DiyLightAnimation
Fun => The Porch => Topic started by: mitch09 on December 16, 2014, 03:14:05 pm
-
I am trying to get an active hub moved off of my roof, but have ran into a little snag.
I currently run an etherdongle to an active Hub on my roof. This then pixelnet outputs to another active hub on the south side of my house.
I would like to get the active hub on the ground, but on the north side of my house.
without running a very long cat5 around my house, can I use a simple ethernet hub or switch at my computer & etherdongle which is centrally located to send data from the etherdongle in both directions?
something like this: http://support.linksys.com/en-us/support/switches/EZXS55W
-
mostly like no but I am sure someone will prove me wrong >:D
The ETD puts out pixelnet and not ethernet packets. If the switch/hub does any error checking and or boost the signal it won't work.
You just need two RJ-45 jacks connected together.
Take a spare SSR4 board with nothing on it but the two RJ-45 jacks
Take 2 RJ-45 jacks and a short piece of cat5 cable and solder the wires to the pins (pin 1 to pin 1, pin 2 to pin 2, etc)
If you have a hub/switch laying around you can test it yourself. Just don't plug it into an outlet for power.
Connect a cable from a working network port and plug into one port on your unpowered switch. Then take a second cable from that hub (unpowered) and plug into something that will show active (laptop) If you see a connection and or lights flashing on the socket then you can use it.
clear as mud?
Rick R.
(hmm, did I just counter point myself??)
-
mostly like no but I am sure someone will prove me wrong >:D
The ETD puts out pixelnet and not ethernet packets. If the switch/hub does any error checking and or boost the signal it won't work.
You just need two RJ-45 jacks connected together.
Take a spare SSR4 board with nothing on it but the two RJ-45 jacks
Take 2 RJ-45 jacks and a short piece of cat5 cable and solder the wires to the pins (pin 1 to pin 1, pin 2 to pin 2, etc)
If you have a hub/switch laying around you can test it yourself. Just don't plug it into an outlet for power.
Connect a cable from a working network port and plug into one port on your unpowered switch. Then take a second cable from that hub (unpowered) and plug into something that will show active (laptop) If you see a connection and or lights flashing on the socket then you can use it.
clear as mud?
Rick R.
(hmm, did I just counter point myself??)
Rick,
Could I then just use to cat5 pigtails that come with the SSC coops? Combine the wires and crimp on a RJ45 male to plug into my computer?
-
You would need a pixelnet splitter http://www.diylightanimation.com/wiki/index.php?title=Manual_PixelnetSplitter to do that. The output of the ether dongle can not be sent through a regular network switch or hub, the data stream is different and the switch/hub would not know how to handle it.
I am trying to get an active hub moved off of my roof, but have ran into a little snag.
I currently run an etherdongle to an active Hub on my roof. This then pixelnet outputs to another active hub on the south side of my house.
I would like to get the active hub on the ground, but on the north side of my house.
without running a very long cat5 around my house, can I use a simple ethernet hub or switch at my computer & etherdongle which is centrally located to send data from the etherdongle in both directions?
something like this: http://support.linksys.com/en-us/support/switches/EZXS55W
-
Just use something like this, pixelnet splitter would be better but these work in a pinch.
http://www.holidaycoro.com/mobile/Product.aspx?ProductCode=ADAPTER-3WAYFF
-
Just use something like this, pixelnet splitter would be better but these work in a pinch.
http://www.holidaycoro.com/mobile/Product.aspx?ProductCode=ADAPTER-3WAYFF
Thx. I'll give it a try
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk