Sounds like a hardware problem with the Mikrotik, as you were thinking.Yes the canopy and trango are reversed. We made up cables accordingly and they work great as long as you connect the Canopy once the poe output on the mikrotik has fully switched on. We measured the Canopy and they seem to draw about 200mA vs the Trango's which draw 130mA at startup which is still a far cry from the 500mA advertised. A startup script wouldn't work due to as long as the canopy is plugged in, you can't get the poe to come up on that port. Though once it is enabled and working you can plug in the canopy and it works great.
A PD (Powered device) indicates that it is standards-compliant by placing a 25 kΩ resistor between the powered pairs. If the PSE (power supplying equipment) detects a resistance that is too high or too low (including a short circuit), no power is applied.
PSE detects if the PD has the correct signature resistance of 19–26.5 kΩ
The standard you're referring to is 802.3af, and that's not what the RB750UP implements. Simple "passive PoE" doesn't define any signature detection, so I'd expect any device that doesn't draw too much power to work. As I can see, I'm not the only one with such troubles (the mysterious Bullet2 that won't power up, even though two Bullet5s and one NanoBridgeM5 work fine).It could be problem with other devices if it does not adhere to standart and does not have correct resistance - as a result it is detected that PoE cannot be turned to to not to burn out the port it is connected to. Load values you are calling should not cause any problems what ever you are doing on port or all of them.
some clarification from wikipedia:A PD (Powered device) indicates that it is standards-compliant by placing a 25 kΩ resistor between the powered pairs. If the PSE (power supplying equipment) detects a resistance that is too high or too low (including a short circuit), no power is applied.
and
this is the case of "P"ower feature used on these boards to make sure that no other equipment is burned needlessly (or only their Ethernet ports)Code: Select allPSE detects if the PD has the correct signature resistance of 19–26.5 kΩ
Yes! Just because we don't fully comply with the 802.3af standard doesn't mean we can't use the same detection method for the RB750UP "auto" detection. JanisK is correct on this one.The standard you're referring to is 802.3af, and that's not what the RB750UP implements. Simple "passive PoE" doesn't define any signature detection
The standard you're referring to is 802.3af, and that's not what the RB750UP implements. Simple "passive PoE" doesn't define any signature detection, so I'd expect any device that doesn't draw too much power to work. As I can see, I'm not the only one with such troubles (the mysterious Bullet2 that won't power up, even though two Bullet5s and one NanoBridgeM5 work fine).
I hope Mikrotik has made the MCU that controls PoE upgradeable in the field (the ATTINY461 chip itself does support self-programming, if supported by a properly written bootloader), so we will see some improvements later. I'd like to see support for poe-out=force option - "enable power, I know what I'm doing" (as in most of the simple, passive PoE adapters).
Well, it's "burn" or "kill" only if the wrong device is connected to that port. I had such an accident - wrong side of UBNT PoE connected to my good old IBM T41 laptop, it was gigabit and now it's only 100Mbps... (Still auto-negotiates gigabit but then doesn't work, have to force lower speed on at least one end.) So I'm more careful now, use patch cords of different color (orange) where PoE is used, etc.your magic devices just do not have the resistance required, so it will not be powered up. And where did you read that it is passive poe Also, it has overload protection and short protection. It is not a simple hack.
Also, i have checked a lot of 100Mbps interface routers and everything worked fine. As well as attempted to burn ports on RB1000 just to be sure that our customers does not damage their equipment.
Edit: so you think that "burn" or "kill" option would be useful?
would it be possible to change the lower bound from 19k to something like 1k ohm? Many devices that don't support PoE have 150 ohms (two resistors 75 ohms each in series) between the unused pairs, so called "Bob Smith termination", so it should still be reliably detected.on - similar to auto setting just upper bound of detection range is removed.
I'd like to know that too!Are the ports POE on/off controllable through Mikrotik command terminal?
What did you mean by as soon as you receive the device that does not work properly. At least for me in my post it was a Motorola Canopy unit. Are you ordering one of those up to test with or are you waiting on one of us to send you something.we are working on possible solutions to turn on as much as possible devices. Most probably it will be additional setting added to enable unsafe mode. As soon as we receive the device that does not work properly (AFAIK it is or soon will be on route)
thx m8, didn't see it.yes, it is described in manual (ethernet section)
but some highlights:
each port is controlled separately, so each can have its settings set.
can be configured through CLI, winbox and webfig (so everywhere)
there is one exception - if short is detected, then power is cut on all ports. It is done so to ensure that on short (that can damage the board) power down is done in fastest possible time.
