Pan Dacom 9.2 Speed-DSL Manual
Below you will find brief information for Speed-DSL SPEED-DSL 9.2. The SPEED-DSL 9.2 is a device that allows you to establish an Ethernet connection over 8 wires. It can achieve speeds up to 9.2 Mbit/s and supports loop bonding capability between all four ports. The device comes with a power supply and supports both single line and loop bonded G.SHDSL connections, as well as a 10/100 Ethernet port.
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Nets work together. (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) Nets work together. Notes Before installing and putting the device into operation, please read the security guidelines at the end of this documentation! Pan Dacom would like to point out that the information and notes contained in these documents are subject to technical changes. In particular, changes resulting from the continuing development of the products may not have been taken into account. Pan Dacom does not assume liability for print errors contained in this manual or other inaccuracies. Pan Dacom explicitly points out that this manual only contains a general description of technical processes and notes, and that their implementation as described is not necessarily sensible in every individual case. In case of doubt, it is essential to confer with Pan Dacom. This manual may not be copied, in whole or in part, or translated into other languages, without the written consent by Pan Dacom. Ó by Pan Dacom Networking AG Version 1.1 SPEED-DSL 9.2 (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) page 2 of 10 Nets work together. 1 INSTALLATION 1.1 Unpack and Inspect the Equipment The following components should be included: 1 SPEED-DSL 9.2 1 power supply 1.2 Power Up the SPEED-DSL 9.2 Plug the power supply into the power adapter port on the back of the SPEED-DSL 9.2 and connect it to your power source. Verify that the Power LED on the front of the SPEED-DSL 9.2 is illuminated. NOTE Upon start up, the Ethernet link will remain disabled (as indicated by solid illumination of the Ethernet 100, Act, and Lnk LEDs) until at least one of the four G.SHDSL connections has been established. 1.3 Configure Bandwidth and Distance Configuration switches for the G.SHDSL ports are on the back of the SPEED-DSL 9.2, numbered from left to right, #1-8. Switches #1-3 on the SPEED-DSL 2.3-P work in tandem with one another to provide eight bandwidth options for the four G.SHDSL ports as a group; bandwidth cannot be configured individually for the G.SHDSL ports. NOTE Configuration switches #1-3 are used for G.SHDSL bandwidth configuration on the SPEED-DSL 9.2-P ONLY. The SPEED-DSL 9.2etermines bandwidth via communication with its partner G.SHDSL provider equipment. Switches #4-8 are not currently used on the SPEED-DSL 9.2 provider or subscriber models. Position switches #1-3 on the SPEED-DSL 9.2-P according to the cable distance for your connection and your desired G.SHDSL bandwidth. Distance capabilities listed in the following table assume the use of 26 American Wire Gauge (AWG) cable. Connections made with cable of a lesser gauge (e.g., 24 AWG) will link up at greater distances. Your SPEED-DSL 9.2 may not link up if the cable is in poor condition or if the cable distance is greater than a particular bandwidth will support; if link IS achieved under such conditions, traffic quality may be affected (e.g., packets may be dropped). Version 1.1 SPEED-DSL 9.2 (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) page 3 of 10 Nets work together. Bandwidth and Distance Options SWITCH #1 SWITCH #2 SWITCH #3 BANDWIDTH (KBPS) DISTANCE (FT) DISTANCE (M) down down down 2,320 11,300 3,444 down down up 2,064 12,200 3,719 down up down 1,552 12,800 3,901 down up up 1,040 16,000 4,877 up down down 784 16,800 5,121 up down up 528 18,400 5,608 up up down 400 19,400 5,913 up up up adaptive varies varies NOTE The SPEED-DSL 9.2-P will run in Adaptive mode when switches #1-3 are in the Up position: the four ports will train up to the best possible speed supported by the SPEEDDSL 9.2-P, the remote G.SHDSL equipment and the copper cable pair connecting the two. 1.4 Connect the G.SHDSL Line(s) The primary feature of the SPEED-DSL 9.2 is loop bonding capability between all four ports, though both the provider and subscriber units can function with a single G.SHDSL connection as well. 1.4.1 Loop Bonded Connection Using two, three or four G.SHDSL lines for one network connection (loop bonding) will net two, three