Troubleshooting the power subsystem, Troubleshooting the ac-input power subsystem – Cisco 12406 User Manual

Page 23

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Cisco 12006 and Cisco 12406 Router Installation and Configuration Guide

OL-11497-03

Chapter 4 Troubleshooting the Installation

Problem Solving with Subsystems

Troubleshooting the Power Subsystem

The power subsystem in the Cisco 12006 and Cisco 12406 Routers consists of the
following components:

An AC PDU or a DC PDU

One or two AC-DC power supplies, or one or two DC-input PEMs

Backplane

DC-DC converters

MBus modules

The power modules provide DC output to the system via the backplane. DC output
from the alarm card powers the MBus modules on each card in the system. The
MBus modules, in turn, control the DC-DC converters also present on each card
in the system. The DC-DC converter takes DC power from the backplane and
converts it into +2.5, +3.3, and +5 VDC, which is distributed to the card circuitry.

Begin checking the power subsystem by looking at the power module LEDs:

For DC-input PEMs, see the

“Troubleshooting the DC-Input Power Entry

Module” section on page 4-26

.

For AC-input power supplies, see the following section.

Troubleshooting the AC-Input Power Subsystem

Begin checking the AC-input power subsystem by first looking at the LEDs on the
AC-input power supplies (see the

“AC-Input Power Supply LEDs” section on

page 4-17

). When you start up the system by turning on facility power to the

system, the following should occur:

The green LED labeled AC should go on immediately. It should remain on as
long as the system is receiving satisfactory AC power levels from the facility
AC power source.

The green LED labeled DC indicates the status of the power module DC
output power and internal DC voltages. This LED stays on when all the
following conditions are met:

The power supply is fully seated in its bay.

The power supply power standby switch is on.

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