Power Notice:

1.The device is a power-required device, it means, it will not work till it is powered. If your networks should active all the time, please consider using UPS (Uninterrupted Power Supply) for your device. It will prevent you from network data loss or network downtime.

2.In some area, installing a surge suppression device may also help to protect your switch from being damaged by unregulated surge or current to the Switch or the power adapter.

2.3Hardware Installation

2.3.1 Connecting end node or hub or switch

1.Place the Switch on a smooth surface or fasten the mounting brackets with the provided screws in a standard 19” rack.

2.Connect switch or PC to one port of the Switch using Category 3/4/5 UTP/STP cabling.

3.Connect another switch or PC to the other port of Switch by following the same process as described in Step 2.

Notice:

Cable distance for Switch

The cable distance between Ethernet Switch and hub/PC should not exceed 100 meter for UTP/STP cable, 220m for 62.5/125 fiber cable and 550m for 50/125 fiber cable if use 1000Base-SX module, 550m for 62.5/125 or 50/125 fiber cable and 10km for 9/125 fiber cable if use 1000Base-LX module.

Make sure the wiring is correct

It can be used Category 3/4/5 cable in 10 Mbps operation. To reliably operate your network at 100Mbps and 1000Mbps, you must use an Unshielded Twisted-Pair (UTP) Category 5 cable, or better Data Grade cabling. While a Category 3 or 4 cables may initially seem to work, it will soon cause data loss.

2.3.2 Connecting to Network Backbone or Server

Connect to the Gigabit Ethernet ports with Category 5 copper cable or fiber optic cable for uplinking to a network backbone or network server. These ports operate at 1000Mbps in full-duplex mode. A valid connection is indicated when the 1000 or LNK LED is on.

4