OVER 9000??!?!?!it would be something along these lines - CCR1100
the rest would be just how many interfaces it has. Here, the example with a lot of Gbit interfaces
CCR1100-9001G
no, "i" means injector (PoE out on one port), "P" means power (PoE out on more ports)Isn't there any letter to distinguish between passive PoE and 802.3af, at ?
If I get it right, i, P refer to Mikrotik proprietary "controller" mechanism...?
Product like this exist only in one ethernet row - RB3011.What to call this device?
RB3011 is:Product like this exist only in one ethernet row - RB3011.What to call this device?
Amlostso you mean like a RB2011L ?
2011L is without LCD and low costAmlostso you mean like a RB2011L ?
But I think smaller and low weight one. Without display, maybe plastic case, under each other the 2x 4/5 ethernet ports.
Yes, I understand you, but ... It's a wish/desire
can we assume the combination XG will mean multi-gigabit?
X = Roman 10can we assume the combination XG will mean multi-gigabit?
like in CRS312-4C+8XG
as i remember Janis' ending lines to the device itself, he was mentioning 2.5G/5G/10G there as the new way Mikrotik is following - maybe was just a freudian slip - this was the base of my speculation.so 10G interfaces
Read carefully. USB is only indicated on non Gigabit devices, because Gigabit devices automatically imply USB (if two models exist, where one is non-gigabit, one is gigabit).Why RB750G is not named RB750UG. The same about RB760iGS not being RB760UiGS? This naming scheme looks really inconsistent in practice :/ CRS and CCR naming schemes seem to be much more consistent. Also why those are not x2? They have 2 cores after all...
-<n>G+ number of 2.5G Ethernet portsWe have updated the manual with some more letters
home Ethernet eXchangehEX ?
mAP ? micro Access Point ?
1. I prefer the classic or Hex-S (!) style
Are you aware that the ac^2 can be installed "flat"? i.e. the base has two configurations, the tower one and a desktop one.There will be a non-TC (classic MikroTik style) version of hap ac2?
These don't seem to conform to 3-symbol-name. Official name seems to be RB5009UG+S+IN ... meaning that 5 is series, left 0 is number of wired interfaces (we all know that RB5009 has more than 0 of them), right 0 is number of wireless interfaces (which is true for 5009 but not for L009) and 9 is some unlisted feature. And likewise for L009 (with official name L009UiGS-RM).Board Name
Currently, there can be three types of board names:
- 3-symbol name
1st symbol stands for series (this can either be a number or a letter)
2nd digit for indicating the number of potential wired interfaces (Ethernet, SFP, SFP+)
3rd digit for indicating the number of potential wireless interfaces (built-in and mPCI and mPCIe slots)- Word - currently used names are: OmniTIK, Groove, SXT, SEXTANT, Metal, LHG, DynaDish, cAP, wAP, LDF, DISC, mANTBox, QRT, DynaDish, cAP, hAP, hEX. If the board has fundamental changes in hardware (such as completely different CPU) revision version will be added at the end
- Exceptional naming - 600, 800, 1000, 1100, 1200, 2011, 3011, 4011 boards are standalone representatives of the series or have more than 9 wired interfaces, so the name was simplified to full hundreds or development year.
I know that the wiki page has been archived... The link on the first page of this thread points to this archived page instead of the new wiki page you just posted. That's why I'm asking you to update this link... If you don't want to update the link, unpin this thread because "as is" it is completely useless for readers.do not use the wiki, it is an archive (it says so on the page, btw). here is the new manual:
https://help.mikrotik.com/docs/display/ ... uct+Naming
also we made a video about naming: https://youtu.be/AILuuE4mJKg
L stands for nothing, it is a "Series", just like RB and S, C, D, M etc.
All RBxxx devices are using the old convention, where the series is 5
L0009 is a newer model, like C52 etc. the series is L
Everything is covered in the document. RTFM more carefully