I am seeing exactly the same results. Roughly .9 volts below the actual voltage on the DC jack. I have the same problem with RB450Gs (as do many others, as listed in a few threads).as far as i have tested RB750UP has very precise voltage monitor. Have you some devices powered by it?
I bought a AU$100 40w ebay solar panel, a ebay mppt charge controller and a 12ah 12v battery. It runs a rb750up, a ubiquity pico station and air cam and a data probe ipio-8 relay board no problems.Hello, The problem you had posted in this thread is really interesting but i am here wondering for information about solar panel. Please can anyone suggest me which is best brand of solar panel and what is the installation cost.
Yes, we have one test installation with a RB750UP and a UBNT RM5. The the rocket reboots every few hours in both "auto" and "on" mode. We verified a stable supply of 18V to the RB750UP.Has anyone had issues with powering UBNT rockets via the 750UP.?
is there a write up somewhere on how to do the cabling?
We upgraded the firmware on the 750UP to 4.17 Level 4 and we can interact fine with the 750UP but the Rocket resets continuously.
Sounds like a cabling issue but can't find a cabling diagram for Mikrotik RB750UP on one end and UBNT Rocket M on the other.
We've got same issue. Rockets reboot if only some traffic comes on radio interface. Specification says that Rocket takes no more than 6-8W which should be doable by 750UP.Has anyone had issues with powering UBNT rockets via the 750UP.?
Any updates?@normis: Wiki was first place where I've looked at Could You give me a link to ROS 5.15rc1 (e-mail or PM).
Edit: OK. Got 5.15rc1. I'll try to test it in the same location where problem showed up.
Same problem here. Upgrade to 5.15rc1 did not fix it.We are having issues with devices connecting to a 750UP as well. We have a site that has two Nanobridges attached to it. The logs show that the interfaces go down. We end up cycling the POE power on-off-on (or forced on in the newer firmware). We have tried to 750UP devices thinking we may have just had a faulty unit. I have tried the 5.6 that shipped on it, 5.12 and 5.13. All seem to have the same problem. I also have a 750UP running 5.6 with only 1 nanobridge powered off of it and it seems to be running better. I am going to try the 5.15rc1 firmware as mentioned to see if we have any improvements. Has anyone else had better luck with it? What is it supposed to fix?
I can't assist with the remainder of your test request, hopefully somebody else will, as I have these deployed in the field.weird thing is that power goes out twice in the row for the board. as you can see from the logs - it goes down, then up and then down again.
Yup identical symptoms.I've ran into the same problem and have it duplicated in the lab.
If the RB750 is powered via a long PoE cable (24v 2A), it can not power ubnt equipment without tripping the over current sensor. I've checked the voltage output at each port (21V using a 24v supply) and ran a current draw check (.14 A) per port. After a few cycles of the port, the MT disables the port until the RB750UP is rebooted.
i'm trying to power a NB5M on port 5 and a NS2M on port 4.
Another site is doing the same thing, there i'm trying to power a LOCO900 and NS2M
I'm contemplating an attempt to solder in a inline capacitor or removing the overload protection circuit, unless I can find an answer quick....
I notice you are comparing the voltage at the battery terminals against the Mikrotik's internal measurement.Its gone from reporting 11.5v to 12.1 with the latest update (5.12). Next time I'm at that site ill put a multimeter across the battery and see how accurate it is .
Thanks!
Damien
[admin@WAPSw1] > system health print
voltage: 22.2V
cpu-temperature: 43C
Patch Panel --> 60m cat5 --> RB750UP -- PoE Port
/
DC --> PoE Injector
\
Switch
what you mean by - manually disable it?Can you identify the silk screen location for this chip so that I can manually disable it?
====>RB711-5hn-m (uplink)
/
PSU 24v/3A >===92m cat5e outdoor cable===>RB750UP - =====>RB711-5ufl (sector)
+ ----|>|-----------------> +
| + | +
from psu == == to router
| |
- -------------------------> +
Would this mean, that RB750UP is not meant for what it is meant - powering 2,3 or 4 routerboards in tower? What is the reason to pay the difference for 'UP'?if you are powering other devices - that is the temperature.
