Re: [AFMUG] Safety Policy / Traffic Policy?

2017-12-03 Thread Steve D
Hey Ben, document didn't make it through to list.  I like the pylon holder
and see a few of that design now.  Nice and simple, a coworker had
suggested some upside down hoop thing for quite a bit more each but I think
it was for large trucks.  I think this thread has given me enough leads to
make something up though.  Cheers,

-Steve D

On Thu, Nov 30, 2017 at 5:07 PM, Ben Royer  wrote:

> Steve,
>
> I ended up ordering these:
>
> http://a.co/gtzGRRV
>
> Work pretty good.  Just have the guys throw a bungee on it too.
>
> I just typed something simple up for now, but still looking to make
> something more involved.  Attached is my basic document.
>
> Thank you,
> Ben Royer, Operations Manager
> Royell Communications, Inc.
> 217-965-3699 <(217)%20965-3699> www.royell.net
>
> *From:* Steve D 
> *Sent:* Thursday, November 30, 2017 5:09 PM
> *To:* af 
> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Safety Policy / Traffic Policy?
>
> Any further luck on finding this kind of info?  Our company is looking to
> implement the same thing.
>
> Anyone got a source for a good cone holder for vehicles too?  (Cheap,
> simple.)
>
> -Steve D
>
> On Wed, Nov 1, 2017 at 11:58 AM, Ben Royer  wrote:
>
>> Good info, thanks again.  I’ve been trying to find other companies’ data,
>> but even with the abundance that is the interwebs, I’ve had little luck so
>> far.  I am however settling in on something along these lines:
>>
>>
>> oCones must be placed in front and behind vehicle, greater than 5’
>> away, no further than 1’ x MPH of roadway, or a distance deemed necessary
>> for environment and driving conditions.
>>
>> oCones must be placed in front and behind vehicle, 3’-10’ away, when
>> working in non-roadway areas.
>>
>> oClass II Hi-Vis Apparel must be worn when working within 15’ of any
>> roadway with traffic speeds of 1-40MPH
>>
>> oClass III Hi-Vis Apparel must be worn when working within 15’ of
>> any roadway with traffic speeds of 40+MPH
>>
>> Thank you,
>> Ben Royer, Operations Manager
>> Royell Communications, Inc.
>> 217-965-3699 <(217)%20965-3699> www.royell.net
>> 
>>
>> *From:* Chuck McCown 
>> *Sent:* Tuesday, October 31, 2017 11:27 AM
>> *To:* af@afmug.com
>> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Safety Policy / Traffic Policy?
>>
>> No, the cone is purely to force them to walk behind the vehicle when
>> leaving so they don’t squish the customer’s kids.
>>
>> *From:* Ben Royer
>> *Sent:* Tuesday, October 31, 2017 10:22 AM
>> *To:* af@afmug.com
>> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Safety Policy / Traffic Policy?
>>
>> Thanks,  Do you specify to the employee the distance of cone?  IE: 1’*MPH
>> of roadway? or 10’ or anything like that?
>>
>> Thank you,
>> Ben Royer, Operations Manager
>> Royell Communications, Inc.
>> 217-965-3699 <(217)%20965-3699> www.royell.net
>> 
>>
>> *From:* Chuck McCown
>> *Sent:* Tuesday, October 31, 2017 11:15 AM
>> *To:* af@afmug.com
>> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Safety Policy / Traffic Policy?
>>
>> Not sure I have written it down.  If in a public ROW, hard hats and
>> orange vests must be worn.
>> If in a UDOT ROW then amber blinky light on top must be used.
>>
>> Cones behind the truck at every stop.
>>
>> *From:* Ben Royer
>> *Sent:* Tuesday, October 31, 2017 10:11 AM
>> *To:* af@afmug.com
>> *Subject:* [AFMUG] Safety Policy / Traffic Policy?
>>
>> Does anyone have pre-drafted Safety Policies?  We have a tower climbing
>> policy and workplace policy, but I’m looking to implement a ‘traffic’
>> safety one.  Something along the lines of when and where to use Hi-Vis
>> clothing, cones, etc.  Anyone have an example you’d share of anything like
>> this?
>>
>> Thank you,
>> Ben Royer, Operations Manager
>> Royell Communications, Inc.
>> 217-965-3699 <(217)%20965-3699> www.royell.net
>> 
>>
>
>


Re: [AFMUG] CPE with prism ac gear

2017-12-03 Thread Jerry Head

"OSHA"

On 12/2/2017 4:29 PM, Jaime Solorza wrote:

Powerbeams AC with larger dish

Jaime Solorza

On Dec 2, 2017 3:23 PM, "Sam Lambie" > wrote:


What are you guys using for cpes up to 5 miles on a 120 sector?





Re: [AFMUG] Residential router recommendation.

2017-12-03 Thread Paul Stewart
Personally use an Asus as my default router at home when I’m not playing with 
Cisco/Juniper/Fortigate “non-home” routers …

I have the RT-AC87R and an impressed …. Never lets me down and handles whatever 
I throw at it … the wireless is pretty good too IMHO

Netgear Nighthawk – bought one before the Asus and returned it within a few 
days … their tech support is absolutely horrible to deal with … 4 hours waiting 
on hold to be told that my router is “incompatible with Canadian Internet 
services” …. ROFL … issue ended up being poorly written code after pushing the 
issues for a couple of hours and finding out the firmware would be released (to 
solve the problem which was IPv6 related) – that release was slated for 
sometime in the next year ;(

-p

On 2017-12-02, 12:03 PM, "Af on behalf of Mitch Koep"  wrote:

We also recommend Asus now as the netgear have become undependable

The Asus have been rock solid

Mitch


On 12/2/2017 10:49 AM, Sterling Jacobson wrote:
> My main recommendations now are Asus and Netgear Nighthawk (NOT regular 
Netgear, those suck).
>
> I don't provide routers to our customers, so I'm thinking we now have 
hundreds of either brand/line of these routers and they seem to be the least 
failure prone.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Jay Weekley
> Sent: Saturday, December 2, 2017 9:43 AM
> To: af@afmug.com
> Subject: [AFMUG] Residential router recommendation.
>
> I have a friend that is looking for a new router from a big box store
> like Best Buy, Walmart or Officemax.   Since I've been using Mikrotiks
> and the occasional Readynet and TPlink for the past several years I have 
no idea what to tell them to get.  It's not for a customer and I will hopefully 
have nothing to do with this router.  If you were me what would you tell them 
to get?






Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

2017-12-03 Thread chuck
This photo shows 10’ overall.  So does one from Rohn.  
https://www.3starinc.com/images/super/ROHN_25G_800x600t.jpg

From: Craig House 
Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 12:58 PM
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

I’ll measure one when I get home in an hour.  I’ve got 200 sections in my front 
yard.  I’m sure I’ll fine one to measure.   Both 45 and 25g


Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 3, 2017, at 13:42,   wrote:


  Is it 4” exactly?

  From: Craig House 
  Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 12:40 PM
  To: af@afmug.com 
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

  That’s correct. 


  Sent from my iPhone

  On Dec 3, 2017, at 13:26,   wrote:


I find drawings showing 25G and 45G tower sections being 10’ end to end.  
But that would cause the tower to lose a few inches due to the telescoping at 
each junction between sections.  So, I am guessing it is 10’ plus whatever 
length telescopes when mating the sections.  Line 4”??



Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

2017-12-03 Thread chuck
If you could measure the distance between the lattice “steps” too it would be 
helpful.  I am tracing drawings from things on the web.  Rather have some 
dimensions.  

From: Craig House 
Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 12:58 PM
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

I’ll measure one when I get home in an hour.  I’ve got 200 sections in my front 
yard.  I’m sure I’ll fine one to measure.   Both 45 and 25g


Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 3, 2017, at 13:42,   wrote:


  Is it 4” exactly?

  From: Craig House 
  Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 12:40 PM
  To: af@afmug.com 
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

  That’s correct. 


  Sent from my iPhone

  On Dec 3, 2017, at 13:26,   wrote:


I find drawings showing 25G and 45G tower sections being 10’ end to end.  
But that would cause the tower to lose a few inches due to the telescoping at 
each junction between sections.  So, I am guessing it is 10’ plus whatever 
length telescopes when mating the sections.  Line 4”??



Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

2017-12-03 Thread Craig House
I’ll measure one when I get home in an hour.  I’ve got 200 sections in my front 
yard.  I’m sure I’ll fine one to measure.   Both 45 and 25g

Sent from my iPhone

> On Dec 3, 2017, at 13:42,   wrote:
> 
> Is it 4” exactly?
>  
> From: Craig House
> Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 12:40 PM
> To: af@afmug.com
> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question
>  
> That’s correct. 
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
>> On Dec 3, 2017, at 13:26,   wrote:
>> 
>> I find drawings showing 25G and 45G tower sections being 10’ end to end.  
>> But that would cause the tower to lose a few inches due to the telescoping 
>> at each junction between sections.  So, I am guessing it is 10’ plus 
>> whatever length telescopes when mating the sections.  Line 4”??
>>  
>>  


Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

2017-12-03 Thread chuck
Is it 4” exactly?

From: Craig House 
Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 12:40 PM
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

That’s correct. 


Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 3, 2017, at 13:26,   wrote:


  I find drawings showing 25G and 45G tower sections being 10’ end to end.  But 
that would cause the tower to lose a few inches due to the telescoping at each 
junction between sections.  So, I am guessing it is 10’ plus whatever length 
telescopes when mating the sections.  Line 4”??



Re: [AFMUG] Tower Question

2017-12-03 Thread Craig House
That’s correct. 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Dec 3, 2017, at 13:26,   wrote:
> 
> I find drawings showing 25G and 45G tower sections being 10’ end to end.  But 
> that would cause the tower to lose a few inches due to the telescoping at 
> each junction between sections.  So, I am guessing it is 10’ plus whatever 
> length telescopes when mating the sections.  Line 4”??
>  
>  


[AFMUG] Tower Question

2017-12-03 Thread chuck
I find drawings showing 25G and 45G tower sections being 10’ end to end.  But 
that would cause the tower to lose a few inches due to the telescoping at each 
junction between sections.  So, I am guessing it is 10’ plus whatever length 
telescopes when mating the sections.  Line 4”??



Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

2017-12-03 Thread chuck

Well you are in luck for next time because the MSRP is only $395!

-Original Message- 
From: Robert

Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 11:37 AM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

I could have used one of those two days ago when I plugged into a cat5
with 48HV 1.5, the wire checked out fine with the tester in the Netonix
with opens at the length of all the wires.   But turned on the power and
poof, there goes a 12-250-DC...   Totally dead...   Right now I would
say one of those is worth $400...  I also have a wire to test it out
with LOL...   Next time I'll test every wire with a mini before trying
anything bigger...   BTW I would suggest using a mini for your test
bench too, and if you blow that it's less painful...

Robert

On 12/3/17 9:42 AM, ch...@wbmfg.com wrote:

Running some endurance tests on the latest rev of the inline POE fuse.

Netonix is providing the power.� Inline POE fuse connected to short red 
CAT5 with LEDS.� 2 Green LEDs on one side and 2 Red on the other.� If 
it blows, the output side LEDs go out but the input LEDS stay lit.� You 
can hook it up either direction.


Big brown power resistor hanging from a wire is the load.� It is 
roasting hot too.� 53 volts x 1.5 amps = almost 80 watts.




Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

2017-12-03 Thread chuck
Ancient technology called a “telephone”.

From: Jaime Solorza 
Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 11:19 AM
To: Animal Farm 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

What is that thing on right above netonix on wall with curly wire? 


Jaime Solorza

On Dec 3, 2017 10:43 AM,  wrote:

  Running some endurance tests on the latest rev of the inline POE fuse.

  Netonix is providing the power.  Inline POE fuse connected to short red CAT5 
with LEDS.  2 Green LEDs on one side and 2 Red on the other.  If it blows, the 
output side LEDs go out but the input LEDS stay lit.  You can hook it up either 
direction.

  Big brown power resistor hanging from a wire is the load.  It is roasting hot 
too.  53 volts x 1.5 amps = almost 80 watts.



Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

2017-12-03 Thread chuck

Any passive POE.  Cheap insurance.

