Twisted pair port link led is off – Allied Telesis Layer 3 Gigabit Ethernet Switch x600-24Ts-POE User Manual
Page 93
x600 Layer 3 Gigabit Ethernet Switch Installation Guide
93
Twisted Pair Port Link LED is Off
When a twisted pair port on the switch is connected to a properly operating
end node, the Link LED for the port should be on. If a Link LED is off, do
the following:
Note
A 1000Base-T connection can take from five to ten seconds to
establish a link.
Verify that the end node connected to the port is powered ON and is
operating properly.
Check that the twisted pair cable is securely connected to the port on
the switch and to the port on the end node.
Make sure that the twisted pair cable does not exceed 100m (328 ft).
Verify that you are using the appropriate category of twisted pair cable.
For information, refer to Table 13 on page 78.
Determine if a crossover cable is required. Since the twisted pair ports
feature auto MDI/MDI-X, you should be able to use a straight-through
cable regardless of the type of device you connect to a port. However,
if you disable Auto-Negotiation on a port and set a port’s speed and
duplex mode manually, the port defaults to MDI-X. Disabling Auto-
Negotiation may require manually configuring a port’s MDI/MDI-X
setting or using a crossover cable.
Make sure that the operating parameters of a port on the switch are
compatible with the end node to which the port is connected. This may
require using the switch’s operating system software.
For a switch port to successfully Auto-Negotiate its duplex mode with
an end node, the end node should also be using Auto-Negotiation.
Otherwise, a duplex mode mismatch can occur. A switch port using
Auto-Negotiation defaults to half-duplex if it detects that the end node
is not using Auto-Negotiation. This can result in a mismatch if the end
node is operating at a fixed duplex mode of full-duplex.
To avoid this problem, disable Auto-Negotiation on a switch port and
set the port’s speed and duplex mode manually if the end node has a
fixed duplex mode of full-duplex.
The switch has a bad cable detection feature that enables it to
determine if a twisted pair cable has a electrical short that might cause
a network loop. If the switch detects a bad cable on a port, it does not
establish a link on that port. In this situation, replace the cable.