDVW
and then just wire up the ports to all be the same wires.. should work.. ? 
cheers, Paul |
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  BigCreek God Is Good. Premium join:2002-06-25 Heber Springs, AR
| I believe that's just a patch panel. Note the first description line: quote: Use in Conjunction with an Active 10/100 Base-T Switching Hub
Here's the manu's page: »www.hometech.com/techwire/vanco.html -- SBC Pro Static DSL; Linux. Terrific wife & kids; live on a farm by Big Creek. Software & network consultant. |
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 public
join:2002-01-19 Santa Clara, CA
·DSL EXTREME
| reply to pmurdock said by pmurdock :If I do go with an Ethernet switch what about this one? » www.controlsysteminnovators.com/itm00045.htmIt shows a power draw of 52 mA with all 5 ports linked up worst case scenario. I will have 3 of those ports so perhaps the current draw will be ~30 mA of constant draw. That's gonna drain the battery BIG time! All just to add a device to allow me to watch the battery because drainage is already an issue! You need either a hub or a switch. Both draw power. There is no such thing as a passive ethernet splitter. You can find a lot cheaper one. |
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  pmurdock Paul Murdock
join:2001-09-13 Riverton, UT | reply to BigCreek isn't that all I really need though is a way to splice the cables together?
cheers, Paul |
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 public
join:2002-01-19 Santa Clara, CA
·DSL EXTREME
| said by pmurdock :isn't that all I really need though is a way to splice the cables together? cheers, Paul No. Ethernet twisted pair needs a hub. |
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  pmurdock Paul Murdock
join:2001-09-13 Riverton, UT
| I'm not so sure about that.. A hub is useful where you need to repeat the signal over larger distances.
However, the ethernet protocol is a CSMA/CD protocol, which implies "C"ollision "D"etection.. this means that a number of transmitters theorectically could be on the EXACT same wires and still be able to communicate as I understand it. When a collision occurs a random backoff period happens and then the two transmit again at different times.. simply by splicing the wires together indeed I will create the opportunities for collisions to occur, but it still should work? 
cheers, Paul |
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 public
join:2002-01-19 Santa Clara, CA
·DSL EXTREME
| said by pmurdock :I'm not so sure about that.. A hub is useful where you need to repeat the signal over larger distances. However, the ethernet protocol is a CSMA/ CD protocol, which implies "C"ollision "D"etection.. this means that a number of transmitters theorectically could be on the EXACT same wires and still be able to communicate as I understand it. When a collision occurs a random backoff period happens and then the two transmit again at different times.. simply by splicing the wires together indeed I will create the opportunities for collisions to occur, but it still should work?  cheers, Paul That applies to original thick wire ethernet. Read up on 10baseT requirements. |
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 jdmarti1 Jack
join:2004-06-15 Oilton, OK
| reply to pmurdock My biggest concern would be to create a chance for collisions on my backhaul. That is a very important link. This little unit only takes one watt. I am unsure what voltages you have on your power supply, so you either use the wall wart with this or use the 7.5v.
»www.trendnet.com/products/TE100-S5P.htm -- »magicwisp.com |
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  Semaphore Premium join:2003-11-18 Arnprior On. | reply to pmurdock The Solar Pop and battery layout please. It's not something we need to do immediately, but it would be beneficial in the future. |
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  pmurdock Paul Murdock
join:2001-09-13 Riverton, UT
| reply to jdmarti1 looks like it is 7.5 Watts.. maybe I'm better off going with that ethernet switch up at the top that consumes 2 Watts or 52 mA @ 24VDC.
I see what you mean about tying which wires together.. that does present a problem. As it is now, they are a cross over direct connect.
Does anyone have a feel for what a "low power" switch should be.. is 52 mA really the best we can do?
cheers, Paul |
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  John Galt Forward, March Premium join:2004-09-30 Happy Camp
·CenturyLink
| said by pmurdock :Does anyone have a feel for what a "low power" switch should be.. is 52 mA really the best we can do? That's pretty low...! -- A is A |
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  pmurdock Paul Murdock
join:2001-09-13 Riverton, UT
| Here's another one I found.. made by Parvus
»www.parvus.com/products/IODataco···itch104/
Says it is a 1.5 Watt, as opposed to the 2 Watt usage by the other one. Though at 5 volts, the P=IV equation says it will draw 300 mA.. how can that be lower than the 52 mA device that draws 2 Watts.?!?
cheers, Paul |
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  John Galt Forward, March Premium join:2004-09-30 Happy Camp | What is your system voltage? -- A is A |
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  pmurdock Paul Murdock
join:2001-09-13 Riverton, UT
1 edit | It will be run from a 12V sealed gel cell 285 Amp/hour battery that is charged by some photovoltaic cells.. So the 7.5 v supply is better than the 10V minimum requirement.. however 52 mA versus 300 mA doesn't make sense.. well the equation makes sense.. 
for 52 mA switch
P = IV
2 watts = (I)*10 volts -> I = 2/10 -> I = 0.2 amps
for ~300 mA switch
P = IV
1.5 watts = (I)*7.5 volts -> I = 1.5/7.5 -> I = 0.2
so it appears that the parvus one is better.. though 200 mA is a horrible draw to have for both of the switches.. is that a continuous draw..?
I would think that the draw would be higher at a higher voltage since voltage is like "pressure" if you applying a higher pressure more current would want to flow through the system. So why only draw 52 mA @ 24VDC and draw MORE current (~200 mA) @ 10VDC? This is what I don't see.
cheers, Paul |
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  Semaphore Premium join:2003-11-18 Arnprior On.
| reply to pmurdock If the required layout is that two devices need to talk to one device then a passive Ethernet splitter would work. Yes they make them. I haven't installed one in over a year but they allow two PC's to share a single Ethernet drop. You can't get Full Duplex but you can get 100Mbps. Yes collisions are problem. No the to devices can't talk to each other directly. Ugly but it does "work". |
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  pmurdock Paul Murdock
join:2001-09-13 Riverton, UT
3 edits | Ok.. so what we have is the new device - the battery voltage device will only ever be active for 5 seconds each hour to transmit it's voltage back to the data center.. So in essence I guess the two devices never need to talk to each other. Here is a drawing that I have made to represent the design..
Basically what will happen is a server in the NOC will send out a UDP request to the battery monitor asking for it to send back the voltage every hour. It will only need to respond with a very small packet and then go back to sleep (drawing microamps current - now that is what I call small! )
Bear in mind also this is a far-away repeater in the middle of nowhere.. with a very limited potential client base.. I'd be happy with a 1Mbps connection to this location and not worry about saturation..
cheers, Paul |
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