On Tue, 08 Dec 2020 07:35:50 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
> On Mon, 7 Dec 2020 23:42:02 -0600, Sqwertz <sqwe...@gmail.invalid>
> wrote:
>
>>On Sun, 29 Nov 2020 07:47:24 -0600, Sqwertz wrote:
>>> I've blown up 2 TPLink T2U+ and possibly a Netgear 6120 (but the
>>> 6120 has terrible reviews saying the same problem). The only thing
>>> that has survived the extension cords are the NetGear 6100's (one I
>>> blew up myself <clapping>, the other has persevered).
>
>>Scratch that. I just blew up the last Netgear 6100.
>>
>>I'm now using a WRT54G in bridge mode until I get a new ....
>>something.
>
> 1. Do you have a DVM (digital volt meter)?
You would think so, but it's been on my bucket list for, oh, 30
years. And Harbor Freight discontinued all their seemingly
perpetual "Free VM with ANY PURCHASE" (only half of them worked more
than 3 times - according to the reviews). I did get a few decent LED
flashlights, though.
> 2. Test the power outlets involved with one of these:
> <
https://www.google.com/search?q=ac+outlet+tester&tbm=isch>
> My guess(tm) is you might have either a miswired outlet, leaky power
> line bypass capacitor to ground, disconnected protective ground
> (green) wire, or something similar. Be sure to also test power strips
> and extension cables for wiring errors. I went through my house last
> year and found 2 miswired outlets and 2 defective power strips.
I have a whole dead circuit in the house and I can't even find the
breaker that controls it - everything in the breaker box turns off
something. My "voltage meter/tester" is literally an electric hand
blender (Braun). I'm not a rich as I used to be <ahem>.
But everything else attached to this outlet has worked fine for
decades - including the computer. And the power to USB is brokered
through the computer. And the USB ports work just fine without the
extension cables. Oh, and I blew up my first power supply inside a
PC a few months ago - lighting strike in back hit the SAME TREE FO
THE THIRD TIME (there's 30+ trees to choose from back there(*)).
but even before the lights came back on 5 seconds later, I smelt it.
Surge protector, telephone/answering machine and monitor survived
just fine).
So I've had 2 different power supplies in the PC during these
seemingly physical damages to the networking dongles. I'm certainly
no expert (or even familiar) with USB electrical specs and TX/RX
But I was the serial/RS-232 guy for 20 years and I know I did some
seriously shit-ass cabling and all those home-grown adapters I made,
I never physically blew up any equipment (Arnet boards excluded -
Bill and I were good friends long before we both ended up at SCO)
> Good luck and try not to electrocute yourself.
The first thing I'm gonna do if they ever brig back those Free
Harbor Freight Vm's is test the 240 rails in my breaker box. I got
all the way to, "Here, hold my beer before I chickened-out testing
them with my tongue (my tongue wasn't wide/long enough). There are
no brakers that tie 2 120's together to power the jacuzzi tub and
the dryer - they seem to be missing the box and nothgin there shuts
them off. Only thing on the outside of the house as a HVAC breaker
(which I had to [pay somebody to] put in for Code).
This morning I just bought another TP-Link A600 - this one is the
"mini" rather than the folding antenna, but I'm going to
double-stick this to wall behind the computer just like I had it for
4-5 years prior. [looking up] I've gor all sorts of velcro and
doucble-stick tape up there, abd 8 holes in the plaster showing
sheetrock where I've done seasonal placement testing. I'm a PRO at
this ;-)
-sw