07-01-2004 02:40 PM - edited 03-02-2019 04:47 PM
Hi. Does anyone know if a 3548XL will play nice with a Linksys EF3124 (w/EF31SC 100BaseFX module) via a 1000BaseSX GBIC over fiber? The idea is to do away with a cheapo switch being used as a repeater in a 400+ ft. Cat 5 pull, and maybe pick up a little performance. Speaking of fiber, anyone have any words of wisdom is pulling fiber through conduit occupied by Cat 5? I apologize for the "simpleness" of my question(s) - I'm learning. ;^)
Thanks.
Solved! Go to Solution.
07-01-2004 08:28 PM
No, it won't.
100Base and Gig protocols are completely different and will not automatically adjust.
Regarding pulling the fiber; if the conduit is reasonably full (reasonably full for a 3/4" pipe is two strands of Cat-rated UTP), you'll have a hard time pulling terminated fiber.
If the fiber is un-terminated, it probably won't be a problem (recommended: use "In the wall" type fiber - it's round and uses kevlar (or similar) material as a strength member to prevent stretching (and breaking) the glass. If you try to use "zip cord," especially terminated Zip cord, your chances of success are significantly reduced ... ).
Zip cord (jumper cordage) has no real strength member, and if you pull with too much force, the jacketing will stretch, and the glass will break.
You may want to investigate a wireless bridge solution.
Good Luck
Scott
07-01-2004 08:28 PM
No, it won't.
100Base and Gig protocols are completely different and will not automatically adjust.
Regarding pulling the fiber; if the conduit is reasonably full (reasonably full for a 3/4" pipe is two strands of Cat-rated UTP), you'll have a hard time pulling terminated fiber.
If the fiber is un-terminated, it probably won't be a problem (recommended: use "In the wall" type fiber - it's round and uses kevlar (or similar) material as a strength member to prevent stretching (and breaking) the glass. If you try to use "zip cord," especially terminated Zip cord, your chances of success are significantly reduced ... ).
Zip cord (jumper cordage) has no real strength member, and if you pull with too much force, the jacketing will stretch, and the glass will break.
You may want to investigate a wireless bridge solution.
Good Luck
Scott
07-02-2004 09:10 AM
Thanks much, Scott. I'll explore other options.
-Josh-
07-02-2004 06:23 PM
Another option that comes to mind is a media converter. If you used something like a 100BASE copper-to-fiber (100BASE-FX), then you could drive the distance over fiber ... it wouldn't be GigE, but would still be a reasonably priced, relatively high bandwidth solution.
Good Luck, thanks for the rating!
Scott
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