RB750UP doesn't really have an outdoor enclosure - you should be using it inside a tough enclosure, together with some other devices. Also consider the OmniTIK UPA, which is an outdoor wireless device.Would this mean, that RB750UP is not meant for what it is meant - powering 2,3 or 4 routerboards in tower? What is the reason to pay the difference for 'UP'?if you are powering other devices - that is the temperature.
Well, no one has put it outdoors - we do have a good and spacy outdoor enclosure with good heat dissipation - aluminium of course and in shade.RB750UP doesn't really have an outdoor enclosure - you should be using it inside a tough enclosure, together with some other devices. Also consider the OmniTIK UPA, which is an outdoor wireless device.
Well, you did not give a cable length to the rb750up...-------stripped--------
I just ordered some 4:1 DC power splitter cables and was planning on just putting some POE inserters and bypass the 750UP for the purposes of the power which gives up the ability to remote power cycle etc. (and basically turns it back into a non POE router, which was working for us before this fiasco with the 750UP). Running the OmnitikUP as a POE router would be fine for us if there is actually some difference between the way that handles the power issues compared to the 750UP. Please advise, as I have enough angry customers off of this AP as it is without going through another round of failures. Can anyone verify the OmnitikUP working in a situation where the 750UP was fail?
04:37:23 interface,info ether3-m5 link down
04:37:26 interface,info ether3-m5 link up (speed 100M, full duplex)
04:37:43 interface,info ether3-m5 link down
04:37:45 interface,info ether3-m5 link up (speed 100M, full duplex)
04:37:48 interface,info ether3-m5 link down
04:37:50 interface,info ether3-m5 link up (speed 100M, full duplex)
I think none, but MT staff will correct me if I am wrong.Still interested in what the basis of using an OmnitikUP rather than a 750UP might have to do with any of this?
I was referring to the comment of Mikrotik staff that somehow the OmnitikUP would make some difference.RB750UP is not really an outdoor device, you should be using it inside a tough enclosure, together with some other devices, where temperature is somewhat stable. Normally you would use in some attic and then run cables to the roof. For true outdoor power, you need the OmniTIK UPA, which is an outdoor device.
Power options PoE: 8-30V DC on Ether1 (Non 802.3af). Jack: 8-30V DC
Power output Supports PoE output on ports 2-5. Max current 500mA per port
Capacitor should be enough as diode is already in RB750UP input. It is all down to PSU - how much capacitance it has. If the value is low, there will be noise. If measurement is done at the moment of low peak - power is turned off for the port.
Othervise I would suggest trying capacitor+diode idea - it will cost you a couple $,
Do you have an ETA on that firmware? Which problems exactly will it remedy?we are working on new controller firmware that should remedy these problems.
That's nice to hear, as, in their current state, all our RB750UP devices can't fulfill they main purpose and we had to go back to using DC splitters and individual POE injectors.we are working on new controller firmware that should remedy these problems.
$2 and its fixed? Where do we solder? Have some close up shots?I've been able to resolve my powering issue.
I soldered a 35V 2200uf capacitor onboard (the board still fits in the case) and all is well.
I put this back on the tower 200ft up in the air and now can power 3 UBNT devices!
Finally it works as expected!!!
That is a great fix!!!!! I wonder if you could have used a smaller cap, that is massive!I've been able to resolve my powering issue.
I soldered a 35V 2200uf capacitor onboard (the board still fits in the case) and all is well.
I put this back on the tower 200ft up in the air and now can power 3 UBNT devices!
Finally it works as expected!!!
specs of working modified 750UP seen above
OS v5.5
24v PoE injector
200ft of CAT5 cable
RB750UPether1<-->200ftCAT5<-->24vPoE<-->120VAC
RB750UPether2<-->empty
RB750UPether3<-->UBNT900Mloco
RB750UPether4<-->UBNTM2Rocket
RB750UPether5<-->UBNTM5Rocket
no devices plugged in:
[admin@MikroTik] > system health print
voltage: 22.5V
cpu-temperature: 44C
ether3 plugged in:
[admin@MikroTik] > system health print
voltage: 21.5V
cpu-temperature: 44C
ether3,4 plugged in:
[admin@MikroTik] > system health print
voltage: 20.5V
cpu-temperature: 44C
ether3,4,5 plugged in:
[admin@MikroTik] > system health print
voltage: 19.5V
cpu-temperature: 44C
System is stable. No reboots or shutdowns.
No, rule table is not supported on 750up. See the wiki below.This is a little off topic, but does the 750UP support VLAN tagging and trunking?
I'm trying to set this up, but keep getting: "failure: not supported for this switch"
Thanks, I was afraid of that. As this is what I was beginning to conclude myself (I was hoping to find some work-around). I guess without tagging and trunking, these 750UP devices are no more than paperweights to me. I guess I should have looked into the specs more carefully as I assumed they could do something as simple as this.No, rule table is not supported on 750up. See the wiki below.This is a little off topic, but does the 750UP support VLAN tagging and trunking?
I'm trying to set this up, but keep getting: "failure: not supported for this switch"
"Rule table is very powerful tool allowing wire speed packet filtering, forwarding and vlan tagging based on L2,L3,L4 protocol header field condition. "
http://wiki.mikrotik.com/wiki/Manual:Sw ... p_Features
Specifications are correct, any issues you might be seeing, are depending on specific conditions and ripple noise from the PSU. We will make software upgrade that does some output adjustments to compensate for this noise.If what CoxWireless says is true and adding a capacitor to the board is required to fix everything so it works according to the specifications seems it is probably time for Mikrotik to fix the product and recall/replace the defective units that have been shipped. At least it would seem reasonable to update the specifications to what they actually are so as to save the rest of their customers time and frustration of trying to use these where they will not work and apologize for releasing a product with incorrect specifications.
Yes, the stock power supply. I'm also using the UBNT 24v 1A supply for another site with only 2 radios.This is with the included power supply?
Have you saturated all 3 APs to their clients and from upstream to the 750UP for say 30 minutes?
How long has your setup been working?
How quick was it failing before?
Any idea how many AC watts the power adapter is using with everyone running behind the 750UP?
Can you provide information and close up pictures on where to solder?
We will make software upgrade that does some output adjustments to compensate for this noise.
I have already stated I was not using POE to bring the DC power to the site, and I had stable voltage with an electrical engineer setting up and then verifying the power at the location. We have solid DC power at the location. There is a simple calculation for voltage drop which includes load, cable size, and length, and we have solid 20V DC power at the site. We had stable power without any meaningful voltage drop under the required load, and nothing else fails to function, just your equipment. If you have some mysterious undocumented, immeasurable requirement for special voodoo power for your device to work, and is not in your specification, then your product is not working to specs.Specifications are correct, any issues you might be seeing, are depending on specific conditions and ripple noise from the PSU. We will make software upgrade that does some output adjustments to compensate for this noise.
This is everyones experience with these products, your specifications are wrong. Here is a guy that has gone out of his way to work out some work around for your faulty device and you still wont even give him the respect to admit your product is failing to do what it is specified to do.I will say, that with all of my measurements, everything was in spec, but I couldn't get anything to work prior to adding the capacitor.
Thanks, I was afraid of that. As this is what I was beginning to conclude myself (I was hoping to find some work-around). I guess without tagging and trunking, these 750UP devices are no more than paperweights to me. I guess I should have looked into the specs more carefully as I assumed they could do something as simple as this.No, rule table is not supported on 750up. See the wiki below.This is a little off topic, but does the 750UP support VLAN tagging and trunking?
I'm trying to set this up, but keep getting: "failure: not supported for this switch"
"Rule table is very powerful tool allowing wire speed packet filtering, forwarding and vlan tagging based on L2,L3,L4 protocol header field condition. "
http://wiki.mikrotik.com/wiki/Manual:Sw ... p_Features
I hope MT comes out with a "P" type device that supports the "rules table"
Thanks,
Duane
Yes, but from what you are describing, this hass nothing to do with tagging and trunking.With ports 1-5 removed from the master port and put into a bridge, I added the vlan under the switch to ports 2-5. I also added the vlan interface to the bridge. This allowed me to attach an IP address to the vlan. Let me know if you need more information.
