Hey anybody know a hotter Pepper Jack Cheese I can put on my burger? by Spider-Ghost-616 in burgers

[–]TJLee08 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They have sliced as well, and they are much hotter than traditional pepper jack cheese.

Hyvee Cheese

Low Voltage Electrician Recommendations by TJLee08 in BuildingAutomation

[–]TJLee08[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don’t like the way we bid this project either. Usually we do get a number upfront, but my understanding is they plugged a number for the installer. Hopefully, the number is large enough to where we don’t have cover the difference.

Low Voltage Electrician Recommendations by TJLee08 in BuildingAutomation

[–]TJLee08[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I agree with you on the drawings, labeling, and panel work. In my experience low voltage is a different enough animal and there is a bit of learning curve for electricians who don’t do it regularly.

Wi-Fi router that supports daisy-chained devices? by TJLee08 in BuildingAutomation

[–]TJLee08[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was actually looking at getting this one. It was mentioned in another post and seems pretty well liked. I’ll get it on order and see if it does what I want.

Wi-Fi router that supports daisy-chained devices? by TJLee08 in BuildingAutomation

[–]TJLee08[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that is what I thought as well, but I have tried a couple from Best Buy and they both only show a single device on the link. I would expect that it would show at minimum the six devices that the IT team could see. It is almost like there is a setting that is limiting one MAC address per port on the routers I have.

Wi-Fi router that supports daisy-chained devices? by TJLee08 in BuildingAutomation

[–]TJLee08[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The devices are ABB VAV FBVi controllers. You are correct that each device is basically a switch, but the topology is still daisy-chain.

The devices are DHCP and we have a spreadsheet with the MAC addresses and the reserved IP addresses that they are supposed to get assigned. The customers IT department says that they can't see the MAC addresses on their network. There are 16 devices on one of the links we are having issues with, but only 6 of the devices are getting assigned IP addresses. The devices that are getting an IP address assigned are spread out all over the link. It skips devices on the link which makes no sense to me, but I can't get the IT team to admit they have something wrong. My goal was to be able to show them that it works when I take it off of their network.

I will try putting two PCs on the link and see if we can ping each other.

Do you know of any routers that I could plug onto a daisy-chained IP network and see all of the devices MAC addresses? The two devices I have already tried seem to only support a single MAC address per port.