Stephen, Thanks for the update. It sounds as if this circiut is not back-to-back. Since there is a carrier involved, you might want to think about how the service might be provisioned. For example, the carrier may have all the transport equipment set up to accept a "channelized" DS3 and you might be "unchannelized." I can't remember what the Cisco default is off hand and I don't have much time to research it for you at the moment. Heading for the airport...
Best of luck! Stephen Bailey wrote: > > Hello all, > > I am a collegue of Mark's who has been working on this fault > over the weekend with Mark. > > We have done some further tests today and we are still > experiencing errors on the line, here are some of the results > we have seen: > > 1.) Each time we have changed the clocking on the line, we have > bounced the link either side. (We used the shut & no shut > commands) > > 2.) With the 7507 set to Internal & the 7204 set to Line, we > see that the errors build up alot slower on the 7204 end. > However any other configuration with the clocking seems to > generate more errors on the 7204 end. > > 3.) We have replaced the coax cable from the 7204 to the > Carrier equipment, but it seems that the new cable is not > correct, as things get worse. > > We are currently in the process of bringing up a 2nd link so > that we can take this 45mbps circuit down for testing hopefully > today. I'll post an update when we get something back from the > carrier. > > Thanks again > > Stephen Baileys vermill wrote: > Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=65590&t=65491 -------------------------------------------------- FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]