This has everything to do with tagging and trunking. In my tests, I was plugging the 750UP ports into a switch (I used port 1 and 2-5, one at a time). I had a different IP on each VLAN on the 750UP. Those VLANs were sent over a trunk with tagging (1 ethernet cable between 750UP and the switch). On other ports of the switch, I confirmed that only the VLAN that was untagged could be communicated with (pinging the IP assigned to that VLAN on the 750UP, connecting to the 750UP and running a bandwidth test) or that I could also setup another device to use a trunk port on the switch and communicate with the 750UP on whichever VLANs were tagged on that trunk port of the switch. All you do is add the VLAN interfaces under the bridge interface on the 750UP. You can assign IP addresses to those VLANs. I think the draw back and limitation isn't that the device can't do this, but that the CPU is handling all of the processing instead of the switch chipset.Yes, but from what you are describing, this hass nothing to do with tagging and trunking.With ports 1-5 removed from the master port and put into a bridge, I added the vlan under the switch to ports 2-5. I also added the vlan interface to the bridge. This allowed me to attach an IP address to the vlan. Let me know if you need more information.
I believe this unit isn't capable of it. I'm using the attached ubnt rocket to do this, it actually can...
OK, I think I didn't describe what I'm wanting to do appropriately.This has everything to do with tagging and trunking. In my tests, I was plugging the 750UP ports into a switch (I used port 1 and 2-5, one at a time). I had a different IP on each VLAN on the 750UP. Those VLANs were sent over a trunk with tagging (1 ethernet cable between 750UP and the switch). On other ports of the switch, I confirmed that only the VLAN that was untagged could be communicated with (pinging the IP assigned to that VLAN on the 750UP, connecting to the 750UP and running a bandwidth test) or that I could also setup another device to use a trunk port on the switch and communicate with the 750UP on whichever VLANs were tagged on that trunk port of the switch. All you do is add the VLAN interfaces under the bridge interface on the 750UP. You can assign IP addresses to those VLANs. I think the draw back and limitation isn't that the device can't do this, but that the CPU is handling all of the processing instead of the switch chipset.
Edit:
I found out with further testing you don't even have to put all the ports in a bridge. You can add VLAN interfaces to a bridge with just the port you want to do trunking with. If you want another port on the 750UP to have an untagged VLAN, just create a bridge with that port and the VLAN interface on the bridge with the trunk port. Bottomline, this is very possible. I think the Wiki needs an update. This seems to be a common misunderstanding.
I am having no problem doing what you are describing. I would be happy to help you figure this out. Maybe we should work with specifics.OK, I think I didn't describe what I'm wanting to do appropriately.This has everything to do with tagging and trunking. In my tests, I was plugging the 750UP ports into a switch (I used port 1 and 2-5, one at a time). I had a different IP on each VLAN on the 750UP. Those VLANs were sent over a trunk with tagging (1 ethernet cable between 750UP and the switch). On other ports of the switch, I confirmed that only the VLAN that was untagged could be communicated with (pinging the IP assigned to that VLAN on the 750UP, connecting to the 750UP and running a bandwidth test) or that I could also setup another device to use a trunk port on the switch and communicate with the 750UP on whichever VLANs were tagged on that trunk port of the switch. All you do is add the VLAN interfaces under the bridge interface on the 750UP. You can assign IP addresses to those VLANs. I think the draw back and limitation isn't that the device can't do this, but that the CPU is handling all of the processing instead of the switch chipset.
Edit:
I found out with further testing you don't even have to put all the ports in a bridge. You can add VLAN interfaces to a bridge with just the port you want to do trunking with. If you want another port on the 750UP to have an untagged VLAN, just create a bridge with that port and the VLAN interface on the bridge with the trunk port. Bottomline, this is very possible. I think the Wiki needs an update. This seems to be a common misunderstanding.
Yes the above works when using the 750UP as the router and having a trunk port to a switch upstream (and the upstream switch is removing the tag for egress traffic to the end device, and adding the tag to ingress traffic from the device).
But what I am trying to do is use the 750UP as the upsteram switch (I am using other vendors for the core routing and vlan trunk) trunking one port to my router, and pealing off the vlans at the 750UP. Now if you can tell me that is possible, tested, and proven true - you'd make my day.
Yes, it does. All routerboards released in the last few years can do this.This is a little off topic, but does the 750UP support VLAN tagging and trunking?
I'm trying to set this up, but keep getting: "failure: not supported for this switch"
Thanks for this info.positive end of capacitor soldered to positive end of onboard capacitor C14
negative end of capacitor soldered to negative ends of onboard capacitors C34 and C59
How is this coming along?Specifications are correct, any issues you might be seeing, are depending on specific conditions and ripple noise from the PSU. We will make software upgrade that does some output adjustments to compensate for this noise.
question about cap was my first question to designers - reply was simple - you do not what to shorth anything anywhere near that board. larger the cap, larger the discharge voltage that can cause serious damage do the board and connected equipment. Better option is to add it near the PSU to make power over wire more stable, so that mdern impulse PSUs do not have noise issues when load is high over ethernet cables. If cap is places on the board - wire is still full of noise and induction uses power and warms up the wire, while cap at psu remedies these issues.
this is why we cannot suggest adding cap at the either of ends, since that is hazardous.
