Quote:
Originally Posted by Alan Anderson
Why is everyone missing the obvious solution? Use passive Power Over Ethernet (POE) on the port that supports it. The Ethernet connector snaps firmly into place. I've never seen one come loose due to bounces or vibration this year.
On the other hand, more than half the robots I checked had loose terminals either on the battery or the main circuit breaker. All of the "lost communication" events I followed up on at both of the events I worked at were associated with a faulty power connection. All.
(I'm counting only ones where there was actually a loss of communication, not the few the drivers called "lost comm" but where the problem was that robot code crashed or a joystick came disconnected or the Driver Station was being interfered with by a software update process.)
|
I'm not familiar enough with PoE to be comfortable without some details. I sure don't want to fry a radio. With a quick search I haven't found out the best way to wire a PoE for this this radio. I assume you can use the 12 v port on the VRM into a spliced ethernet cable but what pins are used and which port does it go into in the router. I apologize if this has already been discussed. I didn't see it in my searching, but might have been looking for the wrong things.