-Original Message- 
From: Craig House

Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 10:44 AM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

what is the POE fuse for?  Is it to save the Netonix ports from shorts?

Craig


- Original Message -
From: ch...@wbmfg.com
To: af@afmug.com
Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 11:42:38 AM
Subject: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

Running some endurance tests on the latest rev of the inline POE fuse.

Netonix is providing the power.  Inline POE fuse connected to short red CAT5
with LEDS.  2 Green LEDs on one side and 2 Red on the other.  If it blows,
the output side LEDs go out but the input LEDS stay lit.  You can hook it up
either direction.

Big brown power resistor hanging from a wire is the load.  It is roasting
hot too.  53 volts x 1.5 amps = almost 80 watts.



Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

2017-12-03 Thread Robert
I could have used one of those two days ago when I plugged into a cat5 
with 48HV 1.5, the wire checked out fine with the tester in the Netonix 
with opens at the length of all the wires.   But turned on the power and 
poof, there goes a 12-250-DC...   Totally dead...   Right now I would 
say one of those is worth $400...  I also have a wire to test it out 
with LOL...   Next time I'll test every wire with a mini before trying 
anything bigger...   BTW I would suggest using a mini for your test 
bench too, and if you blow that it's less painful...


Robert

On 12/3/17 9:42 AM, ch...@wbmfg.com wrote:

Running some endurance tests on the latest rev of the inline POE fuse.

Netonix is providing the power.� Inline POE fuse connected to short red 
CAT5 with LEDS.� 2 Green LEDs on one side and 2 Red on the other.� If it 
blows, the output side LEDs go out but the input LEDS stay lit.� You can 
hook it up either direction.


Big brown power resistor hanging from a wire is the load.� It is 
roasting hot too.� 53 volts x 1.5 amps = almost 80 watts.




Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

2017-12-03 Thread Bill Prince
We have blown a few Netonix ports when a short has happened on the POE 
out. Probably a good idea just for protecting the switch power output.


bp


On 12/3/2017 9:44 AM, Craig House wrote:

what is the POE fuse for?  Is it to save the Netonix ports from shorts?

Craig


- Original Message -
From: ch...@wbmfg.com
To: af@afmug.com
Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 11:42:38 AM
Subject: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

Running some endurance tests on the latest rev of the inline POE fuse.

Netonix is providing the power.  Inline POE fuse connected to short red CAT5
with LEDS.  2 Green LEDs on one side and 2 Red on the other.  If it blows,
the output side LEDs go out but the input LEDS stay lit.  You can hook it up
either direction.

Big brown power resistor hanging from a wire is the load.  It is roasting
hot too.  53 volts x 1.5 amps = almost 80 watts.





Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

2017-12-03 Thread Jaime Solorza
What is that thing on right above netonix on wall with curly wire?

Jaime Solorza

On Dec 3, 2017 10:43 AM,  wrote:

> Running some endurance tests on the latest rev of the inline POE fuse.
>
> Netonix is providing the power.  Inline POE fuse connected to short red
> CAT5 with LEDS.  2 Green LEDs on one side and 2 Red on the other.  If it
> blows, the output side LEDs go out but the input LEDS stay lit.  You can
> hook it up either direction.
>
> Big brown power resistor hanging from a wire is the load.  It is roasting
> hot too.  53 volts x 1.5 amps = almost 80 watts.
>
>


Re: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

2017-12-03 Thread Craig House
what is the POE fuse for?  Is it to save the Netonix ports from shorts? 

Craig


- Original Message -
From: ch...@wbmfg.com
To: af@afmug.com
Sent: Sunday, December 3, 2017 11:42:38 AM
Subject: [AFMUG] POE Fusing

Running some endurance tests on the latest rev of the inline POE fuse.

Netonix is providing the power.  Inline POE fuse connected to short red CAT5 
with LEDS.  2 Green LEDs on one side and 2 Red on the other.  If it blows, 
the output side LEDs go out but the input LEDS stay lit.  You can hook it up 
either direction.

Big brown power resistor hanging from a wire is the load.  It is roasting 
hot too.  53 volts x 1.5 amps = almost 80 watts.