What happened was when a chip in the radio would be fried by a high power
esd, it would cause an arp storm. They added some software code to detect
and remedy this issue many firmware versions back.

What you need is to tcpdump the radio traffic to a .pcap, then download
that file to your computer for analysis in wireshark. If you want to find
the issue, you're going to have to look at the traffic to find out what's
going on.
On Jun 18, 2016 7:11 PM, "CBB - Jay Fuller" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
> several segments of our network have reported intermittent connectivity.
> in some cases drops "a few times an hour".
> I observed at one location coming off a 2.4 loco more dropped packets than
> good packets.   instead of replacing that one radio, i thought i might come
> here for suggestions.
>
> i know a long long time ago we'd heard of ubnt radios losing their mind
> and going on an all out broadcast storm.  i think i remember where a
> firmware release sensed this and disabled the ethernet port (thus bricking
> he unit, which is better than it causing chaos).   something is causing
> chaos, but it is not everywhere.  and of course, it is not getting on other
> routed segments...
>
> any suggestions other than disabling one port on  the switch at the
> affected location at a time?
>
>
>

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