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Forum Discussion
JohnT82
Mar 30, 2022Aspirant
m4300 problem with axm765
Hello all,
I have bought four Netgear m4300 switches and 6 AXM765 modules. I have mount the AXM on the switch but nothing happened. It seems to be dead. Of course, I have changed the modules but the problem still exists.
Should I do some more configuration in the switch?
Thank you in advance.
7 Replies
- schumakuGuru - Experienced User
Unclear what you expect to "happen".
Note the AXM756 will only link to 10GbaseT ports on the M4300/M4250 STP+ ports.
- JohnT82Aspirant
Firstly, thank you for your answer,
Therefore, if I connect on this port a PC, nothing will happen right?
I connected the two SFP+ ports together on the same switch and I saw traffic, then I realize that SFP+ ports will work only if on the other side is another SFP+ port switch.
I cannot use it as an access port to connect a PC for example?On a Mikrotik switch the SFP port is an access port and I have connect a PC. On the Netgear this is not posible.
So, I have another question, I don't know if I have to ask here or to change thread.
Those four Netgear switches I will use them as a stack. However, I am not sure what should I do, should I create VLANs and the whole configuration on every one of them or I should configure the first one and through stacking, will exchange information?- schumakuGuru - Experienced User
If your PD does have a 10 GbE adapter, you can. The point is there is no speed Auto Negotiation, neither on an SFP nor on an SFP+ port. In case you want to access that specific SFP+ port from a PC with a 1GbE copper port only, you need to use a AXM734.
By default all ports including the SFP+ are preset as access ports. For stack usage, the ports need to be changed to stack mode. Very similar to your other switch make.
Afraid both your conclusions are wrong.
All switches added to the stack are managed from a single point, VLANs added become available all over the stack.
Is the intention to operate the stack with switches on physical different locations, using 10 GbE over copper media? Be aware the 10 GbE reach is limited due to the limited power available to an SFP/SFP+ port. Another industry standard hitting all vendors - before you ask. SFP/SFP+ is made for fiber originally - and there is no link speed negotiation, too.
The "classic" v1 does cover max. 30 meters, the newer v2 does allow max. 80 meters.
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