Some day they'll put SFP interfaces on our damn equipment. 



----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 

Midwest Internet Exchange 

The Brothers WISP 




----- Original Message -----

From: "George Skorup" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, May 1, 2017 7:42:02 PM 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] GIGE-APC Surge suppressors 

Bottom line, use MTC surge suppressors top and bottom and your life will be 
better.* 

*does not work in all cases, all gear will not be unharmed, remember to take 
your Pepto-Bismol during storm season 


On 5/1/2017 7:06 PM, Chuck McCown wrote: 





If I did some cherrypicking, I could get a decent testimonial out of the text 
;-) 




From: George Skorup 
Sent: Monday, May 01, 2017 4:56 PM 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] GIGE-APC Surge suppressors 

Sorry to hijack, but semi related... 

We either had a really bad power surge or a very close lightning strike at our 
NOC over the weekend. No visible signs of a direct strike to the tower. I'm 
leaning towards the power surge since other networked things in the office 
died, and our office telco/network closet is uplinked to the server room via a 
pair of fiber. Railroad stuff was all messed up at several crossings. And other 
businesses nearby lost various electronics as well. 

Two AF24's and an AF5. GigE-APCs at the bottom weren't burned up, but were 
obviously dead. The AF POE injectors all shut down when plugged into them. The 
GigE-SS's on top apparently stopped the surge from hitting the radios. After I 
bypassed the GigE-APCs at the bottom, the ethernet links would only run at 
100Mbps, plus errors. After bypassing the GigE-SS's on top this morning, all 
three are running GigE again with no errors. So that saved a lot of work today. 

However, it wasn't so good for the 5GHz 450i cluster at the top. Don't know 
how, but one survived. We relied on the 450's built-in suppression at the top. 
Didn't happen. The GigE-APCs were all dead. So yeah, you should probably just 
run GigE-SS's near a radio, even if it claims surge suppression is built in. 

The PacketFlux PowerInjector+Sync had two of the ports with visible damage on 
the board. Took out the SiteMonitor Base unit with it. Forrest, if you want 
these for failure analysis, just let me know. I'd be happy to send them to you. 
When I got the office, the green LED was flashing 2, and I believe port #2 was 
a damaged one. It also took out all four of those ports on the CCR1036. 

I've seen similar events over the years and this clearly looks like bottom up, 
i.e. utility surge. And of course the one thing I forgot after doing the 
generator and transfer switches.... the f'n whole panel surge suppressor. I 
would've moved the existing one over to the other panel, but I needed different 
breakers. 


On 5/1/2017 11:22 AM, Chuck McCown wrote: 

<blockquote>



During a recent solder paste reorder, one of our people ordered a different 
solder than we historically have been using. It requires a different cleaning 
method than we normally use. 

We only recently noticed this when making some new product prototypes. 
So, for a relatively short amount of time, the boards have not been properly 
cleaned. 

We will offer free advance replacements for any of our products purchased this 
year just so we can inspect them. I don’t think it has been going on for a long 
time but I am not totally certain exactly when this happened. 

If you have anything acting goofy or just don’t to chance it, let us know and 
we will ship you some new ones to swap with. 



</blockquote>


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