cwachs wrote:I have read the grounding. Since this is not a tower, we are grounded a bit differently. In the attic where the MINI is, it is grounded to a ground bar installed by the solar contractors. That is the only ground available up there. It has #6 from the attic to the electrical service ground. The MINI power supply (AF24 POE) is grounded to electrical service via the UPS it is connected to in the basement of the house. No Ethernet surge protectors are in the mix. I don't have the ability to run a new #2 in the house from ground to the attic.
Ethernet is shorter than ground from POE to MINI. Can't run a new Ethernet from basement to MINI but I could put an Ethernet surge protector in place and then add a long service loop to make that longer than the ground line. But I'm not convinced this is a grounding issue.
I am going to likely move the MINI outside the house to the base of the J-Bar (where the antennas are) to help with heat soon as my weather proof enclosure arrives. But, the switch is under 90C now and is having 3v alarms every couple of hours.
I am almost 100% this is NOT a temperature issue.
OK so I can understand correctly what is going on.
MINI is in attic but is powered from a Shield CAT5 ESD wire like ToughCable with ESD end that runs to the basement where the AF24 POE brick in plugged into a UPS that is plugged into the house AC service?
There is a #6 ground wire that runs from the AC service ground at the service panel or the service ground rods to a ground bus in the attic to ground the solar panels. There is a ground wire that runs from this ground bus to the WS-6-MINI chassis.
The one bad thing here is the Ethernet cable run is shorter then the intended ground run so any ground potential difference or surge will follow the Ethernet path. Yes you could insert an Ethernet surge protector and add a service loop to increase this path length but it would have to be a surge suppressor that accommodates the ESD shielding like the one UBNT sells.
However if the unit is already damaged from a ground potential difference or even a surge or static discharge from the solar panels running through the Ethernet cable to get to ground correcting the grounding will not repair the unit.
Once again I do not think this is a heat issue so I would do the following:
1) Increase the Ethernet cable run to be at least 10% longer than the intended ground run possibly by inserting a UBNT Ethernet surge protector ( I hate surge protectors) and adding cable length. AND/OR MAYBE INCREASE THE CABLE LENGTHS FROM THE SWITCH TO WHAT EVER DEVICES YOU ARE POWERING FROM THE WS-6-MINI.
2) Make sure that the #6 ground wire the solar installer ran is correctly bonded to the service ground rods either at the panel or the service ground rods and not another ground rod and if it is a separate ground rod from the service ground rod(s) that could be your problem so make sure they are all bonded together at the ground level.
After correcting any grounding issues you could swap out the WS-6-MINI and there should be no other problems.