RE: [USR-TC] Cooling fan
There is a fan in the power supply that is 24v. Most fans are either 12vdc or 120vac. The 24 v fan is hard to find and we have been unable to locate one. Of course I'm sure you could get one from 3Com for a couple of hundred dollars. Anyone with a source for the 24v variety would be doing a great service by sharing the source with the list. At 05:54 PM 6/13/02 -0400, you wrote:
<excerpt><color><param>0000,0000,ffff</param>Hi David, If you're talking about the old 45A style chassis with the single fan in the rear just unplug the chassis and screw that back plate off and replace the fan. It's a 3-pin 60mm fan that you can find in any old pc or buy at a computer store. We've replaced one ourselves and it works great. If you're referring to the fan trays on the chassis that lie underneath you can replace the entire tray or individual fans as well. If you have just one fan go bad then it's probably cheaper just to leave it alone. You can remove individual fans and replace them if you are comfortable wiring the fan. The fans can also be found at a computer parts store, just make sure to match the fans electrical specs and properly wire it. They can be depending on the fan tray either 60mm, 90mm or 120mm fans. Thanks, Steve Wujek Solunet TAC </color><excerpt> <fontfamily><param>Tahoma</param>-----Original Message----- <bold>From:</bold> david@carolnet.com [mailto:david@carolnet.com] <bold>Sent:</bold> Thursday, June 13, 2002 5:29 PM <bold>To:</bold> usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com <bold>Subject:</bold> [USR-TC] Cooling fan </fontfamily> Anyone have a source for the small cooling fan for the power supply on a TC chassis? David _____________________________________________________ <color><param>0000,8080,8080</param><<mailto:david@carolnet.com>David Swearingin </color><bold><fontfamily><param>Comic Sans MS</param><color><param>0000,0000,ffff</param><<http://www.carolnet.com/>CARROLLTON INTERNET SERVICE </color></fontfamily><fontfamily><param>Script MT Bold</param><bigger><bigger><bigger>First Financial Group, Inc. </bigger></bigger></bigger></fontfamily></bold>11 N. Folger, Carrollton, MO 64633 660-542-3002 Fax 660-542-3003 </excerpt> </excerpt><<<<<<<<
Google turns up a ton of 60mm 24V fans: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=60mm+24V+fan I'd also try pulling the fan and typing the part number into google. C -- Charles Sprickman spork@inch.com On Thu, 13 Jun 2002 netboss@cyberport.net wrote:
There is a fan in the power supply that is 24v. Most fans are either 12vdc or 120vac. The 24 v fan is hard to find and we have been unable to locate one. Of course I'm sure you could get one from 3Com for a couple of hundred dollars.
Anyone with a source for the 24v variety would be doing a great service by sharing the source with the list.
At 05:54 PM 6/13/02 -0400, you wrote:
<excerpt><color><param>0000,0000,ffff</param>Hi David,
If you're talking about the old 45A style chassis with the single fan in the rear just unplug the chassis and screw that back plate off and replace the fan. It's a 3-pin 60mm fan that you can find in any old pc or buy at a computer store. We've replaced one ourselves and it works great.
If you're referring to the fan trays on the chassis that lie underneath you can replace the entire tray or individual fans as well. If you have just one fan go bad then it's probably cheaper just to leave it alone. You can remove individual fans and replace them if you are comfortable wiring the fan. The fans can also be found at a computer parts store, just make sure to match the fans electrical specs and properly wire it. They can be depending on the fan tray either 60mm, 90mm or 120mm fans.
Thanks,
Steve Wujek
Solunet TAC
</color><excerpt> <fontfamily><param>Tahoma</param>-----Original Message-----
<bold>From:</bold> david@carolnet.com [mailto:david@carolnet.com]
<bold>Sent:</bold> Thursday, June 13, 2002 5:29 PM
<bold>To:</bold> usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com
<bold>Subject:</bold> [USR-TC] Cooling fan
</fontfamily> Anyone have a source for the small cooling fan for the power supply on a TC chassis?
David
_____________________________________________________
<color><param>0000,8080,8080</param><<mailto:david@carolnet.com>David Swearingin
</color><bold><fontfamily><param>Comic Sans MS</param><color><param>0000,0000,ffff</param><<http://www.carolnet.com/>CARROLLTON INTERNET SERVICE
</color></fontfamily><fontfamily><param>Script MT Bold</param><bigger><bigger><bigger>First Financial Group, Inc.
