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Forum Discussion
grizzogor
Nov 30, 2019Aspirant
PLP2000 Pick-A-Plug light going from green to red over time
Hello Netgear community forums. I'm having some issues with my PLP2000 EoP adaptor. When I got the device at first, I had no issues, and all lights were Green. But now, the Pick-a-Plug light has bee...
michaelkenward
Nov 30, 2019Guru - Experienced User
Can you clarify your layout?
Is there just the one PLP2000 plug connected to the router with the second PLP2000 and two PL1000 plugs paired to the router's PLP2000?
You followed these instructions to add the PL1000s?
>>> Adding a powerline adapter to an existing powerline network <<<
It probably does not matter, but I have no idea what EoP means. It isnl't something that appears in any Netgear manuals for Powerline kit.
The behaviour of the the Pick-a-Plug light suggests something is going on on your mains network. I assume that don't have any fancy mains extension cables in there.
- grizzogorNov 30, 2019Aspirant
Yes, the PLP2000 network was already in place between my router and computer, and I had added the PLP1200 pair to the PLP2000's network using those instuctions.
EoP is the "by-the-book" term for powerline networking, primarily found in CompTIA A+ material. It stands for Ethernet over Powerline.
- michaelkenwardNov 30, 2019Guru - Experienced User
grizzogor wrote:
EoP is the "by-the-book" term for powerline networking, primarily found in CompTIA A+ material. It stands for Ethernet over Powerline.
That tag is missing from all the Netgear documentation I have read. It just uses the Powerline label.
As a troubleshooting move, have you tried swapping plugs around? That might eliminate sockets and/or plugs.
One thing to investigate might be the status of the "Standby mode" setting.
Netgear seems to ship devices with that feature, but no way to turn it on or off, thanks to Netgear's failure to provide a utility to manage Powerline devices. This has been known to cause grief in the past.
The solution is to track down the ZyXel powerline utility and use that ti check if Standby mode is active. If it is, the plugs can go to sleep unbeknown to you.
- grizzogorDec 01, 2019Aspirant
I've tried switching outlets from behind a storage cabinet to behind my PC. At first the Pick-A-Plug light was red, but then changed to amber. Doing a speedtest showed a good result, I think maybe the PLP2000 unit was overheating behind the cabinet? Not sure, but I'll reply back if there's any issues.
Before switching plugs, doing a speedtest while the PLP2000 unit was in red resulted in really high ping to local speedtest servers and really low speeds compared to the rest of my network.