Robust Industrial Ethernet Switches

July 15, 2008
WAGO Corporation’s new 852 Series of Ethernet switches provides a wide range of scalable solutions for network infrastructures. The 852 Series ranges from simple Ethernet switches to configurable, multifunction Ethernet communication switches. Features such as a rugged housing give all 852 Series switches an operating temperature of 0°C to 60°C, vibration resistance (acc. to IEC 60068-2-6) and shock resistance (acc. to IEC 60068-2-27), ensuring the switches can withstand rigorous industrial environments.“The 852 Series of industrial-grade Ethernet switches is dedicated to optimizing network performance,” said Mark DeCramer, Product Manager – WAGO-I/O-SYSTEM. “In addition to solid mechanical properties, they feature excellent electrical characteristics including function monitoring and redundant voltage supplies ranging from 9 to 48 V.”852-104 Leads Comprehensively Equipped 852 Series Variants:•    852-101 5-Port 100BASE-TX Industrial Switch•    852-102 8-Port 100BASE-TX Industrial Switch •    852-103 8-Port 100BASE-TX + 2-Slot 100BASE-FX Industrial Switch including two additional SFP module ports (small form-factor pluggable for connecting fiber optic cables)•    852-104 7-Port 100BASE-TX + 2-Slot 100BASE-FX Industrial Managed SwitchThe 852-101, -102 and -103 switches are equipped with: a DIP switch for enabling alarm functions; compliance with IEEE 802.3 and 802.3u standards; non-blocking, store-and-forward switching; auto-negotiation on all 10/100BaseTX ports and auto-MDI/MDIX (crossover) on all 10/100BaseTX ports. Operational status LEDs are also included. The top-tier 852-104 switch builds on these features by adding: Web-based/SNMP management; full compliance with IEEE 802.3x, 802.1d, 802.1q, and 802.1p standards; Xpress Ring; VLAN (802.1q) VID; IGMP snooping for multicast filtering; port configuration, status and statistics; port trunking and SNMP v1/v2 with RMON. “The Xpress Ring found in the 852-104 allows the redundant ring to be configured, enabling a reconfiguration in less than 50ms in the event of a primary link failure,” DeCramer said. “An additional benefit: Failures can be reported via e-mail.”