I have a Rocket M2 that powers up, and other nodes see it and talk to it, but the LAN port is apparently completely dead. The switch doesn't see any traffic at all on the wire.
Fried Atheros? Ideas?
Fried Atheros? Ideas?
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Was that Rocket *ever* connected to an 802.3AF/AT-capable switch? I suspect that the EdgeSwitch "auto-PoE+" mode killed mine, like it did the UAP-AC-LITE.
I once had a Bullet with the same symptoms.
Turns out it was dropped.
This caused the Ethernet isolation transformer to detach partially from the circuit board. This component looks like an IC but is a bit heavier than a silicon component and was attached to the board only with its surface-mount leads. Sadly, it was deemed not repairable because some of the leads went to internal traces on the PCB that were not accessible. It was not really easy to see this until I realized you could slide a pice of paper under a couple of the leads (photo). It interrupted the leads carrying the data but not the power. If you don't feel like taking the unit apart you could have found this problem by testing with an ohmmeter for DC continuity between the appropriate pairs of pins (possibly 1-2 and 3-6 but I have not looked it up).
It seems to have failed at the same time my UAP-AC-LITE failed, after the ES was restarted.
The Rocket M5 and the NSM2 are fine. No problems at all. The Rocket M2 and the UAP-AC-LITE went dark after I'd swapped out the PoE injectors on all four devices for an EdgeSwitch ES-24-250W.
The UAP-AC-LITE is *definitely* a blown TVS diode - UBNT's "protection" circuit. The Rocket M2 is different. It powers up and was seen by the NSM2 when I went looking, but no ping, no switch traffic, no MAC, no ARP, no nothing on the wire.
Most everyone does this:
<img src="http://store.netgate.com/Assets/info/accessories/POE_Chart.png">
but there exist older patterns...