- Apr 2, 2017
- 8
- 0
- 1
I am a friend of the family that owns a restaurant business. Recently one of the printers in the kitchen stopped working. It turned out to be a busted connector coming from the POS system to the printer device. Best I can tell, the line that goes to the main hub in the basement is a yellow crossover cable. The opposite end is hardwired to a self crimping style plug. The other end of the same connector appears to have a standard straight through cable port that then goes to the printer. There is one of these for each printer. The straight through port for one of these lines is what broke.
Thinking it is all the same, I figured if I followed the diagram on the connector, I could replace the connector that broke. So I would have to replace the hardwired crossover cable end using a standard crimp style connector. Then use an RJ45 coupler to connect the newly crimped end to the other straight through line going to the printer. After hours of trying different combinations of wiring and crimping, I still cannot get printer to work.
One odd thing I noticed is that if I take the wires from the good printer and switch them over to the bad printer, we get a light stating there is connectivity, but nothing prints. However, the test page prints, so we know the printer works and that the line works, just not when connected to the bad printer. Not sure if there is some software configuration in the POS (Point of Sale) system that handles the communication based on the printer's address.
Since it costs crazy money to have the POS company to fix the issue, my one last thought was to abandon the bad wire and use a switch. Take the good line coming from the basement (which i think is a crossover cable), then connect its other end using a straight through cable to a switch. Then use two more straight through cables from switch to each printer.
I tried the above using a spare router and we got the activity light on the printers, but they failed to print. I thought this might be because it was a router trying to create a new subnet not configured for the POS. Hence why I thought maybe a standard switch would be best.
Any thoughts or ideas? I am unfamiliar with the POS network and why there seems to be different wiring at certain points and crossover cables going into the master hub in the basement.
Thanks!
Thinking it is all the same, I figured if I followed the diagram on the connector, I could replace the connector that broke. So I would have to replace the hardwired crossover cable end using a standard crimp style connector. Then use an RJ45 coupler to connect the newly crimped end to the other straight through line going to the printer. After hours of trying different combinations of wiring and crimping, I still cannot get printer to work.
One odd thing I noticed is that if I take the wires from the good printer and switch them over to the bad printer, we get a light stating there is connectivity, but nothing prints. However, the test page prints, so we know the printer works and that the line works, just not when connected to the bad printer. Not sure if there is some software configuration in the POS (Point of Sale) system that handles the communication based on the printer's address.
Since it costs crazy money to have the POS company to fix the issue, my one last thought was to abandon the bad wire and use a switch. Take the good line coming from the basement (which i think is a crossover cable), then connect its other end using a straight through cable to a switch. Then use two more straight through cables from switch to each printer.
I tried the above using a spare router and we got the activity light on the printers, but they failed to print. I thought this might be because it was a router trying to create a new subnet not configured for the POS. Hence why I thought maybe a standard switch would be best.
Any thoughts or ideas? I am unfamiliar with the POS network and why there seems to be different wiring at certain points and crossover cables going into the master hub in the basement.
Thanks!