or four times the speed and data passing capability as a single G.SHDSL connection. Multiple G.SHDSL lines used for one connection can also be considered as backup for each other should one or more of the lines become disabled. NOTE A SPEED-DSL 9.2 must be connected with equipment that is also loop bonding capable in order to utilize the loop bonding feature; see the G.SHDSL Loop Bonding Product to Product Feature Compatability list. Plug your G.SHDSL cables into the G.SHDSL RJ45 ports (G.SHDSL 1, 2, 3 and/or 4) on the rear of the SPEED-DSL 9.2; the order of connection is not important. Verify all connections: the G.SHDSL Link (Lnk) LED for each connected port will pulse green to indicate the connection is established and operational. 1.4.2 Single Line Connection Plug your G.SHDSL cable into one of the four G.SHDSL RJ45 ports on the back of the SPEEDDSL 9.2; any of the four ports may be used. A single line connection can be established between an SPEED-DSL 9.2-S and any of G.SHDSL provider equipment. Likewise, a single line connection can also be established between an SPEED-DSL 9.2-P and G.SHDSL subscriber units. Verify your connection: the G.SHDSL LED corresponding to the connected port (G.SHDSL 1-4) will flash green to indicate the connection is established and operational. Version 1.1 SPEED-DSL 9.2 (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) page 4 of 10 Nets work together. G.SHDSL RJ45 Pinout PIN CONNECTION 1 not used 2 not used 3 not used 4 ring 5 tip 6 not used 7 not used 8 not used Link up time between local and remote G.SHDSL network extenders can vary from one to five minutes depending on the quality, gauge and distance of the copper cable pair being used. If the cable distance is greater than a particular bandwidth will support, the units may not link up or, if they do achieve link, traffic quality may be affected (e.g., packets may be dropped). 1.5 Connect the Ethernet Line NOTE If a G.SHDSL connection has not yet been made, the Ethernet link will remain disabled (as indicated by solid illumination of the Ethernet 100, Act and Lnk LEDs) until at least one of the four G.SHDSL links has been established. 1.5.1 Duplex Mode The 10/100 Ethernet port auto-negotiates speed and duplex mode in accordance with the remote equipment to which it's connected; Ethernet speed and duplex mode configurations cannot be hard set on the SPEED-DSL 9.2. For the best connection results, the remote device (PC, hub, switch, etc.) should be set to auto-negotiate speed and duplex mode as well. If the remote device cannot be configured to auto-negotiate, speed may be hard set at either 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps but duplex mode must be hard set to Half Duplex; a 10/100 Ethernet connection will not operate properly if the remote device is hard set to Full Duplex. 1.5.1.1 Half Duplex Receive and transmit functions are mutually exclusive; data transmission occurs in only one direction at a time. Packet collisions are not unusual. 1.5.1.2 Full Duplex Receive and transmit functions occur simultaneously, effectively doubling aggregate bandwidth and preventing packet collisions. Version 1.1 SPEED-DSL 9.2 (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) page 5 of 10 Nets work together. 10/100 Ethernet RJ45 Pinout PIN CONNECTION Version 1.1 1 Rx+ 2 Rx- 3 Tx+ 4 not used 5 not used 6 Tx- 7 not used 8 not used SPEED-DSL 9.2 (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) page 6 of 10 Nets work together. 2 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 2.1 LED Indications LED State Indication Additional Information Power solid green unit is operational If the Power LED is not illuminated, it is unlikely that the SPEED-DSL 9.2 is receiving power and therefore none of the LEDs will be illuminated. SDSL Link (Lnk) Ports 1 - 4 pulsing green G.SHDSL connection is established and active Traffic is flowing. solid green problematic G.SHDSL connection A connection exists but there is indication of a problem with the G.SHDSL line. no illumination no G.SHDSL connection See NOTE on following page. flashing amber G.SHDSL activity The SPEED-DSL 9.2 is receiving data. solid amber heavy Rx traffic The SPEED-DSL 9.2 is receiving large amounts of data. no illumination no activity A G.SHDSL link may exist but the SPEEDDSL 9.2 is not receiving any data. G.SHDSL activity The SPEED-DSL 9.2 is transmitting data. heavy Tx traffic The SPEED-DSL 9.2 is transmitting large amounts of data. no illumination