BEWARD ST-810HP [6/14] Rear panel

BEWARD ST-810HP [6/14] Rear panel
10 11
Per 10/100Mbps Port
LED Color Function
LNK/ACT Green
Light: Indicates the link through that port is successfully
established at 10/100Mbps full duplex mode.
Blink Slowly: Indicates the link through that port is
successfully established at 10/100Mbps
half duplex mode.
Blink Fast: Indicates that the switch is actively sending
or receiving data over that port.
PoE Orange
Light: Indicates the port is providing 48V (ST-810P) /
56V (ST-810HP) DC in-line power.
Per 10/100/1000Mbps Port
LED Color Function
Speed Green
Light: Indicates the link through that port is successfully
established at 1000Mbps.
Blink Slowly: Indicates the link through that port is
successfully established at 100Mbps.
Off: Indicates the link through that port is successfully
established at 10Mbps.
LNK/ACT Green
Light: Indicates the link through that port is successfully
established.
Blink: Indicates that the switch is actively sending or
receiving data over that port.
2.2 Rear Panel
The rear panel of the PoE Ethernet Switch indicates an AC inlet power socket,
which accepts input power from 100 to 240V AC, 50-60Hz, 2A (ST-810P) or 100 to
240V AC, 50-60Hz, 2.5A (ST-810HP).
100~240V AC
50/60Hz, 2A max.
Figure 2-3: ST-810P Switch Rear Panel
100~240V AC
50/60Hz, 2.5A max.
Figure 2-4: ST-810HP Switch Rear Panel
Power
Notice
The device is a power-required device, meaning it will not work till
it is powered. If your networks should be 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. In
some area, installing a surge suppression device may also help to
protect your ST-810HP from being damaged by unregulated surge
or current to the ST-810HP or the power adapter.
Before startup
Before your installation begins, please refer to the following for your cabling:
10/100Base-TX (Port 1 to Port 8)
All 10/100Base-TX ports come with Auto-Negotiation capability. They automatically
support 100Base-TX and 10Base-T networks. Users only need to plug a working
network device into one of the 10/100Base-TX ports, and then turn on the PoE
Ethernet Switch. The port will automatically run in 10Mbps, 20Mbps, 100Mbps or
200Mbps after negotiating with the connected device.
10/100/1000Base-T (Port 9)
The 10/100/1000Base-T port comes with Auto-Negotiation capability, which
automatically supports 1000Base-T, 100Base-TX and 10Base-T networks. Users
only need to plug a working network device into the 10/100/1000Base-T port, and
then turn on the PoE Ethernet Switch. The port will automatically run in 10Mbps,
20Mbps, 100Mbps or 200Mbps and 1000Mbps or 2000Mbps after negotiating with
the connected device.
Cabling
Each 10/100Base-TX and 10/100/1000Base-T port uses RJ-45 sockets -- similar
to phone jacks -- for connection of unshielded twisted-pair cable (UTP). The IEEE
802.3 / 802.3u / 802.3ab Fast / Gigabit Ethernet standard requires Category 5 UTP
for 100Mbps 100Base-TX. 10Base-T networks can use Cat.3, 4, 5 or 1000Base-T
uses 5/5e/6 UTP (see table below). Maximum distance is 100 meters (328 feet).
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