> The NEMA 6-20 plug is very uncommon in a datacenter environment. I
> don't know why Juniper sells those cords.
>
It's not Juniper, it's the reseller/partner who quotes the spec. For the MX
series you don't have any default per-country power cord option, which is
the case for the EX, branch SRX
On 5/11/18 15:15, mike+j...@willitsonline.com wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
> So I want to connect an MX240 and some other gear in a single
> cabinet at 208V. The group has convinced me this can work in general. I
> am now trying to find a rack mounted or Zero-U type metered 208V PDU but
> I am having a
On Fri, May 11, 2018 at 03:15:13PM -0700, mike+j...@willitsonline.com wrote:
> So I want to connect an MX240 and some other gear in a single
> cabinet at 208V. The group has convinced me this can work in general. I
> am now trying to find a rack mounted or Zero-U type metered 208V PDU but
> I
You don't need to use the original power cords. IEC 60320 is the
standard for power connectors. You want an IEC 60320 C19 to C20 cord
and a PDU with C19 outlets on it to accept the C20 end of the cord:
https://www.stayonline.com/reference-iec320.aspx
On Fri, May 11, 2018 at 03:15:13PM -0700,
Hi,
So I want to connect an MX240 and some other gear in a single
cabinet at 208V. The group has convinced me this can work in general. I
am now trying to find a rack mounted or Zero-U type metered 208V PDU but
I am having a hell of a time finding one for this application. The power
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