no activity A G.SHDSL link may exist but the SPEEDDSL 9.2 is not transmitting any data. solid green 100 Mbps Ethernet If the Ethernet 100 LED is illuminated, the connection is Ethernet Lnk LED will also be illuminated. established See NOTE below. no illumination no 100 Mbps Ethernet connection pulsing amber standard operation Traffic is flowing without any problems solid amber heavy traffic A solid amber Ethernet Act LED can also signify a lost G.SHDSL connection; see NOTE below. no illumination no activity Either there is no Ethernet link or a link exists but there is no activity. SDSL Data Reception (Rx) Ports 1 - 4 SDSL Data flashing Transmission (Tx) amber Ports 1 - 4 solid amber 100 Mbps Ethernet Link (100) 10/100 Ethernet Activity (Act) Version 1.1 If the Ethernet 100 LED remains unlit but the Ethernet Lnk LED is illuminated then a connection has been established at 10 Mbps rather than 100 Mbps. SPEED-DSL 9.2 (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) page 7 of 10 Nets work together. 10/100 Ethernet Link (Lnk) solid green Ethernet connection is established If the Ethernet Lnk LED is illuminated but not the Ethernet 100 LED then a 10 Mbps connection has been established. If the Ethernet 100 and Lnk LEDs are BOTH illuminated then a 100 Mbps connection has been established. A solid green Ethernet Lnk LED can also signify a lost G.SHDSL connection; see NOTE below. no no Ethernet illumination connection The Ethernet 100 and Act LEDs will remain unlit by default. (A pulsing LED blinks steadily at a rate of once per second. A flashing LED blinks at a more rapid, less constant rate.) NOTE Upon start up, the Ethernet link will remain disabled (as indicated by solid illumination of the Ethernet 100, Act, and Lnk LEDs) until at least one of the four G.SHDSL connections has been established. Likewise, if one or more of the G.SHDSL connections had previously been established but have since been lost, the Ethernet link will automatically be disabled (as indicated by solid illumination of the Ethernet 100, Act and Lnk LEDs) until at least one of the connections has been reestablished. Version 1.1 SPEED-DSL 9.2 (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) page 8 of 10 Nets work together. 2.2 Regulatory Compliance for Class B Equipment 2.2.1 FCC Regulatory Compliance Information for Class B Equipment Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment uses, generates and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: 2.2.2 · Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. · Increase separation between the equipment and the receiver. · Connect equipment to an outlet on a circuit different from the receiver. · Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. Industry Canada Regulatory Compliance Information for Class B Equipment This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003. Cet appareil numérique de la Classe B est conforme à la norme NMB-003 du Canada. Version 1.1 SPEED-DSL 9.2 (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) page 9 of 10 Nets work together. GS Nord GS Ost Merkurring 105 22143 Hamburg Tel.: 040-679447-0 Fax: 040-67944750 Germania Bogen Multimedia-Center 12099 Berlin Tel.: 030-7508-3500 Fax: 030-7508-3535 GS West Schiess Straße 55 40549 Düsseldorf Tel.: 02131-17058-0 Fax: 02131-1705880 GS Mitte/Zentrale Robert-Bosch-Straße 32 63303 Dreieich Tel.: 06103-932-0 Fax: 06103-932400 GS Südwest GS Süd Kurze Straße 40 70794 Filderstadt Tel.: 0711-7705506-0 Fax: 0711-77055070 Inselkammerstraße 10 82008 Unterhaching Tel.: 089-614478-0 Fax: 089-61447850 Technical Hotline 06103 – 932 100 Fax: 06103 - 932 413 [email protected]. Version 1.1 SPEED-DSL 9.2 (9900-009-001-A, 9900-008-001-A) page 10 of 10 ">
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Key features
- Ethernet connection over 8 wires
- Up to 9.2 Mbit/s speed
- Loop bonding capability
- Single line G.SHDSL connections
- 10/100 Ethernet port
- Power supply included
Frequently asked questions
The SPEED-DSL 9.2 can achieve speeds up to 9.2 Mbit/s.
Loop bonding capability allows you to use two, three or four G.SHDSL lines for one network connection, which can net two, three or four times the speed and data passing capability as a single G.SHDSL connection.
Yes, the SPEED-DSL 9.2 supports both single line and loop bonded G.SHDSL connections.
The 10/100 Ethernet port allows you to connect the SPEED-DSL 9.2 to a local network, such as a PC, hub, or switch.
The SPEED-DSL 9.2 comes with a power supply.