JustJoe wrote:No, wait, stop, let's do some thinking outside the box and not sit on some NIH attitude as a couple of people here are doing.
Maybe the full "cable test" function is overkill, so what if it was stripped down to the safety test essentials ...
OK, in the Email exchange with Dave, while I thought we could do a bit of brainstorming, I first brought up the idea, that since he has programmable MOSFET switches controlling POE power, could he essentially use them, plus the voltage/current sensors and the system processor to act as a programmable PWM voltage/current regulator? He explained that no, that basically the voltage/current sensors were not on a bus structure that was not fast enough to handle that type of continuous feedback regulation.
So I then said:But imagine that you could probably program a free-running, narrow enough pulse width for an "on" 48VH port (for example) so that even without feedback monitoring, it would be just enough to power an unplugged port for an "ohmmeter" or "continuity" test function. (But not enough to burn out the Ethernet transformer.)
The processor wouldn't have to continually monitor that. It could come back every 3 seconds or so to see if the charge voltage on the per port output capacitor dropped more than an open port, but less than a shorted port? Only then would it would run it full on all the time. At least until such time that the current dropped below a certain level, indicating unplugged port, so that it could switch back to the "ohmmeter" state.
Sure, this would not fix the case of a bad cable randomly shorting out while in use. But maybe it could give it a chance to get past initial crooked plug in of a RJ-45 or a totally shorted new cable ... or new radio?
Unfortunately, Dave never had a chance to reply back since March 11, and I have had to deal almost continuously with a sick family member, so I also didn't have much time to try followups. I have long felt that the burned transformer exposure is a perceived hit to these switches being fully embraced as carrier class ...And I dooo want them to succeed as such and have spent a bit of time trying to come up with ideas around it that also encompass the idea of very low power loss for solar installations.
Without spilling the beans (SO DO NOT ASK I WILL NOT SAY MORE) for switches we are working on for NEXT year, or whenever the next generation of switches come out, there will be no issues/risk with people doing boneheaded things like this. That generation of switch will allow for POE to be on and you will be able to plug in a dead shorted cable and the switch will sense this fast enough and turn the POE OFF before any damage is done and then also sense that it is fine to turn POE ON so you will be able to plug and unplug live POE with our BLESSING but that is the next generation but for now I think this software work around is the best route.
Put it this way there has NEVER been a switch designed like what is in our R&D for the next generation in PASSIVE POE switches.