Switch shuts down when connected to modern Asus motherboards
Hardware Version : 1.0
Firmware Version : V1_150928
ISP :
Hi,
We are using a TL-SG2210P and have come across a strange problem.
The switch has been working fine for a couple of months, however recently we have built some new PC's and they are all modern Skylake computers with Asus boards (3 different motherboard models so far) and if we connect them to the switch, the switch powers off!!! then as soon as you unplug the cable going to the Asus PC it powers back on!
We were even more surprised when it powered off after connecting the Asus computer to one of the main netgear switches in the office. So there wasn't a direct connection to the TP link, it was passing from the Netgear, to the TP link, but no other switches in the office get upset.
Has anyone ever come across this before, or is this sounding faulty.
We have tried a few things, such as disabling PoE on the switch but nothing has made a difference.
Thanks.
EDIT:
As an update, we just managed to make it not shut down on the same network as the PC's by putting a device that doesn't have PoE in-between it and the network.
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I found a funny workaround to this while experimenting. My Asus Z270E Gaming NIC shuts down my TP LInk TL-SG2210P switch as well as a Cisco SG208P if connected to one of the PoE Enabled ports on that one (but works fine on the non-PoE ports).
If I disable PoE on the SG2210P it still shuts the switch down when connected to the Asus board's NIC. I was wondering if I could fashin some sort of coupler that would make it work and then my eyes fell upon an item on my shelf that sort of couples two cables..I have this old TP Link PoE Injector just lying around.
Tried connecting it in series for a laugh to see what would happen.
It only bloomin works!
PC connected to "Ethernet In", Switch connected to "PoE Out" - yeah, backwards, and that works. The Injector isn't powered, no psu connected. Maybe there's a diode or something in there that filters it. That'll do for now.
I did at one time have the PC connnected to a Netgear GS108TP as well and that didn't shut the switch down but it overheated tremendously and at the time I had no idea why, and thought the switch just ran how. I'm guessing there was a short circuit the whole time and it was eating way more current than it should have.
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