</bigger></bigger></bigger></fontfamily></bold>11 N. Folger, Carrollton, MO 64633
660-542-3002 Fax 660-542-3003
</excerpt>
</excerpt><<<<<<<<
_______________________________________________ USR-TC mailing list USR-TC@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/usr-tc
I have the fans. as I looked for Carrollton Internet I noticed that we had some new. They are exact part numbers as the fans in the USR power sets (45A style).I am shopping for a better source at this point but based on my cost I have them for sale at $35.00. They might be out there cheaper but this is what I can do. AND I have them in stock. At 04:13 PM 6/13/2002 -0600, you wrote:
There is a fan in the power supply that is 24v. Most fans are either 12vdc or 120vac. The 24 v fan is hard to find and we have been unable to locate one. Of course I'm sure you could get one from 3Com for a couple of hundred dollars.
Anyone with a source for the 24v variety would be doing a great service by sharing the source with the list.
At 05:54 PM 6/13/02 -0400, you wrote:
Hi David, If you're talking about the old 45A style chassis with the single fan in the rear just unplug the chassis and screw that back plate off and replace the fan. It's a 3-pin 60mm fan that you can find in any old pc or buy at a computer store. We've replaced one ourselves and it works great. If you're referring to the fan trays on the chassis that lie underneath you can replace the entire tray or individual fans as well. If you have just one fan go bad then it's probably cheaper just to leave it alone. You can remove individual fans and replace them if you are comfortable wiring the fan. The fans can also be found at a computer parts store, just make sure to match the fans electrical specs and properly wire it. They can be depending on the fan tray either 60mm, 90mm or 120mm fans. Thanks, Steve Wujek Solunet TAC -----Original Message----- From: david@carolnet.com [<mailto:david@carolnet.com>mailto:david@carolnet.com] Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 5:29 PM To: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com Subject: [USR-TC] Cooling fan
Anyone have a source for the small cooling fan for the power supply on a TC chassis?
David
_____________________________________________________ <<mailto:david@carolnet.com>mailto:david@carolnet.com>David Swearingin 11 N. Folger, Carrollton, MO 64633 660-542-3002 Fax 660-542-3003 <<<<
_______________________________________________ USR-TC mailing list USR-TC@mailman.xmission.com <http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/usr-tc>http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/usr-tc
</blockquote></x-html>
Steve Rivera IM: srivera711 Toll Free: (877)WRCANET x102 DIRECT: 732-833-2034 Fax available equipment to: (732)833-2115 for more product info got www.wrca.net
Hello, all. I have a seeming simple, but irritating problem with getting a few analog/digital quads working with analog NIC's. I set them up for NIC, 115k fixed rate DTE, enable command echoing and response vie the DIP switch, but the best I've been able to get so far is a "yellow" off hook LED on a particular channel when issuing an ATDT5551212 - no responses ever show up on the terminal. And, I haven't been able to repeat that since it happened a couple hours ago. I've tried a variety of other oddments with the other serial options, and nothing seems to click. Also, is the DTE "slot" assignment even relevant when setting up the quads in this manner? Is there a specific setup, save to NVRAM, reset sequence I need to perform? I've even booted the cards with SW10 on to restore factory defaults to no avail (which is right on factory setup - 9600-N-7-1 or 19200-N-8-1?) These modems were previously used in "digital" mode, and functioned fine in that installation. I'm rather flustered at the moment, and it's no doubt something stupid and simple I'm missing. But, I would greatly appreciate any pointers from the gurus! Thanks, Brad
On Sun, Jun 16, 2002 at 10:54:48PM -0500, Brad Gass wrote:
I set them up for NIC, 115k fixed rate DTE, enable command echoing and response vie the DIP switch, but the best I've been able to get so far is a "yellow" off hook ... These modems were previously used in "digital" mode, and functioned fine in that installation.
Some quads need to be told specifically that they are on an analog line. Appending %d0 to their init scipt does the trick for me. -- Mojahed System Administrator, Agni Systems Limited
participants (5)
-
Brad Gass -
Charles Sprickman -
Mojahedul Hoque Abul Hasanat -
netboss@cyberport.net -
Stephen Rivera - WRCA.Net