04-07-2015 03:10 AM - edited 03-17-2019 02:34 AM
Hi all,
I have had a few Cisco 7900 series phones returned to me recently with the same problem
When the phone receives PoE the whole phone lights up the only the speaker light stays on and all else goes off. Factory reset not functional at this point. These were all working phones at one point. Other posts suggest a hardware fault, can anyone confirm if there are any known fixes before i raise a TAC?
Thanks in advance.
04-07-2015 05:00 AM
Which 7900 phones, switch, ios?
04-07-2015 05:47 AM
The phones i have had back are all cisco 7945s into a 3750 stack running 'ipservicesk9-mz.122-55.SE6'
I've had 3 come back after a major departmental move, when unpacking at the far side of the move the phones are doing as above. Thanks for your assistance.
Phone Load name - SCCP45.9-4-2-1s
04-08-2015 04:43 AM
Looks like you are hitting the problem listed in the field notice above.
"If the suspected hardware has been in operation for approximately 24 months, the product hardware might fail to boot up due to memory failure during a power cycle event"
"Fix on failure Replacement Guidelines: Request Return Material Authorization (RMA) product through normal service support channels."
04-08-2015 04:49 AM
Thats the best explanation i've had to date. Many thanks for your help Cehill.
04-08-2015 04:51 AM
Your welcome.
07-13-2015 04:04 AM
Is there a work around available for this or a way of knowing which phones are effected?
I'm undertaking an upgrade for a client at the moment and they have about 200 7945's deployed and so far about 5% of their phones have been effected by this?
I'm concerned about upgrading the phones as I don't want to kill all of them.
Thanks,
Richard
07-14-2015 10:25 AM
I read through the Field Notice before and opened a case with TAC. Long story short, if the 79xx phone is under warranty or SmartNet you can get it replaced. If it is not covered then your basically out of luck unless you can convince your Cisco Rep. or Cisco Partner to replace the phones for free. The field notice basically states that Cisco knows they got a batch of bad chips in these phones, but they stop short of doing a replacement program.
We normally loose at least one phone every time we have a power outage at any of my sites.
There are no internal batteries in these phones that I know of, but it's been a while since I cracked one open.
08-13-2015 02:54 PM
This discussion has been reposted from Cisco Small Business Support Community to the IP Telephony community.
04-07-2015 05:22 AM
Field notice below describes your trouble. Unfortunately I don't see a workaround listed.
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/field-notices/637/fn63772.html
FN 63772 - IP Phones - May Fail To Boot-Up After A Power Cycle - Fix-on-Failure
Phones that fail remain in a stalled boot-up state where the LCD is blank and the speakerphone lamp is lit. The phone will no longer recover back to an operational state.
07-13-2015 04:59 AM
Hi Folk,
I have a solution for you. you should test your device at some other location, or you may change its batteries and then see how its performs.
07-13-2015 05:03 AM
When you say try it in another location, do you just mean a different switch/switchport - as this has no effect. Also which batteries should we be changing?
07-13-2015 05:26 AM
Batteries are there inside the phone. you can open from bottom. you need to unscrew it(if it is not in warranty).
07-14-2015 08:28 AM
I've opened up a defective phone and i don't see any batteries, do you know where they are located and what they look like?
07-13-2015 05:52 AM
Hi Andrew,
Tried on a seperate switch stack & a seperate Chassis but still wont boot, When you say battery are you talking about a CMOS battery of some sort on the internal board of the phone? I've never dealt with these before as like you say it would probably null any warranty.
Thanks for your help.
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide