Switching from Wifi to LAN
Posted: Sat Jul 13, 2024 4:07 pm
Hello Everyone,
first time poster.
I have a Fox ESS H1 with 3x HV25 installed last year. They are powered by 9x Canadian Solar 430w. The system is running very well and I am quite happy with it.
The installer used the wifi dongle to connect the inverter to the fox cloud, however the signal is very weak as my broadband router sits on the other side of the house. I am currently using a wifi extender which is some relief. I've also got an office in the room just below the inverter, where I am currently looking to install a wired ethernet port.
The solar installer actually ran two CAT6 cables from the inverter down to the consumer unit. At the time, I had no plans to get an ethernet connection from my broadband router to the consumer unit (and then back to the inverter) so nothing further was installed. However, one of the two CAT6 (actually just two double strands from one cable) is used to connect the inverter to the CT clamp at the consumer unit and the other CAT6 cable is completely spare. I want to use this spare lead, connect one end to my broadband router and the other end into my office as wired internet connection.
Getting closer to my actual question now...
Give the weak wifi signal, I was thinking to connect my inverter to the internet via LAN using the spare lead. Now I've read different things here and that FOX have potentially disabled this function? My idea was to purchase FOX' LAN stick https://www.senetic.co.uk/product/FOX_P ... gKzgfD_BwE and simple replace this with the wifi dongle.
Would this in theory work?
And furthermore, given the amount of data being transferred is quite low, I was wondering if I can actually even use the two spare double strand from the CAT6 cable that is currently connected to the CT clamp. Effectively this would throttle the speed of the cable by just using 2 Rx and 2 Tx. The benefit would be that the other spare CAT6 cable is 100% free and can provide high speeds into my office. Alternatively I would need to install a network switch to split the signal, but I prefer to avoid it.
Thanks in advance.
first time poster.
I have a Fox ESS H1 with 3x HV25 installed last year. They are powered by 9x Canadian Solar 430w. The system is running very well and I am quite happy with it.
The installer used the wifi dongle to connect the inverter to the fox cloud, however the signal is very weak as my broadband router sits on the other side of the house. I am currently using a wifi extender which is some relief. I've also got an office in the room just below the inverter, where I am currently looking to install a wired ethernet port.
The solar installer actually ran two CAT6 cables from the inverter down to the consumer unit. At the time, I had no plans to get an ethernet connection from my broadband router to the consumer unit (and then back to the inverter) so nothing further was installed. However, one of the two CAT6 (actually just two double strands from one cable) is used to connect the inverter to the CT clamp at the consumer unit and the other CAT6 cable is completely spare. I want to use this spare lead, connect one end to my broadband router and the other end into my office as wired internet connection.
Getting closer to my actual question now...
Give the weak wifi signal, I was thinking to connect my inverter to the internet via LAN using the spare lead. Now I've read different things here and that FOX have potentially disabled this function? My idea was to purchase FOX' LAN stick https://www.senetic.co.uk/product/FOX_P ... gKzgfD_BwE and simple replace this with the wifi dongle.
Would this in theory work?
And furthermore, given the amount of data being transferred is quite low, I was wondering if I can actually even use the two spare double strand from the CAT6 cable that is currently connected to the CT clamp. Effectively this would throttle the speed of the cable by just using 2 Rx and 2 Tx. The benefit would be that the other spare CAT6 cable is 100% free and can provide high speeds into my office. Alternatively I would need to install a network switch to split the signal, but I prefer to avoid it.
Thanks in advance.