Anyway, we are expecting new controller firmware with some nice options to manage loads on ports.
Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012
Problem "solved" with connecting 4 pairs 5cat to main current 220V and other 4 pars to other current. When PSU is connected beside 750UP with short power cord with jack, then Voltage is 22,4V and almost 23 hours is working without restarts.question about cap was my first question to designers - reply was simple - you do not what to shorth anything anywhere near that board. larger the cap, larger the discharge voltage that can cause serious damage do the board and connected equipment. Better option is to add it near the PSU to make power over wire more stable, so that mdern impulse PSUs do not have noise issues when load is high over ethernet cables. If cap is places on the board - wire is still full of noise and induction uses power and warms up the wire, while cap at psu remedies these issues.
this is why we cannot suggest adding cap at the either of ends, since that is hazardous.
Anyway, we are expecting new controller firmware with some nice options to manage loads on ports.
Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2012
When will be information about firmware update? Or info that this failure can be solved with firmware upgrade! And it will be nice to warn resselers of this BUG, either you can loose faith in MT as a googd devices !!! We lost week to find out where problems hiding! Does these problems can fix with better PSU for example 27VDC 3,8A or 7,5A cable to 750up is around 50m, and is turned into PowerJack (in poe port is almost not working at all), now we try 2 default 24VDC 2,5A parallel connected psu and PROBLEM NOT SOLVED !
Our 2nd solution that we are awaiting parts to try is a 48V to 24V PoE Converter, silimar to Mikrotik's but the one we ordered has 30W output instead of 24W, I would've preferred a >40W unit, but we couldn't find one that was readily available and at a resonable price. This would allow us to use a high power 48V PoE injector at ground level and convert it to a good 24V at height for the RB750UP. This should give us the extra few volts we need to keep the current required lower.
we have 2 cables in that tower i describe.ottoshr ethernet cable only have 4 pairs with 2 wires each (a pair) or i am missing someting from your post?
MyThoughts you effectively reduced by half the power loss over the cable, of course that works perfectly well.
Normis (Mikrotik) we are still waiting and hoping that someday these problems/issue/bug will be solved somehow with firmware update !Sorry for not replying sooner - we are still working on it, and developers promise a solution hopefully next week.
Tycon Power TP-DCDC-4824-HPI considered this solution myself. I wasn't able to get an answer from MikroTik as to if this would actually fix the problem. Sounds like it does. Where did you find the 30W? The MikroTik was the highest one I found. What all are you running on it? What cable lengths?
Normis, Mikrotik any news concerning RB750UP poe issues ?!Normis (Mikrotik) we are still waiting and hoping that someday these problems/issue/bug will be solved somehow with firmware update !Sorry for not replying sooner - we are still working on it, and developers promise a solution hopefully next week.
5.17 is without updates in this POE issues?Please be assured, that we will post any news as soon as we have them.
Yes, we do that. But better will be if there is going low voltage not 220V for fire safety and etc.no, 5.17 does not introduce anything new, in the mean time, you can
9if possible) run longer power cable to the RB750UP to power connected devices successfully.
we tried but there is also loss of voltage and with 21,9V it almost not working , restarts poe devices from time to time.you can do that with low voltage (from same supplied power supply as electrical cable has less resistance as result less voltage drop over the cable and less fluctuations on power spikes.
problem was when we powered up 750up with standart psu 2,5A 24VDC with power cord , poe devices restarts from time to time, cable length aprox 50-70m, we try 2 psu units put together for 5A 24VDC and problem still exists, system>health show 21,2V and poe devices resets... as i describe earlier solved only when place on tower psu.if you are powering RB750UP with power-cord you do not have any problems powering other devices within allowed powering range. So how exactly these will solve the problem?
According to Ubiquity 12-24V 2.5WAnd these devices are within 500mA required (for current FW) at voltage they are receiving?
Very interested in your design!.not a problem, feel free to pm me if you have any more questions . We are using the solar site to control the stock water for cattle wirelessly .
Got this today:we are working on new controller firmware that should remedy these problems.
What's new in 5.18 (2012-Jun-21 17:20):
.....
*) fix health and poe access reliability on OmniTIK UPA and RB750UP boards;
......
My desired setup (and how I'm testing) is with the Mikrotik-provided power supply (24V @2.5amp) feeding through a passive poe injector (y-cord) through 120' of cat5e cable. The 750UP is fed on the DC plug from that 120' cable. Then I have a 1 or 2 Nanostations on a 30' cat5e cable connected to one of the LAN ports with poe-out=forced-on.
The Nanostation reboots regularly. When I change a setting on 1 Nanostation and apply changes (in AirOS), then the other Nanostation will reboot.
Otherwise, reboots happen sporadically. Maximum uptime of the Nanostations in the past 72 hours is about 10 hours.
[Edited] Assume each NSM5 is 8W and the RB is 6W. That's a total of 22W and even with the long POE run, I would expect that's sufficient.
The 750UP is showing constant voltage of 20.4V in system health.
When will it be made available?New firmware will be able to mask some of the spikes
no, it is not possible, RB800 works with 802.3af/at and RB750UP does not support thatsomeone tried this
if you want to put to work a rb800 with the rb 750UP
no, power conversion happens only in one dirrection. Also, RB800 uses a lot of power and it is not possible even theoretically to power it using RB750UP.I can put 48 to 24V PoE Converter, in reverse so that IN=24v Out 48V?
http://routerboard.com/pdf/386/RB-POE-CON-HP.pdf
RB750UP---------24 v Poe Converter in reverse out 48V--------RB 800?
excuse my little English
Yes, I understand all that. That's very basic.it does not matter much how long cables are from RB750UP to device you are powering since there you can have up to 500mA. Issue is, that cable that is powering RB750UP itself, as there you will have sum of all powered device and losses and fluctuations will be bigger there.
How much longer will we suffer?RK - release is coming along nicely.
Bump.CoxWireless you say you could have used a smaller capacitor. What size? That level of electrical is over my head, but I was hoping to solder a cap on my 750UP. Is 24V 1200uf reasonable or what would you recommend?
People are just looking for a solution to the problem. The problem being the hardware doesn't work quite as advertised. The solution could be this promised software fix. Right now, the only thing that we know works is this capacitor.solution with capacitor is dangerous if short is happening, it can damage the router and connected hardware when on short that large capacitor is discharging, on the other hand, if you know that no shorts are going to happen - it is not that bad to stabilize the fluctuations.
they are working ok. List is not updated.sxts, grooves, 751 and 951 not reliable whit 750UP?
it did not have to fix anything yet,Not sure if 5.19 was supposed to fix the power problem, but it hasn't.
I have another RB750UP to modify. I'll go smaller and see where the breaking point is at.CoxWireless you say you could have used a smaller capacitor. What size? That level of electrical is over my head, but I was hoping to solder a cap on my 750UP. Is 24V 1200uf reasonable or what would you recommend?
They added a lot of information here:hi, whith 5.20 on my 750up (poe firmware 2) i'vo got random reboot on ubnt rocket M5. Set "forced on" do nothing.
What to try out??..
log
In the "5.20 Release" thread http://forum.mikrotik.com/viewtopic.php?t=64785 , one has problem with poe on port 4 also.hi, whith 5.20 on my 750up (poe firmware 2) i'vo got random reboot on ubnt rocket M5. Set "forced on" do nothing.
The user in other thread is "sindudas".to Paetur - it is same guy - hagar83 in both topics
to hagar83 - we need more useful information.
Same here. No unexpected behavior to report so far.Bravo for 5.20, it seems to work pretty good.
Hi ...I've got a 35v 220uf capacitor running now (not the 35v 2200uf anymore) and I can power 4 UBNT devices reliably. I'm going to put this in the field tomorrow for real world testing....
set 0 name=ether1-gateway
set 1 name=ether2-master-local poe-priority=10
set 2 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether3-slave-local poe-out=off poe-priority=10
set 3 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether4-slave-local poe-priority=10
set 4 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether5-slave-local poe-priority=10
set 0 name=ether1-gateway
set 1 name=ether2-master-local poe-priority=10
set 2 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether3-slave-local poe-out=off poe-priority=10
set 3 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether4-slave-local poe-priority=10
set 4 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether5-slave-local poe-priority=10
I have one running with the 35v 220uf capacitor. System-Health reports a constant 21.8VHi ...I've got a 35v 220uf capacitor running now (not the 35v 2200uf anymore) and I can power 4 UBNT devices reliably. I'm going to put this in the field tomorrow for real world testing....
Any updates on that?
Regards;
I have a following configuration and I am little lost here, whether it will work or not.2.5A@24V PSU is over what rb750UP can consume (it is close to that value, so there should not be any issues regarding lack of power).
next problem - 50m - 70m with minimum set resistance for cat5e cable of 0.18Ohm per meter (and this is taken straight out of physics book) so we are talking 9Ohm (50m) and 12.6Ohm(70m) (usually higher quality cables have less resistance) so now calculate the voltage loss over the length of the cable. And then calculate how much power will use connected device when it uses 8W@24V
Does mikrotik have any answer to this?I had found a similar issue as well
@mikrotik You should be able to do this in your lab (this is all your gear):
1. plug in 750UP via 2.5A 24V include supply and computer in ether1
2. load 5.20 and update poe firmware.
3. with default config, only change poe off on ether3:
/interface ethernet4. plug ether1 of RB750 into ether5 of 750UPCode: Select allset 0 name=ether1-gateway set 1 name=ether2-master-local poe-priority=10 set 2 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether3-slave-local poe-out=off poe-priority=10 set 3 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether4-slave-local poe-priority=10 set 4 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether5-slave-local poe-priority=10
5. plug ether1 of RB750G into ether3 of 750UP
6. watch RB750 on ether5 reboot
@CoxWireless, @complete2006, is that what you were seeing? Is that what you meant by "LEDs go crazy"?
EDIT: I found "LEDs go crazy":
1. plug in 750UP via 2.5A 24V include supply and computer in ether1
2. load 5.20 and update poe firmware.
3. with default config, ether2 poe off, ether4 poe forced on, ether:
/interface ethernet4. plug ether1 of RB750 into ether3 of 750UPCode: Select allset 0 name=ether1-gateway set 1 name=ether2-master-local poe-priority=10 set 2 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether3-slave-local poe-out=off poe-priority=10 set 3 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether4-slave-local poe-priority=10 set 4 master-port=ether2-master-local name=ether5-slave-local poe-priority=10
5. watch LEDs on ether4 of 750UP
6. set ether5 to poe off and the problem goes away
Even if i run poe forced-on the 951 will reboot sometimes. Any tips?I have a 750UP powering 3 951 devices. I must run poe forced-on. Because when I run poe auto-on the devices randomly reboots. any fix to this soon?
admin@PoE Switch] > int eth poe monitor [find]
name: ether2-master-local ether3-slave-local ether4-slave-local>
poe-out-voltage: 23.6V 23.6V
poe-out-current: 16mA 32mA
poe-out-power: 0.3W 0.7W
waiting =)Hold on until I post my update later this week, made a change...
Since Mikrotik isn't updating us on any of this, I reached out to their support email. A couple weeks later, I was told "we are working on completely revised version of firmware."Does mikrotik have any answer to this?
new changed poe-controller firmware will be included into RouterOS 5.22. It will
address "crazy lights" when in auto-on mode, weirdness with ether5 port. However
it will not address issues with forced-on mode.
Ive updated to 5.22
My Firmware is 3.0
My POE Firmware is 2.1
I am powering my 750UP over POE. Cable is long about 50m. Ive checked Ether1 POE over long cable.
I get random reboots (power off/on) on my powered UBNT devices. I have 1 UBNT bullet m2, 1 Airgrid M2 and 1 Airgrid M5.
First time i tried doing it over POE it was version 5.17 i think.. Devices would shut down and power up randomly all the time.
I connected Power adapter directly and everything was working for almost a month.
Now i dont have power in the builing where router is and I was forced to use POE to power on router.
It goes like this.... Some random time in day ... random device/s or all of them go offline. After 5-10 min they get back up.
I have been working with Mikrotik support to no avail on this issue.Modified unit (cox wireless mod) feeding 3 rockets over 200ft. of cat 5 , using 28 v 3.5 a power supply . 750 poe out monitor very very erratic. Rockets in AP mode and are said to be @ 6.5 watts , but I'm seeing monitored spikes up to and in excess of 12w which is crazy. All new units, the only thing I haven't changed is the cat 5 feeding up the tower.